38 P.2d 603 | Wyo. | 1934
In this case the court rendered judgment declaring the claim of John Madden, hereinafter referred to as the claimant, to be a preferred claim against all of the assets of the Riverton State Bank, now in the process of liquidation. From this judgment the State Examiner has appealed. He allowed the claim as a general one, and contends that it should not have been allowed as a preferred claim.
The evidence shows: On July 25, 1932, claimant had in his possession a check, apparently on a Wisconsin bank, for the sum of $9668.10. On that day he, in company with Mrs. Burke, went to the Riverton bank and interviewed Mr. McGeown, the cashier of the *472 bank. The claimant wanted to use part of the money, and after the cashier had, by telegram, found out that the check was good, it was agreed that the claimant might use of the sum of $1668.10 immediately and check against it. The Wisconsin check was to be sent through the regular channels and collected and the cashier agreed to send the balance of the sum, namely, $8000, to claimant's sister in law in Wisconsin. The check was accordingly deposited. The deposit slip was written out by the cashier. It was for the sum of $9668.10, and contains the statement: "In receiving items for deposit or collection, the bank acts only as depositor's collecting agent." On the books of the bank, the claimant was given credit for the total amount of deposit, namely $9668.10. At the same time the cashier gave to claimant a blank check book. The latter drew checks against the deposit, six in all, in the total sum of $1660.93, leaving of the above sum of $1668.10 only the sum of $7.17. All the checks were issued and paid on July 25, 1932. On August 6 thereafter claimant sent a telegram from Milton Junction, Wisconsin, to the Riverton State Bank reading: "Please send balance my account care of Farmers Bank Milton Junction Wisconsin." On August 9, 1932, the Riverton Bank issued its cashier's check for $8007.15. This check was deposited in the Farmer's Bank a few days thereafter, sent through the mails for collection, but was not paid because the Riverton bank closed its doors on August 20, 1932.
1. The Attorney General, on behalf of the State Bank Examiner, contends that there is no substantial evidence to support the finding that the claimant should have a preferred claim, for the reason that the evidence clearly indicates that when claimant deposited his Wisconsin check, the relation of creditor and debtor arose between him and the bank. What the relation herein was, both before as well as after the Wisconsin *473
check was collected, depends upon the intention of the parties. 3 R.C.L. 633; Hudson v. State, (Del.)
The Attorney General, to sustain the contention that the relation of debtor and creditor existed in the case at bar, has cited us to the case of Ex parte Sanders,
Inasmuch, then, as the Riverton bank must be held to have acted in a fiduciary capacity, namely, as agent for the claimant, it follows that under the holding of this court in State v. Foster,
2. The main question herein is as to whether or not the claim herein must be traced into a specific fund, in accordance with our previous decisions. We have no occasion herein to doubt that the legislature has the power to classify deposits, provided the classification is reasonable, and to declare some of the deposits preferred *476
over others, or to dispense with the rule of tracing. 12 C.J. 1103; Witt v. Bank,
"Checks, drafts or other negotiable instruments issued by any collecting bank or trust company in exchange for notes, bonds, interest coupons, warrants, or other evidences of indebtedness deposited with or forwarded to such bank or trust company for collection and payment by the makers thereof or other parties liable thereon, shall be entitled to preferred payment upon the insolvency of such bank or trust company."
The ground urged for the unconstitutionality is that the statute purports to create preferred claims even in those cases in which the checks, drafts, etc., deposited for collection may prove to be worthless. We do not think that the statute bears that construction. If the securities deposited for collection are worthless, no claim can arise in favor of a depositor even as a general creditor. Such claim can, generally speaking at least, be co-extensive only with the value of the securities deposited. When, accordingly, the statute refers to preferred claims, it necessarily, we think, postulates the existence of a valid claim. It may, however, be that the statute, if it intends to dispense with the rule of tracing, could be said to be unconstitutional on the ground that it gives a preferred claim only when the bank gives a check or draft or other negotiable instrument in exchange for the securities collected, or to be collected, when as a matter of practice a forwarding bank frequently gives only a receipt, and the statute *477 does not give a preferred claim when that only, or a non-negotiable instrument, or no receipt, is given in exchange.
Our statute was apparently taken from Ch. 63, Sess. Laws Colorado 1925. An act of similar import, but differently framed, was passed in Utah in 1927. Ch. 49, Sess. Laws Utah 1927. See also Harvard Law Review 43, 311, note 25. These statutes, so far as we are aware, have not been passed on by the Supreme Courts of the respective states. South Carolina, too, adopted a law on the same subject. No. 202, Sess. Laws 1927. The act was declared unconstitutional because, among other things, it discriminates against "corporations, partnership and individuals sending their drafts directly to a bank for collecton." Ex parte Wachovia Bank Trust Co.,
It is not necessary, however, to determine the meaning of the act of 1929 or its constitutionality, if construed as dispensing with the rule of tracing, for the reason that a later act appears to cover the case at bar, and in which the legislature has gone, as to cases covered thereby, much beyond the rule heretofore recognized by this court. That is Ch. 74 of the Session Laws of 1931, now embodied in Sections 10-701 to 713, Rev. St. 1931. The act is the proposed statute drafted in 1928 by the American Bankers Association, known as the Bank Collecting Code. It had been adopted at the end of 1931 by 18 states. 39 Yale Law Journal 479; 43 Harvard Law Review 307; State v. Kingston, (Wis.)
"Where an agent collecting bank other than the drawee or payor shall fail or be closed for business as above, after having received in any form the proceeds of an item or items entrusted to it for collection, but without such item or items having been paid or remitted for by it either in money or by an unconditional credit given on its books or on the books of any other bank which has been requested or accepted so as to constitute such failed collecting or other bank debtor therefor, the assets of such agent collecting bank which has failed or been closed for business as above shall be impressed with a trust in favor of the owner or owners of such item or items for the amount of such proceeds and such owner or owners shall be entitled to a preferred claim upon such assets, irrespective of whether the fund representing such item or items can be traced and identified as part of such assets or has been intermingled with or converted into other assets of such failed bank."
This subdivision has been considered in two cases. State v. Kingston, supra; Denkichi Tsujii v. Moody,
Affirmed.
KIMBALL, Ch. J., and RINER, J., concur. *480