108 Neb. 129 | Neb. | 1922
This is a controversy between A. P. Ackerman, receiver of the American State Bank of Aurora, Nebraska, an insolvent corporation, and James R. Parney, claimant.
In a proceeding by the state of Nebraska to wind up the affairs of the bank, Parney filed a claim' for proceeds of lands sold by him through the agency of the Wentz Company, asserting the rights of a depositor and charging that Charles W. Wentz, managing officer of both the bank and the Wentz Company, collected for him his purchase money
Questions of fact, of agency and of imputed knowledge are presented by the appeal and require a more detailed statement of the case.
James R. Farney, claimant, owned two farms in Hamilton county and sold them through the agency of the Wentz Company. Between February 28, 1920, and March 15, 1920, Wentz received from the purchasers for claimant the proceeds of the sales and deposited them in the bank to the credit of the Wentz Company. On its checks the bank paid out the purchase money of claimant. When the bank failed the account of the Wentz Company was overdrawn more than $20,000. There was owing to claimant at the time purchase money to the extent of $38,719.35. He did not authorize', the deposit in the name of the Wentz Company, nor did he direct the bank to accept it as a deposit. Neither did he instruct the bank to make disbursements on the checks of the Wentz Company. In connection with these transactions he was not guilty of fraud or deceit or wrongdoing of any kind, but his demands for the balance of the proceeds of his farms, though traced in the form of trust funds from the purchasers through Wentz and the Wentz Company into the bank, have been unavailing. Shakesx>eare would have pleaded the defense of the bank in this language:
*131 “Thou can’st not say I did it; never shake Thy gory locks at me.”
The American State Bank commenced business as a commercial enterprise March 8, 1918. An officer of the state took charge of it in an insolvent condition March IT, 1920, and was succeeded by Ackerman, receiver, May 11, 1920. The bank has not since been open for the transaction of a general banking business.
The Wentz Company was a corporation dealing in real estate, farm loans, mortgages and insurance.
Charles W. Wentz was vice-president and managing officer of the bank. It had a president in name only. It had a cashier, but he recognized Wentz as the superior officer and deferred to him. In some capacity Wentz had exclusive control and management of the Wentz Company. He owned all of its stock and for practical purposes was the company itself. The business of both corporations was generally transacted in the same building with Wentz the controlling spirit in both enterprises. The transactions of the corporations were more or less intermingled. The bookkeepers in the bank kept the books for the Wentz Company. The two corporations occupied the same room and used the same counter, the same vault and the same safe. Each paid half the office rent. The officers of the Wentz Company were officers of the bank. There was no public sign to identify the corporate hand that accepted funds for the Wentz Company or manipulated the business devices used by Wentz in disbursing funds for the bank.
For the purpose of escaping liability for the disbursement of claimant’s money on the checks of the Wentz Company, the receiver argues that Wentz and his company were the agents of claimant; that it was no part of the duties of Wentz, as an officer of the bank, to represent claimant in collecting and disbursing the, proceeds of the sales; that, in transacting business for claimant, Wentz and the Wentz Company did not act for or in the interests of the bank; that Wentz was not the sole representative of
Wentz was the dominant force in the bank. When he spoke his utterance was the law of the bank. When the cashier made a deposit slip, effective for the purpose of crediting claimant’s money on the books of the bank to the account of the Wentz Company, the cashier’s act was the act of Wentz. If the cashier did not get a peremptory order to make the deposit slip when he received from Wentz the checks for claimant’s purchase money, he acted pursuant to a business custom of Wentz which required funds belonging to clients of the Wentz Company to be deposited to its credit in the bank. In either case the will of Wentz was supreme and the act of the cashier was the mere impression of Wentz’s power. The bank received and accepted these funds. This was an act of the banking eorporation and could be performed alone by a representative of the bank. Wentz offered the purchase money for deposit to the credit of the Wentz Company and at the same time accepted it for the bank through its cashier. Claimant had no authority to select for the bank an agent to receive and accept a deposit from himself or from any one else. The receiving and the accepting of claimant’s deposit, therefore, were not independent acts of the cashier, but were banking acts of Wentz as vice-president and manager*, operating through the cashier in this respect as a mere instrument of the former’s will. Notice to the banking corporation, through its cashier, that Wentz deposited to the credit of the; Wentz Company and accepted for the bank trust funds of the former’s clients was unnecessary, because Wentz, the managing officer, was the bank itself for practical business purposes and he knew all about the facts. The finding that Wentz was the sole representative of the bank is the only proper conclusion from the evidence on this issue.
The receiver also contends that the bank and Earney never entered into the relation of banker and depositor.
There is no error in the record, and the judgment is
Aeeirmed.