290 F. 884 | 9th Cir. | 1923
This is a suit by the Steel Company, appellee, to recover the proceeds of a check from the Spokane & Eastern Trust Company, a banking corporation, called the Spokane Bank, appellant. The Central Bank & Trust Company of Yakima, called the Central Bank, and Farnsworth as director of taxation and examination of the state of Washington, were made defendants, the Central Bank being regarded by the Steel Company as in a trust relationship alleged to exist between itself and plaintiff, while Farnsworth, as director aforesaid, was included because he was liquidating the Central Bank at Yakima as an insolvent bank, and was exercising the functions of a receiver. From a decree in favor of the Steel Company and against the Spokane Bank, the bank appeals.
Shortly before January 19, 1921, the Yakima Hardware Company mailed its check, drawn on the Central Bank & Trust Company, for approximately $47,000, to the Steel Company. The Steel Company, a customer of the Seattle National Bank, received the check, and on January 19, 1921, indorsed it to the order of the Seattle National Bank and delivered it to that bank for collection and deposit to the credit of the Steel Company. On the deposit slip were these words:
“In receiving checks or other items on deposit payable elsewhere, * * * this bank assumes no responsibility for the failure of any of its direct or indirect collecting agents, and shall only be held liable when proceeds in actual funds or solvent credits shall have come into its possession. Tinder these conditions items previously credited may be charged back to the depositor’s account.”
On the same day the Seattle Bank forwarded the check, with other items, by mail to the Central Bank at Yakima, through which it made its Yakima collections. The remittance letter said:
“We inclose for returns the following cash items, which bear this stamp. N. F. 10-7 or similar authority of preceding indorser, or the words No. Fro. Wire nonpayment of items $250 or over. Deliver documents only on payment of drafts attached unless otherwise instructed.”
The Central Bank of Yakima, not being a member of the Yakima clearing house, cleared through the Yakima Valley Bank. The Valley Bank received the items mailed in the letter of the Seattle Bank to the Central Bank, and on January 21st the items, with others aggregating approximately $59,000, were paid to the Central Bank; the Valley Bank retaining about $1,500 on deposit to the credit of-the Central Bank. The Valley Bank turned over to the Central Bank two drafts, one for $45,000, drawn on the Bank of California at Tacoma, and the other for $3,000, drawn on the Fidelity National Bank
Prior to the presentation of the draft, the Spokane Bank learned that the draft upon it had been issued and was outstanding, and charged back to the Central Bank at Yakima certain rediscounts and other paper indorsed by the Central Bank of Yakima, and in this manner sought to apply all the proceeds of the Steel Company check to an indebtedness of the Central Bank. When the Seattle check or draft was presented on January 26th, payment was refused, and afterwards, when demand was made by the Steel Company to pay over the proceeds of the check so received by the Spokane Bank, payment was refused. When the Seattle Bank was advised of the nonpayment of the draft, it charged back to the Steel Company the amount of the check for which the Seattle Bank had given a credit, and the Steel Company never has received any return on account of its check. It is not disputed that the Central Bank & Trust Company of Yakima was "in fact insolvent during January, 1921, and that it was closed by the bank examiner on January 27th thereafter.
