124 Neb. 538 | Neb. | 1933
This is an action brought by the Lincoln National Bank & Trust Company against School District No. 79, of Boyd county, to recover on certain registered warrants issued by the school district and held by the trust company. The district issued these warrants in payment of operating expenses. The warrants were genuine and regular on their face when the trust company purchased them from the Ponca Valley State Bank, of Monowi, Nebraska. R. A. Studley was the treasurer of the district and was the active managing officer of the Monowi bank at the time these warrants were issued, registered, and sold. Studley, as treasurer of the school district, deposited its money in his bank in a special account. The warrants involved in this controversy were paid upon presentation by the bank, but were not charged to the Studley treasurer account. When a number of them accumulated in the bank, Studley, as treasured of the district, registered them and then, as managing officer of the bank, sold them to the trust company. Studley, as managing officer of the bank, wrongfully transferred the money from his account as district treasurer to other accounts. Studley was not faithful to his trust either as managing officer of the bank or as treasurer of the school district, and the present litigation results because of his wrong-doing. This is a mild portrayal of his manipulation of the accounts in the bank by Studley, but is sufficient for the purposes of this opinion. The district alleged two defenses, payment and set-off. The trial court, jury being waived, found in favor of the defendant district. There is some uncertainty although little dispute as to the facts. The trust company, as the assignee of
The question, involved in this case is simplified by considering the situation which would exist, if the warrants had not been transferred, between the bank and the school district. There is no difference in the situation of the bank and the trust company, since the trust company bought the warrants at face value and in the regular course of business from the bank. There is no defense to the warrants in the hands of the trust company except such as could be urged against the bank. The bank acquired these warrants by payment from bank funds and did not charge them to the account of Studley as treasurer of the district. Could the bank recover from the district upon these warrants? The answer is obviously in the negative. A school district cannot become a depositor in a bank. Comp. St. 1929, secs. 79-405, 79-2008. A bank receiving a deposit by treasurer of a school district becomes trustee for the district. State v. Midland State Bank, 52 Neb. 1. And very recently we have held: “A bank receiving a deposit of funds of a school district, in the hands of its treasurer, who is also president and
The other officers of the district did not know that these warrants had been registered, but intended and supposed that they had been paid by the treasurer from the
The judgment of the district court is
Affirmed.