173 Ga. 722 | Ga. | 1931
An agent of the Standard Oil Company collected or received funds belonging to that company, amounting to $955.81.' He turned these funds over to the Salzburger Bank at Pineora, Georgia, for the sole purpose of having the bank Temit them to the oil company at its district office in Savannah, Georgia. To effectuate this purpose the bank, on January 28, 1930, issued to the oil company its two cashier’s checks amounting to the sum stated above. These checks were drawn on the Savannah Bank & Trust Company of Savannah. The oil company had no account with the drawing bank, and was not a depositor therein. These checks were delivered to the agent for the oil company, and by this .agent promptly forwarded to the oil company at Savannah, and were by it presented for payment to the drawee bank on January 29, 1930. Payment of them was refused because the drawer bank had closed its doors and had been taken over by the superintendent of banks for liquidation. The amount represented by the checks has never been paid to the oil company. That company did not know or suspect the insolvency of the drawer bank, but on the contrary was satisfied that this bank was solvent and that said cheeks would be paid when presented to the drawee bank. The oil company filed its petition against the drawer bank, containing four counts, each alleging the facts hereinbefore stated.
In the first count the plaintiff further alleges that the bank is due the principal amount of said checks, with interest from January 29, 1930; that by reason of the facts alleged it is entitled to a lien for such amount on the assets of the defendant bank, which lien should rank with other liens according to date; and that this lien should attach as of January 28, 1930. In the second count it is further alleged that said sum of $955.81 was received by the bank when the bank and its officers knew that it was insolvent, and thereby a fraud was perpetrated upon the plaintiff by the bank and its officers, which unjustly enriched the bank, and its assets were fraudulently increased to that extent at the expense and to the damage of the plaintiff; and that as a result of such conduct on the part of the bank its assets became impressed with a trust to
In each of said counts it is alleged that the plaintiff’s claim was duly filed with the superintendent of banks, and by him was rejected and put in the class of contractual obligations on March 17, 1930. In the first count the plaintiff prays for a judgment against the bank for $955.81, with interest, and that its right to a lien
The defendant bank demurred to the petition and each of the four counts thereof, upon the grounds that neither the petition as a whole nor any count thereof sets forth a cause of action against it, and that neither the .petition as a whole nor any count thereof alleges that the bank had any knowledge whatsoever of the purpose of the oil company’s agent in purchasing its cashier’s checks,. There were special grounds of demurrer, hereinafter referred to. The judge overruled the demurrers, and the defendant bank- excepted.
Does the first count of the petition set forth a cause of action? An agent of the Standard Oil Company had collected or received at Pineora, Georgia, funds belonging to that company. He desired to have these funds remitted to that company at its district office in Savannah, Georgia. For this sole purpose he turned these funds over to the Salzburger Bank at Pineora. To effectuate the purpose for which these funds were delivered to it, the bank issued its cashier’s checks, payable to the oil company and drawn upon the Savannah Bank & Trust Company, its correspondent at Savannah. The latter had ample funds of the drawing bank to pay these checks. The bank then delivered these checks to the agent to be forwarded to the oil company. The agent promptly forwarded them, and they were received by the oil company at its Savannah office on the day after they were issued. They were presented by the oil company to the trust company, and
The bank undertook to discharge this obligation by giving the oil company its checks on the trust company; but they were not paid. Checks given in payment of a debt or obligation do not constitute payment until themselves paid. Civil Code (1910), § 4314. When the bank received these funds they were impressed with a charge in favor of the oil company. This created in its favor an equitable lien on the funds; and equity will aid in restoring the
In the second count of the petition it is alleged that these funds were received by the bank when the bank and its officers knew that it was insolvent, and thereby a fraud was perpetrated upon the plaintiff by the bank and its officers, which unjustly enriched the bank and fraudulently increased its assets to the extent of these funds, to its damage, and that as a result -of such conduct on the part of the bank its assets became impressed with a trust to the extent of said sum to be paid out of its assets as a debt due it by the bank as trustee. Where money is received by an insolvent bank for the purchase of a draft which it knows to be worthless, it will be held by such bank in trust for its owner, who is entitled to priority over general creditors. Whitcomb v. Carpenter, 134 Iowa, 227 (111 N. W. 825, 10 L. R. A. (N. S.) 928); Brown v. Sheldon State Bank, 139 Iowa, 83 (117 N. W. 289) ; Widman v. Kellogg, 22 N. D. 396 (133 N. W. 1020, 39 L. R. A. (N. S.) 562). A deposit of money obtained by fraud when a bank is hopelessly insolvent creates a trust in favor of the depositor, and can be recovered from a receiver of the bank, even if the identical money deposited does not pass into his hands, when the funds received by him are in. any event increased by the
The present case under its facts does not come within the principle that in the absence of fraud the purchaser of a draft or check from an insolvent bank, for which he pays cash, is not entitled to a preference over general creditors in an insolvency proceeding. We are dealing with this count of the petition upon the facts therein set forth; and under these facts an implied trust arose in favor of the plaintiff against the bank. It follows that the second count sets forth a good cause of action. .
