97 Iowa 423 | Iowa | 1896
“Hold -Fast to the Right. The -Telegraph wants to add a word to what it has repeatedly said about the*426 creditors of the Cass County Bank keeping right on their side, not violence. The dispatches which have recently gone forth from Atlantic to the metropolitan dailies, do injustice in presuming a strong desire to violence. They want their money or justice. Think of it! Hundreds of thousands of dollars belonging to an honest, hard-working people, swept away, — worse than swept away. It has been squandered and sequestered by men in whom they placed a superb confidence. This crime has phases worse than robbery, worse than burglary, worse than the operations of the bunco bandit or faro dealer. These men feel that their money has been wrung away from them by the arts of thievery in the guise of friendship. The amount of these losses is startling, and the creditors feel that the money has been used in private schemes and extravagancies. This is exasperating. The amount of the loss is exasperating, the character of the loss is exasperating. But, still, these creditors, smarting under the method and Extent of their robbery, want no violence. They want every cent available. They want justice. They’ll have justice. One other thing: It has been said that this failure would hurt Atlantic and community for a long time. That is not so.”— Atlantic Telegraph.
“Great excitement was created Saturday morning by the currency of the rumor that the president of the defunct bank, J. C. Tetzer, was preparing to leave the city. A mob of two hundred persons, quickly gathered at the depot to intercept his escape. As the train was pulling out, the cry was raised, that Tetzer had been smuggled on board. The train was stopped after it had got out of the yards, and detained for ten minutes, while a search was made. It was the limited, and a great' protest'was made-by the trainmen. Their search was fruitless, and Tetzer was shortly afterward found 'in a box car, where he had concealed*427 himself, and the crowd yelled to hang him.” — Press Dispatch.
III. The point is made, that appellant’s motion in arrest of judgment, should have been sustained, because Haven, who made the deposit, for the receipt of which the indictment was returned, knew the bank was insolvent, and hence was not deceived or defrauded. We need not determine what would be the effect of such knowledge when making a deposit, for the reason that no such fact appears in this case. It does appear, that on the nineteenth day of December, 1898, Haven bought three drafts from the bank, which were afterward returned protested, and were never paid, and that the deposit in question, was made on the twenty-seventh day of the same month; but when the drafts were returned, so that he had .knowledge of the insolvency, does not appear.
“1824. No bank, banking house, exchange broker, deposit office, or firm, company, corporation, or party, engaged in the banking, broker, exchange or deposit business, shall accept or receive on deposit, with or without interest, any moneys, bank bills, or notes, or United States treasury notes, or currency, or other notes, bills or drafts circulating as money or currency, wthen such bank, banking house, exchange broker, or deposit office, firm or party, is insolvent.
“1825. If any such bank, banking house, exchange broker, or deposit office, firm, company, corporation or party, shall receive or accept on deposit any such deposits as aforesaid, when insolvent, any officer, director, cashier,, manager, member, party, or managing party thereof, knowing of such insolvency, who shall knowingly receive or .accept, be accessory, or permit or connive at the receiving or accepting on deposit therein, or thereby, any such deposits as aforesaid, shall be guilty,” etc.
VTTT- It is thought that the jury was swayed by passion and prej udice. The record does not so indicate.
Some of the questions argued are not to be considered, because of the condition of the record as to the evidence. There is a stipulation, by which it appears that certain affidavits, relied upon to sustain