67 F.2d 833 | 5th Cir. | 1933
The appellee, Key, gave to First National Bank of El Paso, Tex., his cheek on another bank for $500, and took a receipt reading : “Received of the above mentioned A. H. Key the sum of $500.00 together with a copy of the foregoing contract to be held by the First National Bank of El Paso, Texas, under the terms and conditions of the foregoing contract.” That contract was one for the purchase by Key from a third person of certain realty, in which it was stipulated that, pending examination of the title, Key should place $500 with the- bank “in escrow,” to be forfeited to the vendor as damages if the title proved good and Key failed to purchase; or to be applied as purchase money if Key kept his contract; or to be returned to Key if the title proved bad. The next day the bank collected the cheek, accepting instead of cash the cashier’s cheek of the drawee bank. Three days later this cashier’s check was taken to the clearing house and used to offset checks drawn against the First National Bank by its customers, the clearing house transaction resulting in a large balance against the First National Bank, which was charged against its reserve at the local branch of the Federal Reserve Bank, and later made good by a deposit of funds drawn from other sources. The First National Bank several weeks later failed and was put into a receiver’s hands. Key became entitled to have the $500 back, and sued to establish a preferential claim against the fund in the receiver’s hands. The District Court held the $500 to be a trust, and that the bank had treated the cashier’s check representing it as cash and had commingled it with its other cash items, making its total cash assets a common fund impressed with the trust, and, it being proved that the bank’s cash assets had never since been less than $500, the receiver was ordered to pay that sum as a preferred claim. The receiver appeals.
We agree that the $500 was not a general deposit or a loan to the bank, but was a special deposit, in law a bailment and in equity a trust. It was shown that the banks in El Paso- habitually used money thus deposited “in escrow,” putting in its place as a memorandum a cashier’s check or a certificate of deposit; but there is no evidence that Key knew of, or assented to, any such thing. The bank’s agreement with him was express that it would hold — not borrow or use — the money, and would in the contingency which happened return it to him. The ownership of the cashier’s check which represented the $500 was in Key or his vendor and not in the bank.
We do not agree that this trust res became so commingled with the funds of the bank as to be unidentifiable and thus raise a lien by confusion. If the cashier’s cheek for the $500 was put with the other cash items of the bank, it continued to be easily recognizable, and could have been reclaimed. When taken to the clearing house and use“d to offset cheeks drawn on the bank it was still
Schumacher v. Harriett (C. C. A.) 52 F. (2d) 817, 82 A. L. R. 1, is much relied on to sustain the judgment appealed from. The court there reviews the eases and concedes that they establish such principles as we have just asserted, but avoids their consequences by the novel view that a trust check, when treated by a bank as one of its cash items, is thereby confused with its cash as though it had been unidentifiable currency; and that, if the bank misuses the cheek, it thereby sets apart as a trust res an equivalent value of other cash assets. Such a doctrine amounts to saying that in every ease of misapplied money or money’s equivalent the wrongdoer’s other cash and cash items stand in .its place so long as he has any, establishing in effect
The judgment is reversed, with direction to disallow appellee’s claim as preferred and to allow it as a general claim only.