148 Mo. 358 | Mo. | 1899
This cause was heard and decided by the circuit court of Saline county, on the following agreed statement of facts:
“It is hereby stipulated and agreed by and between the parties hereto that the facts in this case are as follows, and that this agreed statement may be read as evidence in this case.
“It is admitted that from and after the 12th day of December, 1894, and for some time prior thereto, the Midland National Bank was and is now a banking corporation duly organized under the laws of the United States with reference*363 to national banks, and doing a general banking business at Kansas City, Missouri.
“That on December 12th, 1894, the Midland National Bank sent collection items to the Slater Savings Bank of Slater, Missouri, with instructions to remit in Kansas City exchange. These items aggregated $6,726.44, a large part of which consisted of drafts drawn on the Citizens Stock Bank of Slater, Mo. All of these items were collected by the Slater Savings Bank, either by charging the accounts of depositors against whom the drafts were drawn, after being authorized to do so by such depositors and crediting the account of the Midland National Bank, or by a clearing of the day’s business with the Citizens Stock Bank. In settlement of the balance for the day against it, the Citizens Stock Bank gave the Slater Savings Bank its draft on St. Louis for $4,184.31. The Slater SavingsBank indorsed this draft and forwarded it, together with its own draft on St. Louis for $2,650, to the Midland National Bank on account of the collection items above mentioned. Neither of these drafts were paid, and both the Slater Savings Bank and the Citizens Stock Bank of Slater failed December 17th, 1894, and their assets are in the hands of their respective assignees. The Midland National Bank has not received payment for any portion of the collection items above mentioned, represented by these drafts for $4,134.31 and $2,650. At the time of the failure of the bank, the assignee found in the vault the sum of $449 in cash. And it is also admitted that said draft of $2,650 was forwarded to plaintiff on December 14th, 1894, and was duly presented for payment on December 17th, 1894, when payment was refused and said draft was protested for nonpayment, and also that the said defendant as assignee had in his hands at the date of the trial sufficient assets to pay the draft of $2,650 and interest thereon in full.”
No other evidence was offered at the trial.
Which declaration of law the court refused to give and defendant duly excepted to said refusal.
The circuit court then rendered a decree that the said sum of $2,650 collected by the Slater Savings Bank was received as a trust fund, and was held as such when said bank failed, and that the assignee held it in the same way, and the court further found there were sufficient assets in the hands of the assignee to satisfy said claim and directed it paid with interest. From this decree the assignee appeals to this court.
I. The question involved in this appeal upon the agreed statement of facts is whether the Midland National Bank is a preferred creditor or a mere general creditor of the Slater Savings Bank. Certain principles must be considered as settled. When a note or draft is sent by one individual or bank to another bank for collection and to remit the proceeds to the sender, the relation of principal and agent is created, and not that of creditor and debtor.
The receiving bank’s duty as a collecting agent is to present the note or draft for payment, and unless a special authority is otherwise shown, to receive in payment nothing but money, or that which by common consent is considered and treated as money. [Levi v. Bank, 5 Dill. 104; 2 Morse on Banks and Banking, sec. 567; Libby v. Hopkins, 104 U. S. 307; People v. Bank, 96 N. Y. 32.]
Having received the note or draft for collection it does not owe the amount thereof to the sender until collected, and
Equally plain is the law that an assignee for benefit of creditors takes no higher or better right to the assigned assets than his assignor possessed, and if the assignor stands in a fiduciary relation to the assets that relation is cast upon the assignee.
It is, moreover, undeniable that equity will follow a fund through any number of transmutations, and preserve it for the owner so long as it can be identified and this court has extended this doctrine, and held that when a trustee or bailee wrongfully mixed trust money with his own, so that it can not be distinguished as to what portion is trust money and what part private funds, equity will follow the money by taking out of the estate of the trustee or bailee or his insolvent estate, the amount due the cestui que trust. [Harrison v. Smith, 83 Mo. 210.]
And in Stoller v. Coates, 88 Mo. 514, it was held that the general assets of an insolvent bank having been enlarged and increased by the unlawful conversion of a trust fund, the bailor or cestui que trust was entitled pro tanto to have the amount of the converted fund declared and enforced as a preferred demand against 'the assigned estate. In going to this length unquestionably this court took a position in advance of the English chancery and most of the States of this Union, but with the soundness of this position we are entirely satisfied. The creditors of an insolvent person or corporation are entitled to subject his estate to their demands, but justice and equity give them no right to appropriate the estate of another which he holds in trust.
With these acknowledged principles as our guide, the question recurs whether upon the agreed facts of this case, the plaintiff bank has established its claim to a preference.
When this court has spoken of assets being increased by the reception of a trust fund heretofore, it clearly meant actual assets, not the mere juggling of accounts whereby debts due depositors were transferred to become a debt due a correspondent who sent collections.
We are not disposed to hold that the mere canceling of a liability to one debtor and the transferring it to another on the same books is an actual increase of assets.
Eor these transfers to have such an effect there must have been funds in the bank upon which such transfers could have operated. The transfer of a mere naked liability to one creditor to another on the bank books added not a dollar to the Slater bank’s assets; when the transaction was finished it was a debtor in the same amount but to a different person in a different capacity, and had not received an additional dollar whereby the dividends of the other creditors would be enlarged. TTpon the argument we were inclined to the view that plaintiff had probably shown itself entitled to a preference, but upon more mature consideration we see no reason why plaintiff should be preferred to other creditors of this bank.
The doctrine invoked rests upon the fact that the trust fund has gone to swell the assets of the insolvent bank, while in this ease no inference can be drawn that the assets in the hands of the receiver-were the product of the collections sent by plaintiff, but the contrary plainly appears. The bank was hopelessly insolvent, and received not a dollar of new assets.
Justice and equity will only be conserved in this case by distributing the assets pari passu and by denying plaintiff the preference it seeks.
The judgment of the circuit court is reversed.