266 P. 472 | Okla. | 1928
O'Bannon forwarded to the First State Bank of Bristow two drafts with bill of lading attached, totaling $1,027.70, drawn upon Gibbs for collection and remittance. These drafts were received by the bank, and in due course presented to Gibbs for payment. Gibbs paid the same to the collecting bank by checks drawn upon his account in the collecting bank — his account was adequate to pay the same. His account in due course was charged with the amount of the drafts, and a corresponding credit given the bank's cashier's checks outstanding, and the bank issued its cashier's check to O'Bannon Company of Claremore for the amount of the collection. The bank became insolvent and the payment on the cashier's check was refused. During the entire transaction and after insolvency there was sufficient cash on hand in the bank to pay the amount in controversy.
The decisive question here involved is whether the relation between O'Bannon and the bank was that of debtor and creditor or that of principal and agent, and consequently whether O'Bannon was a mere general creditor or a preferred claimant.
This question is settled in this jurisdiction by Hall v. Sullivan,
In affirming the decision of the trial court we are not unmindful of conflict in the decisions of other jurisdictions as well as conflict in the decisions of the federal courts. We think the status is dependent upon the intention of the parties. 3 Rawle C. L. 632. There must be assent of the party to whom the debt is due in order to change the admitted original relation of agency. An agent should not be permitted by its act alone to change the relation by sending its check and so convert its trust fund into a debt. Holder v. Western Ger. Bank, 6th C. C. A., 136 Fed. 90.
The Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals spoke in Spokane E. Trust Co. v. U.S. Products Co., 290 Fed. 884, and held:
"The rule as established by the weight of authority is that where a bank transmits negotiable paper for collection and returns, the bank which receives the check and undertakes the collection is the agent of the principal, and becomes a trustee of the proceeds for the owner, and, except where consent is given, the collecting bank cannot avoid such relationship and create that of mere debtor and creditor."
The case of Bank of Poplar Bluff v. Millspaugh, 313 Mo. 412,
The case of First Nat. Bank v. Walker,
"When paper is accepted for collection under express directions to collect and remit, money in the hands of the collecting bank is then a trust fund for the real owner."
Likewise, in Nebraska, Griffin v. Chase, 54 N.W. 572; in South Dakota, Plano Mfg. Co. v. Auld, 86 N.W. 21; in Minnesota, Eifel v. Veigel,
We shall examine the cases quoted from by the appellant, the Bank Commissioner.
Goyner v. Williams (Cal.)
The next case — Young, State Bank Examiner, v. Teutonia Bk. Trust Co. (La.) 64 So. 806. There had been a prior course of dealing between the parties.
In U.S. Nat. Bank v. Glanton,
In Union Nat. Bank v. Citizens Bank,
Commercial Nat. Bank v. Armstrong,
"There the contract required a settlement between the banks only upon certain days of each month, and under the facts, the court concluded that the collections made were not to be placed on special deposit and held until the day for remitting, but were to be treated as a general deposit, the transmitting bank being regarded as a general depositor."
In Peters Shoe Co. v. Murray,
"It is the well-settled doctrine in this state, as well as in a large number of the states of the union, that in a case like the present, where a special agency is created and the bank has no authority to hold and credit the proceeds of the draft, but is bound by the agreement to remit them immediately to its correspondent, the relation of trustee and beneficiary is created and the money collected or its equivalent can be recovered from the assignee of the insolvent bank."
But the preference was there denied for failure to identify the trust funds. However, the later case in Texas is to the contrary. First National Bank of Beaumont v. Union Trust Co.,
In Citizens Bank of Pinewood v. Bradley,
In Hecker-Jones-Jewell Milling Co. v. Cosmpolitan Trust Co. (Mass.)
We, therefore, conclude as to the first proposition that when the State Bank of Bristow received the drafts in question with bill of lading attached with specific instructions for collection and remittance and collected the same by receiving the check from the drawee of the draft upon the collecting bank, which held ample funds to pay the check, and when the collecting bank issued its cashier's check in payment thereof for the drawer of the draft, the relation between the drawer and the bank was that of principal and agent and the ample cash in the collecting bank was impressed with a trust which entitled the drawer to a priority.
It is contended by appellant that upon the payment of the drafts by a check of the drawee of the draft upon his deposit in the collection bank, the consequent charging of the drawee's account and issuing of the bank's cashier's check in payment of the drafts did not constitute an augmentation of the assets in the bank, and, therefore, the trust cannot be held to exist.
