102 F. 785 | 5th Cir. | 1900
after stating the case as above, delivered the opinion of the court.
All the money in dispute in this case except $172 was collected on checks and drafts which the appellee deposited with the American National Bank. The checks and drafts were entered on the appellee’s pass book, each having been indorsed, “Pay to .the order of the American National Bank.” There is evidence in the case showing that the checks and drafts were deposited with the bank for collection. The bank was then about to close. Its insolvent condition was known to its officers. At about 8 o’clock in the evening of August 5, 1896, the day the deposits were made, the bank officers instructed the note and collection clerk to keep the drafts and checks received that day
“After a bank has suspended, it ought not to receive payments upon business paper previously deposited with it for collection, or, at least, not in such a manner that the money so received by it will pass into its general assets, and the owner of the paper will he placed in the position of one of its creditors, entitled only to take his dividend. * * * Proceeds received after the bank becomes insolvent are held in trust, and may be recovered in full.” 1 Morse, Banks (3d Ed.) § 248a.
This view is sustained by many authorities, the facts varying in each case, but the principle being the same. Levi v. Bank, 5 Dill. 104, Fed. Cas. No. 8,289; In re Havens, 8 Ben. 309, Fed. Cas. No. 6,230; Richardson v. Banking Co., 36 C. C. A. 307, 94 Fed. 442; Same v. Bank, 36 C. C. A. 315, 94 Fed. 450.
The other point made by the appellee is equally as conclusive. The fraud of the bank would prevent its obtaining title to the checks and drafts and their proceeds. In Railway Co. v. Johnston, 133 U. S. 566, 10 Sup. Ct. 390, 33 L. Ed. 683, the court held:
“When a bank has become hopelessly insolvent, and its president knows that it is so, it is a fraud to receive deposits of checks from an innocent depositor, ignorant of its condition, and he can reclaim them or their proceeds.”
There can now be no doubt about the fact that it is well settled by authority that a bank should not continue business when it is known to its officers that it is hopelessly.insolvent. The relation between a ’bank and its customers is such that great confidence is asked and reposed. A banker who knows that he is-hopelessly insolvent cannot honestly continue business, and receive money from his customers. He may not intend to defraud a particular customer, but he will be held, of-course, to have intended the inevitable consequences of his act, — that is, to cheat and defraud all-persons whose money he receives and whom he fails to pay before he stops business. A banker
The appellee was also entitled to recover the $172 deposited in currency by it. The undisputed facts in the case show that this money, or its equivalent in cash, passed into the hands of the receiver. lie either received the actual money deposited, or it served to increase the amount delivered to him. In the case of Richardson v. Redemption Co. (C. C. A.) 102 Fed. 780, we have recently handed down an opinion which deals with the question of tracing cash deposits. The case is, on its facts, almost identical with the instant case, so far as the deposit of cash is involved. It is sufficient to say that when a bank, on the eve of insolvency, by committing a fraud obtains the money of a customer, and mingles it with the general funds of the hank, the title to the money does not pass; and if the money is not expended, but kept in the bank and turned over to the receiver, the money, or a like amount, although mixed with the general funds of the hank, can he recovered in a suit against the receiver. The circuit