149 Iowa 662 | Iowa | 1910
This action was originally brought by the plaintiff Stilson to place the First State Bank of Cor-with in the hands of a receiver, and W. O. Oelke was later appointed receiver of said bank and duly qualified. The People’s Savings Bank of St. Benedict, G. W. Mason & Co., S. B. Baymond, Grundy County National Bank, and the Garnavillo Savings Bank filed claims against the First State Bank of Corwith, and subsequently asked that such claims be given preference over the claims of the general creditors of the bank and preference over the claims of depositors in said bank. W. -0. Oelke, as receiver of the Bank of Corwith, filed objections to the claims above referred to and denied the right of claimants to preference. There were a great many depositors. Walter Wildman and A. J. Doidge were depositors of their own funds, as we understand the record, and F. A. Beers was the clerk of Maj'or township, which was a depositor. The persons named j’oined in objections to the claims on their own account and as a committee representing a large number of depositors. Each of these claims was tried separately in the district court, and preference was allowed as .to the whole or a part of each. The receiver and the depositors appearing and represented appeal. The cases have been consolidated for presentation to this court.
Under these authorities and many more that might bo cited, the creditor who asks that his claim be given preference has the burden of showing that his money has come into the hands of the assignee as an increase of the assets of the estate, and that it may be taken therefrom without impairing the rights of general creditors. It is true that in certain cases a presumption arises in favor of the preference claimed, but such presumption does not relieve the
Are the appellees herein entitled to the aid of the legal presumption that their money reached the hands of the receiver in the form of increased assets of the bank, and that it may be taken therefrom without impairing the rights of the general creditors? We are of the opinion that an affirmative answer to the inquiry would require us to go a step farther than we have ever gone, and to establish a rule that would be unjust and inequitable. Wo have already gone to the extreme limit in giving claimant the benefit of the presumption referred to, and we are not disposed to extend the rule. In Ind. Dist. of Boyer v. King, 80 Iowa, 497, where the rule was first adopted and applied by this court, the fund deposited belonged
In all of our cases, except one which will be noticed later, where the presumption has been given force, the deposits were of trust funds, the character of such funds was known to the banks when the deposits were made, and the deposits involved no wrongful act on the part of the banks. The presumption was in every instance based on the theory that the bank, knowing the character of the fund and acting honestly would not use or dissipate it as long as it had funds of its own. See Jewell v. Clay, 107 Iowa, 52; Smith v. Bank, 107 Iowa, 620. The case which may be treated as the exception is Whitcomb v. Carpenter, 134 Iowa, 227, and it is the case upon which the appellees chiefly rely for an affirmance of the judgment. In that case the plaintiff paid the Bank of Olin for a draft drawn on a correspondent Chicago bank where the Bank of Olin then had no funds. The plaintiff also paid to the Bank of Olin money due on a note given to said bank, but which was held by a third party. The receipt of the money for application on the plaintiff’s particular debt was not wrongful in itself, and a trust was created by its acceptance. We held, however, that the receipt of the money for the draft was wrongful and that a trust was thereby created. It was shown that at the time the Bank of Olin failed the liabilities of the bank greatly exceeded its assets, and