Booking to the question whether the Central Bank ever had title to the Hardware Company’s check, sent to it by the Seattle Bank, we are of the opinion that the writings between the remitting bank and the collecting bank at Yakima not only fail to disclose consent to any relationship of debtor and creditor,. but affirmatively show that the relationship became one whereby the collecting bank was a trustee of the proceeds collected. We are also of the opinion that the Central Bank, at the time that it acted in the matter of collection, was insolvent and not in a position to become a debtor of the Steel Company. The rule as established by the weight authority is that where a bank transmits negotiable paper f.or collection and returns, the bank which receives the check and undertakes the collection is the agent of the principal, and becomes a trustee of the proceeds for the owner, and, except where consent is given, the collecting bank cannot avoid such relationship and create that of mere debtor and creditor. Among many cases where the rule is clearly stated are: Holder v. Western German Bank, 136 Fed. 90, 68 C. C. A. 554; Continental Nat. Bank v. Weems, 69 Tex. 489, 6 S. W. 802, 5 Am. St. Rep. 85; Nat. Reserve Bank v. Nat. Bank, 172 N. Y. 102, 64 N. E. 799; Titlow v. McCormick, 236 Fed. 209, 149 C. C. A. 399. Nor is such trust relationship necessarily extinguished by the fact that the collecting
We do not understand Commercial Bank v. Armstrong, 148 U. S. 50, 13 Sup. Ct. 533, 37 L. Ed. 363, as in conflict with the rules stated. There the contract required a settlement between the banks only upon certain days of each month, and under the facts the court concluded that the collections made were not to be placed on special deposit and held until the day for remitting, but were to be treated as a general deposit, the transmitting bank being regarded as a general depositor. The court, however, in considering the proceeds of collections made by subagents, regarded the receiver as a trustee for the proceeds, and held that title to such proceeds remained in the owner, notwithstanding the collection and credit arrangement. The paper had been honored and paid, but the actual proceeds had not been transmitted to the failing bank, nor were they reduced to actual possession; the subagents claiming title to the proceeds. The marked difference between that case and this is that in the one an arrangement showing intention to extend credit was found, while in the other the transaction was intended to be a cash one without extension of credit.
Bowman v. Bank, 9 Wash. 614, 38 Pac. 211, 43 Am. St. Rep. 870, is also relied upon by appellant. The case undoubtedly sustains appellant’s argument to the effect that where there is no special agreement between them, by reference to the general banking custom in Washington, the collecting bank was not to hold the money collected as a special deposit and remit in specie, but was expected to commingle such money with its general funds and make settlement by means of a draft on another bank, and that when the collection is made the relation between the collecting bank and the correspondent.or customer for whom it makes collection is that of debtor and creditor, and not that of trustee and cestui que trust. Hallam v. Tillinghast, 19 Wash. 20, 52 Pac. 329, may also be in accord with appellant’s contention. It would appear that the more recent case of Raynor v. Scandinavian Bank (Wash.) 210 Pac. 499, has modified the earlier decisions, at least with respect to the right to trace trust funds.
But, granting that the appellant is correct in its interpretations of the decisions of Washington, and that a construction of the law of the state should become the rule of decision in a trial in a court of the United States in cases where such rule is applicable, nevertheless it is well established that upon questions of general commercial law the courts of the United States will exercise their independent judgment, and are not bound by the decisions of the courts of the state. In Oates v. National Bank, 100 U. S. 239, 25 L. Ed. 580, in an action concerning a promissory note made and payable within the state of Alabama, the Supreme Court cited earlier cases and upheld that doctrine, saying that it had been “so frequently announced that we need only refer to a few leading cases bearing upon the subject.” Titlow v. McCormick, supra; In re Jarmulowsky, 249 Fed. 319, 161 C. C. A. 327, L. R. A. 1918E, 634.
Whether, before leaving Spokane, Mr. Buckholtz severed his official connection with the Spokane Bank, is not of vital importance. Bet it. stand that he was taken off the pay roll. Even so, no employé could have been more careful of the interests of an employer than was he of the interests of the Spokane Bank. No agent could have given more attentive care to the business of his principal. After Buckholtz went into the Central Bank he had charge of the note pouch and was in almost daily communication with the officials of the Spokane Bank. He handled the rediscounts for the Spokane Bank, selected the paper to be sent to it, was advised by. the Spokane Bank officials as to certain notes to be sent, and gave them detailed advice of the affairs of the Central Bank. In one of his letters to the vice president of the Spokane Bank he wrote that certain notes were in his possession “as agent of the Spokane & Eastern Trust Company.” His authority in the credit department was complete. The president of the Central Bank testified to the effect that Buckholtz was specially charged with the interests of .the' Central Bank in its relations with the Spokane Bank.
