123 Neb. 358 | Neb. | 1932
In a proceeding in the district court for Saunders county to wind up the affairs of the Farmers & Merchants Bank of Weston, an insolvent banking corporation, the First National Bank of Wahoo as claimant and intervener presented a petition for the recovery of a trust fund of $100 payable in full out of bank assets in the hands of the receiver, in preference to claims of depositors and other creditors. The receiver had previously rejected the trust-fund theory of intervener, but had ranked and allowed its claim in the class with preferred depositors and holders of exchange. The claim arose in the following manner: April 14, 1930, A. H. Thege went into the Farmers & Merchants Bank of Weston, and, though not a. depositor, legally turned over to it the equivalent of $100 in money and received therefor a cashier’s check on that bank for $100. April 15, 1930, he presented the cashier’s check to the First National Bank of Wahoo, now claimant and intervener, and received therefor $100. The Farmers & Merchants Bank of Weston went into the hands of the receiver and never paid the cashier’s check. The plea of intervener is that the $100 represented by the cashier’s check went into the Farmers & Merchants Bank, was never withdrawn, is now in the hands of the receiver
The essential facts are not in dispute. There are now precedents for the following rules: A check on a bank does not operate as an assignment of funds therein to the amount of the check, a former rule to the contrary having been changed by statute. Comp. St. 1929, sec. 62-1606; State v. State Bank of Belvidere, 122 Neb. 797. By purchasing a cashier’s check, bank draft or certified check, the purchaser usually becomes a creditor of the bank and the holder of exchange, and not the beneficiary of a trust, in absence of special circumstances creating the relation of trustee and beneficiary. State v. State Bank of Belvidere, 122 Neb. 797; State v. First State Bank of Alliance, ante, p. 23. These rules, when applied to the undisputed facts, require a finding that intervener did not make a case entitling it to payment in full on the basis of a trust fund in the hands of a receiver. Intervener’s claim was properly classified by the receiver. The judgment of the district court is reversed and the cause remanded for a decree conforming to this opinion.
Reversed.