On October 23, 1896, the Fourth National Bank of Grand Rapids sent by mail to the Mecosta County Savings Bank, for collection, a number of items, consisting of checks drawn by various persons upon the latter bank, amounting to $3,197.17. No money was received by the Mecosta Bank upon the checks, but they were charged upon the books of the bank against the several and respective drawers. On October 27, 1896, the Mecosta Bank sent to the Grand Rapids bank a draft for $3,194 upon its correspondent in New York, the Hanover National Bank, which, on October 28th, it forwarded to the Hanover National Bank. On receipt of this draft, the Hanover National Bank refused payment, on the ground that the Mecosta Bank had made an assignment for the benefit of creditors, and on October 30th returned the draft. At this1 time the Mecosta Bank had a credit of $4,638.82 with the Hanover Bank, which sum has since been paid to the receiver of the Mecosta Bank. The petitioner, the Fourth National Bank, asks that the receiver be directed to pay its claim, on the ground that it is a preferred creditor, and, has appealed from an order denying the prayer in its petition. -The claim is based upon two propositions: First, that there was a trust fund, arising from the collection of the checks, which came to the hands of the receiver; second, that the receipt of the draft amounted to an equitable assignment of the fund in the Hanover Bank, to that amount.
There is not entire harmony in the authorities upon this subject. Where there are circumstances of a special nature indicating an intention to make money received upon a collection a special deposit, such money has sometimes been held to be a trust fund, and the trust attaches to any actual fund into which the money received can be traced; and there have been cases which seem to go so far as to hold that this extends to all of the property of the bank, although it be evident that the actual fund into which the money was traced has been exhausted, and notwithstanding the fact that what remains could not, by
The question has arisen in this State several times. It was held in Sherwood v. Central Michigan Savings Bank,
Counsel rely upon the case of Fourth Street Bank v. Yardley,
The order of the learned circuit judge is affirmed, with costs.