On January 17th the Central Bank advised the Spokane Bank that the cash reserve was running from 6 to 10 per cent., and was scarcely more than the cash on hand in the bank as actual collected balances. It is very clear, too, that the cashier of the Central Bank knew all the
“We have a man over there who is looking after things, and things are coming along very nicely.”
On January 24th the vice president of the Spokane Bank wrote that, if conditions continued as they then were the institution would soon be where no one would purchase, and then “it is a case of either closing its doors or getting some one to see it through.” On the 23d of January Buckholtz wrote Mr. Rutter, of the Spokane Bank, that they had mailed a $51,000 draft on the Seattle National Bank, covering a large letter of items on other local banks, the net of which had been remitted to the Spokane Bank. The assistant cashier of the Seattle National Bank testified that on January 27th Buckholtz told him that he (Buckholtz) had discussed the cash remittance letter with the Spokane Bank officers over the telephone, and that those officials knew that the draft was outstanding. The cashier of the Central Bank said that on January 21st the “cash letter” was talked over with Mr. Buckholtz and was seen by him, and that together the two of them decided to send it to Spokane. Buckholtz denied having seen the cash letter, but admitted that on January 21st the cashier of the Central Bank told him of the nature of the letter.
There is also credible evidence that the vice president of the Spokane Bank knew on the 21st by a telephone message of the cash remittance letter. More than this, Buckholtz wrote to him under date ■of the 21st that the bank was without cash, and that it would hold what few pennies could be collected on the Spokane Bank collateral notes. Much more misrht be cited in support of the conclusion that Buckholtz acted as agent of the Spokane Bank, knew that the situation of the Central Bank was hopeless, that he furnished to the officials of that bank knowledge of its insolvency, and-that those officials knew of the collection of the check here involved from the time it was in the hands of the Central Bank until the draft was dishonored by the Spokane Bank. Union Stockyards National Bank v. Moore, 79 Fed. 705, 25 C. C. A. 150; Arnold v. San Ramon Bank, 184 Cal. 632, 194 Pac. 1012, 13 A. L. R. 320. Because of widely differing facts. Fidelity & Deposit Co. et al. v. Kelso (C. C. A.) 287 Fed. 828, has little appositeness to the present case.
As approximately $7,000 of checks held by the Central Bank are not shown to have been held in any trust relationship, it will be presumed that the Central Bank owned these checks, so that the $7,000 should be applied toward the payment of the collections of $9,000 items presented against the Central Bank. Spokane County v. First National Bank, 68 Fed. 979, 16 C. C. A. 81; Raynor v. Scandinavian-American Bank, supra; Empire State Surety Co. v. Carroll County, 194 Fed. 593, 114 C. C. A. 435. The check involved was approximately $48,000, and the amount of the drafts of the Central Bank was also $48,000, but with items to which trust relationship attached the aggregate was $51,000. Apparently about $3,000 of it was lost in the clearance, and in this way the Steel Company lost about one-seventeenth of the total amount of its check. Accordingly, it had judgment for sixteen-seventeenths of- the amount of the check. This appears to be just. Cragie v. Hadley, 99 N. Y. 131, 1 N. E. 537, 52 Am. Rep. 9; Foster v. Rincker, 4 Wyo. 484, 35 Pac. 470.
The question of preference as against general creditors need not be considered, for the reason that the Steel Company does not seek to establish a trust upon the funds in the hands of the liquidator of the Central Bank. The Steel Company has a right to reach funds which never passed into the possession of the receiver or liquidator, in that they had been transmitted to the Spokane Bank before the liquidator took charge. It may be said, however, that, even if-the proceeds had passed into the hands of the liquidator, doubtless the Steel Company could pursue them. Raynor v. Scandinavian-American Bank, supra.
Our judgment is that a serious injustice was done to the Steel Company, and that the District Court was correct in ruling that it was entitled to recover as allowed in the decree.
Decree affirmed.