190 N.E. 383 | Ohio | 1934
A purely legal question is presented for determination. Is the relator entitled to receive from the respondent the bonds pledged by The Union Trust Company as security for deposit of relator's funds when the indebtedness of the relator to the trust company is in a sum larger than the amount of such deposit? Or, putting the proposition in another way, can a deposit of public funds, representing moneys derived from taxation, be applied by a bank against past due obligations owed to it by the political subdivision which is the owner of such deposit?
The relator argues with much force that under Section
The respondent is equally insistent that the relator is in no different position in respect to these funds than an individual or a private corporation, and that the general rules relating to set-off govern. *196
In the case of Fidelity Casualty Co. v. Union Savings BankCo.,
Again, in the case of Ward, Treas., v. Fulton, Supt. ofBanks,
An examination of numerous authorities convinces us that these holdings express the majority view.
Thus, in State v. First State Bank of Alliance,
"Intervener contends that county funds, derived from the collection of taxes, are trust funds in the hands of the county treasurer; that a bank receiving same for deposit, with such knowledge, must account for the same as trust funds, and that claims for such trust funds are entitled to payment before the payment of claims of other depositors."
Answering this argument, the court continues:
"Clearly the statute authorizes the county treasurer to place the county funds in his hands in depositary banks on general deposit and provides for taking security therefor. The title to the moneys or other *197 credits deposited passes to the bank and may be used by it as other funds deposited in the bank. It follows that the bank did not hold the deposit as a trust fund, * * *."
The rule of most general adoption appears to be that where there is an authorized general deposit of public funds in a depository, the transaction is in effect a loan creating the relationship of debtor and creditor, and such public funds are not entitled to preference under the claim that they constitute a trust. 18 Corpus Juris, 579; 3 Ruling Case Law, 555, 521; 22 Ruling Case Law, 223; Phillips v. Yates Center National Bank,
Our next inquiry is, what is the situation, as in the instant case, where a depository containing public funds derived from taxation seeks to apply these funds on a matured obligation owed it by the depositor of such funds?
The answer to this question involves the principle of set-off, which is thus defined in 24 Ruling Case Law, at page 792: "Set-off, both at law and in equity, must be understood as that right which exists between two parties, each of whom, under an independent contract, owes an ascertained amount to the other, to set-off their respective debts by way of mutual deduction, so that, in any action brought for the larger debt, the residue only, after such deduction, shall be recovered."
It is said in 5 Ohio Jurisprudence, at page 456: "Ohio statutes secure the right of set-off between parties sustaining the relation of debtor and creditor between whom there are cross demands, and those existing between banks and their customers are not ex-copied *198 from its operation. A bank may, therefore, apply a deposit of its debtor, or such portion thereof as may be necessary, to the payment of the debt due, * * *."
And see 3 Ruling Case Law, 488; 7 Corpus Juris, 653.
What has been said applies unquestionably to individuals; but is the rule the same when public bodies tire involved? Our answer is in the affirmative.
The first case to which it is desired to call attention isUnited States v. Bank of the Metropolis, 40 U.S. (15 Pet.), 377, 392,
"When the United States, by its authorized officer, become a party to negotiable paper, they have all the rights, and incur all the responsibility of individuals who are parties to such instruments. We know of no difference, except that the United States cannot be sued. But if the United States sue, and a defendant holds its negotiable paper, the amount of it may be claimed as a credit, if, after being presented, it has been disallowed by the accounting officers of the treasury; and if the liability of the United States upon it, be not discharged by some of those causes which discharge a party to commercial paper, it should be allowed by a jury, as a credit against the debt claimed by the United States."
The Supreme Court of Pennsylvania in the case of GeorgesTownship v. Union Trust Co.,
In Board of Drainage Commissioners v. City National *199 Bank of Paducah, Ky.,
Also, sustaining the principle that a deposit of public funds can be applied by a bank to the payment of a matured obligation due the bank, are the cases of Hemphill v. Florida NationalBank (5th C.C.A.),
The latest and strongest case found supporting the position of relator is that of Township Committee of Piscataway Township
v. First National Bank,
There is a vigorous dissenting opinion in the last-named case, in accord with the majority holdings cited above.
In the present case the funds of the relator, no matter from what source derived, when deposited in The *200 Union Trust Company under the depository agreement, lost their identity and became a part of the general funds of the trust company, which it could use accordingly. The ordinary relationship of debtor and creditor was created between the bank and the relator, and the rights of the relator were no greater and no different than those of an individual depositor. Therefore, the trust company was entitled to apply the deposit of relator in part satisfaction of the past due obligations which the relator owed it. The funds of the relator were no more sacred than those of any other depositor.
Having failed to establish its right to the bonds in question, the writ prayed for by the relator will be denied.
Writ denied.
WEYGANDT, C.J., ALLEN, STEPHENSON, JONES, MATTHIAS and BEVIS, JJ., concur.