The bank at the time of payment had funds to pay the drafts. It was the duty of the bank then to so pay the same. Equity will consider that as done which ought to have been done. Bank of Poplar Bluff v. Millspaugh, 313 Mo. 414,
In Rainwater v. Fed. Reserve Bank,
"Certainly there is no necessity for the drawee of the draft to take its check to its bank, the collector, and present it and receive the money and hand it back to the bank in payment of the draft." Kesl v. Hanover St. Bank,
The appellant cites Midland Nat. Bank v. Brightwell, 148 Mo. 358, 49 S.E. 994, but the Missouri court in Federal Reserve Bank v. Millspaugh, supra, expressly held that decision was not decisive, for therein the reciprocal account method existed and there was not sufficient funds in the bank to pay the draft of the bank so drawn.
People v. Bank,
Billingsley v. Pollock,
Larabee Flour Mills Co. v. Bank, 13 Fed. Rep. 2d 330, cited, supports the rule contended for by appellant. It follows a strict rule of construction in reference to tracing and identifying trust funds prevailing in that Circuit Court of Appeals. There is no decision of the Supreme Court of the United States upon the subject. It is noteworthy that Judge Faris dissented to the opinion cited with reasoning that to our view is sound. He points out the weight of authority in the federal courts to the contrary, says he is unable to follow the majority federal rule, for the reason that the stranger, the drawer of the draft, is thereby made to become a creditor without his consent and against his expressed intent. He says the situation should be taken at the time the receiver takes charge of the bank; that is, while the bank was a going concern it paid the drawee an amount due him equal to the draft it held for collection, and with that transaction the receiver was not concerned, for at the time he took charge the bank owed the drawee the sum of the draft less than before, and thereby it got into the bank's hands the sum which belonged to the drawer of the draft; that equity sometimes takes a short cut to ultimate results and regards that as done which ought to have been done. He says it is ridiculous to require the drawee to take out of the collecting bank, by his check, an amount equal to the draft, walk around the block and pay the same money into the bank in exchange for the draft held by the bank, that the cases hold that if the drawee pays the draft out of money from his pocket or by a check on another bank or even by giving his note to the collecting bank, the drawer would have become a preferred creditor.
Judge Pollock holds to the same view. He says in the memorandum opinion in Kansas Flour Mills Co. v. First Nat. Bank, supra, that the collecting bank by reason of its agency owed the duty to take the money out of the drawee's account and transmit the cash or its equivalent to the drawer, but instead, for convenience, it sent its draft which proved worthless in return. There it is pointed out the bank could not on its own motion, in failing to do its duty as agent, appropriate plaintiff's property or money and thus compel the assumption of the relation of debtor and creditor by mala fides; that neither the bank, its creditors, nor the receiver can profit by the bank's breach of trust in the transaction.
It is well stated in Kansas Flour Mills Co. v. New State Bank of Woodward, supra, in regard to the payment of the drafts by the drawee:
"It would be an idle thing to hand you the amount of your check and receive, eo instanti, the sum back from you. We will consider that as done which should have been done."
And:
"It was the intention of all the parties that this fund should not be commingled with the other deposits, but that it should be a trust fund."
The Supreme Court of Nebraska aptly said in National Bank v. National Bank,
"A fund * * * with respect to which a bank has but a single duty to perform, and that to pay the money to the person entitled to it, is a trust fund and incapable of being commingled."
The cases to the contrary are divided as to the governing reason. Some of them bottom their holding upon the theory that the drawee giving his check upon his ample funds in the collecting bank does not augment the funds in the bank, and so the res of the trust cannot be traced and identified; others base their conclusion upon the premise that when the drawer of the draft sends the same for collection, the relation of principal and agent ensues, but when the bank performs its duty so far as to collect the amount of the draft, the relation changes to that of debtor and creditor. No reason other than custom warrants such a phenomenal transformation of relationship, and nowhere else in the field of law is there an example or analogy of the power of an agent altering the relationship between himself and his principal by his own act or desire, so as to bind his principal.
The cases to the contrary are not based upon the joint theories, but each predicates its judgment upon one or the other view. Neither theory has had the approval of this court. The change in relationship theory seems to us unsound. The nonaugumentation of assets view is too harsh as against the equitable principle heretofore set out. Applying both theories, we say all courts agree that in the beginning of such transactions the relation is that of principal and agent. Such being the case, we think the relationship should not be held to be transformed without consent of the principal. Very often such a principal may be willing to accept an agent for collection of a trust fund when he would not at all be willing to accept the relation of debtor and creditor.
The judgment of the trial court is affirmed. *210
BRANSON, C. J., MASON, V. C. J., and HARRISON, CLARK, and HEFNER, JJ., concur.
PHELPS, LESTER, and HUNT, JJ., dissent.