The question which this record presents for decision is whether a quasi-municipal corporation, whose funds have been deposited in a bank which has become insolvent, is entitled to priority of payment over the bank's other creditors.
The Home State Bank of Grant Park was closed on January 9, 1928, by the Auditor of Public Accounts. Upon a bill filed in the circuit court of Kankakee county Luther B. Bratton was appointed receiver. H.M. Gerdes filed a petition in the cause setting forth that he was supervisor of the town of Sumner, in the county of Kankakee, and ex-officio treasurer of the road and bridge fund of the town and of its hard road fund; that he had deposited in the bank on June 10, 1927, and November 15, 1927, the sum of $10,442.25, which he held as treasurer of the hard road fund, that sum being evidenced by two certificates of deposit providing for the payment of interest thereon at four per cent if left in the bank for three months; that he also deposited as treasurer of the road and bridge fund the sum of $161.46 and as supervisor the sum of $266.92, each of these deposits being made in a checking account; that each of these deposits was made as a trust fund, and on April 14, 1928, he filed a claim for them with the receiver but no part of the funds has been paid to him. The petitioner claimed that he was entitled to a preference in payment over the other depositors in the bank. The petition was *Page 181 heard and an order was entered denying the claim of the petitioner to a preference, from which he appealed to the Appellate Court for the Second District, which affirmed the judgment. His petition for a writ of certiorari to review the record was allowed.
The reasons assigned in the brief of the plaintiff in error why the judgments of the trial and Appellate Courts should be reversed are, that the money in the custody of the treasurer of this involuntary quasi-public corporation belonged to the State, was raised for public purposes and deposited and received as such by the bank; that the passbooks and certificates of deposit issued by the bank show that they were public and official accounts, and the bank kept the respective funds separate and apart from the funds of the petitioner.
It was held in People v. Farmers State Bank,
The plaintiff in error contends that the money in question in this case constitutes a trust fund, that the bank knew it was a trust fund, the account was an official account, and therefore the deposit created a trust relation between the bank and the plaintiff in error. Deposits in a bank may be either general or special. A general deposit is a deposit generally to the credit of the depositor, to be *Page 183
drawn upon by him in the usual course of the banking business. (Wetherell v. O'Brien,
A fiduciary may deposit trust funds as a general deposit. The fact that the funds so deposited are trust funds and known by the bank to be so does not make the deposit special. In the absence of evidence making it a special deposit the depositor simply becomes a creditor of the bank, standing upon the same footing as other general creditors and entitled to no preference, the bank simply becoming indebted to him in his representative capacity. (Paul v. Draper,
The two pass-books, in which were entered the sums deposited by the petitioner as supervisor of the town and treasurer of the road and bridge fund, were the ordinary pass-books in which the credits were made by the bank in the checking accounts of its customers. The two certificates *Page 185 of deposit were the ordinary time certificates of deposit issued by the bank to depositors who requested them, payable to the order of the depositor on the return of the certificate properly indorsed, with interest at the rate of four per cent per annum for all full months if left three months. When the plaintiff in error placed the money in the bank on general deposit the title immediately passed to the bank and the relation of debtor and creditor was created between the bank and the plaintiff in error. McGregor v. Battle, supra.
The circuit court properly decided that the plaintiff in error was not entitled to a preference of payment. Its order is affirmed.
Order affirmed.