95 So. 449 | Miss. | 1922
delivered the opinion of the court.
This is a suit in equity by C. A. Moore, administrator of the estate of John L. Moore, deceased, against the Grenada Bank to recover certain bonds, or their value, twenty thousand five hundred dollars, deposited by the deceased, John L. Moore, in the bank of Ackerman, a branch of the Grenada Bank; and from a decree in favor of the appellee administrator, the bank appeals.
The case is simply this: John L. Moore, deceas'ed, in his lifetime deposited in the bank of Ackerman, a branch of the Grenada Bank, certain bonds of the value of twenty thousand five hundred dollars as a special deposit; the manager of the Ackerman Bank, G. A. Torbert, was also the vice president and cashier of the Grenada Bank. Mr. Moore was a depositor and customer of the Ackerman Bank for many years before his death, and from time to time purchased the bonds in question and delivered them to the Ackerman Bank through its manager, C. A. Torbert. The coupons of these bonds were regularly clipped by the bank and the proceeds placed on deposit to the credit of Mr. Moore, who seemed to have had implicit confidence in the bank and its manager, Torbert, and intrusted it with the special keeping of the bonds in its vaults.
Torbert, as we have already said, was the manager of the Ackerman Bank and vice president and cashier of the mother bank at Grenada. Torbert took the bonds out of
It appears that the money obtained by Torbert was used by him in paying off certain worthless obligations due to the Bank of Grenada from which obligations Torbert had previously received the benefit. S'o the funds he received for the bonds went into the Bank of Grenada in settlement of insolvent claims due it. The Grenada Bank had no knowledge that Torbert was taking the bonds and using them for the purposes stated, unless it knew it, as a matter of law, by reason of the fact that Torbert himself was an officer of the Grenada Bank and the manager of the Ackerman Bank.
It was the custom of the bank to receive special deposits of bonds and other valuables for its customers, and to keep them in its vaults.
It is the contention of the appellee, Moore, that the Grenada Bank is liable for the value of the bonds for two reasons, namely: First, that the' funds obtained by the hypothecation of the bonds were used in settlement of bad obligations due to bank, and thus the bank received the benefit of these funds; second, that the bank is liable because it was negligence in its officers to permit Torbert to take the bonds out and borrow money on them, even though the bank was a gratuitous bailee.
The opposite contention of the bank is that Torbert was acting fraudulently for his individual benefit adversely to the bank, and not in its interest; or the loss was through mere negligence; and therefore it cannot be held liable as a gratuitous bailee; and that there is no liability on its part on account of receiving the funds obtained as a loan upon the bonds by Torbert, because it did not in fact receive the benefit from the funds, since they went to settle other valid obligations due the bank.
But furthermore we do not think the bank was a gratuitous bailee, because it was acting for a consideration, in that it was dealing with one of its customers and depositors, whose business with the bank was valuable to it and amounted to a consideration for the trust of safely keeping the bonds in its vaults.
We cannot subscribe to the view that a general depositor and customer of a bank, who, by virtue of his business relations and of his implicit confidence in the institution, makes a special deposit of his securities and valuables therein, is afforded no protection against loss which occurs through the fraudulent acts or negligence of the officers of the bank. Our judgment is to the contrary.
The business given a bank by* a customer who deposits his funds therein and otherwise contributes to its profits is valuable to the bank, and is certainly sufficient consideration in a contract of bailment, such as a special deposit, to create mutuality and warrant the view that it is a bailment for hire and not accommodation. Therefore the loss of the special deposit through the acts of the officers of the bank, either by negligence or fraud, must be met by the bank.
We have here a case where the manager of the Ackerman Bank received the special deposit of the bonds, and after-wards deliberately took them from the vaults, then in his charge, and disposed of them by hypothecation with outside parties. We think his act was the act of the Grenada Bank, the mother bank, because of his official position and control of the branch bank at Ackerman.
It would be contrary to all reason and right to hold that the officer in charge of a bank may receive special deposits from its credulous customers and dispose of them and con
The judgment of the lower court is affirmed.
Affirmed.