In the third count the plaintiff insists that under the facts of this case it is entitled pro tanto to be subrogated to the rights
So construing the pleading, we are of the opinion that the third
We come next to deal with the' fourth count in the petition. In this uount the plaintiff insists that the transaction was an equitable assignment of a sufficient amount of the assets of the bank held by the trust company, in excess of any liability of the bank, to pay the amount of these cashier’s checks. This contention is denied by the bank. It is undoubtedly true that an ordinary draft, drawn by a creditor upon his debtor and not made payable out of any particular fund, does not, before acceptance, operate as an assignment, either legal or equitable, to the drawer of money due by account from the drawee to the drawer of the draft. Baer v. English, 84 Ga. 403 (11 S. E. 453, 20 Am. St. R. 372); Jones v. Glover, 93 Ga. 484 (21 S. E. 50); Georgia Seed Co. v. Talmadge, 96 Ga. 254 (23 S. E. 1001); Talladega Mercantile Co. v. Robinson &c. Co., 96 Ga. 815 (22 S. E. 1003); Reviere v. Chambliss,
So both by the decisions of this court and by our negotiable instruments law a check or draft by itself, before acceptance or certification, does not amount to an assignment of the funds of the drawer in the hands of the drawee. In the above and other decisions, this court has recognized the existence and validity of equitable assignments arising in parol. In Daniel v. Tarver, 70 Ga. 203, one who had induced another to give credit to a third party bought the account of the latter, made out in gross, at half price, and gave his note for the purchase-money thereof; and this court held that while an assignment of an account should be in writing to pass the legal title to an open account, the transaction amounted to an equitable assignment of the account to the purchaser, on which he could sue in the name of the creditor for his use. Here the parol assignment of an open - account, for value, was held to be a good equitable assignment, and to have passed the equitable title thereto to the purchaser. In Baer v. English, supra, .Chief Justice Bleckley, who delivered the opinion in the case, said: “There may be cases (see Daniel v. Tarver, 70 Ga. 203) in which the doctrine of equitable assignment would still have application, notwithstanding the code furnished the means by which' to accomplish a- legal assignment without any aid from equitable principles.” Again in Jones v. Glover, supra, Chief Justice Bleckley said: “In order to infer an equitable assignment, such facts or circumstances must appear as would not only raise an equity between the assignor and assignee, but show that the parties con-templated an immediate change of ownership with respect to the particular fund in question, not a change of ownership when the
To constitute a valid assignment of a chose in action, either in toto or pro tanto, no particular form of words or formal instrument is necessary. Any language which makes an appropriation of the funds amounts to an equitable assignment. Walton v. Horkan, 112 Ga. 814 (38 S. E. 105, 81 Am. St. R. 77). Any order, writing, or act which makes an appropriation of the debt or funds amounts to an equitable assignment, and such an assignment may rest in parol. Dugas v. Mathews, 9 Ga. 510 (54 Am. D. 361); Whitehead v. Fitzpatrick, 58 Ga. 348; First National Bank v. Hartman Steel Co., 87 Ga. 435 (13 S. E. 586); Beasley V. Anderson, 167 Ga. 470 (146 S. E. 22). Our negotiable instruments law was not intended to, and does not, abrogate equitable assignments and implied trusts as 'they existed at the time of its passage. The provisions of this act, which we have set out above and Avhich provide that drafts or checks, by themselves, do not operate as assignments of the funds in the hands of the drawee available for the payment thereof, and do not operate as an assignment of any part of the funds to the credit of the drawer with the bank, were not intended to do away with the doctrine of equitable assignments of funds to the credit of the drawers of such instruments in banks upon which they were drawn. Prior to the passage of this act, some courts in this country had held
The transaction in this case clearly operated as an equitable assignment of the funds of the drawing bank in the drawee bank to the extent of the amount of the checks drawn by the drawer upon the drawee. When the plaintiff’s agent placed its money in the Salzburger bank for the sole purpose of having it transmitted to the Savannah office of the plaintiff, and with the view of effecting this purpose the bank issued its checks drawn upon its Savannah correspondent, the transaction amounted to an equitable assignment of so much of the funds of the bank in the hands of the Savannah correspondent as was required to pay these checks. This placed the equitable title, if not the legal title, to so much' of the funds in the hands of the drawee, belonging to the drawing bank, as was necessary to meet and pay these checks. The bank received the cash for these checks. This cash went to swell the assets of the then insolvent drawer of these cheeks. Instead of remitting the identical funds received to the plaintiff at its Savannah office, the bank sent its checks to be paid out of its funds in the hands of its Savannah correspondent. It would be inequitable
The cases cited by counsel for the bank are distinguishable from the case which we have in hand.. They refer to transactions which are entirely different from the case at bar. In Schofield Mfg. Co. v. Cochran, 119 Ga. 901 (47 S. E. 208), the deposit was general, and not special. In Spiroplos v. Scandinavian-Am. Bank, 116 Wash. 491 (199 Pac. 997, 16 A. L. R. 181), the facts were insufficient to establish a special deposit, and the funds were not turned over to the bank under an agreement that the bank was to transmit them to Spiroplos at Athens, Greece. In the instant case the deposit was in the nature of a special deposit, and the funds were turned over to the Salzburger Bank for transmission to the plaintiff at Savannah. Furthermore, in the case we have under consideration, the funds turned over to the Salzburger Bank swelled its assets. Other cases cited by counsel for the bank involved merely the purchase of drafts from banks which subsequently to the purchase became insolvent. So we are of the opinion that the fourth count of the petition set forth a good cause of action; that the trial judge did not err in overruling the general demurrer.
We do not think the rulings of the judge upon the various special demurrers require a reversal.
Judgment affirmed.