234 F. 613 | 9th Cir. | 1916
The appellee Sundquist brought this suit in the court below against the receiver of the United States National Bank of Centralia, state of Washington, to recover $1,296 alleged to have been deposited by the plaintiff in the action with the defendant bank under an express agreement between the parties that the bank would pay it to one Izella J. Smith in satisfaction of a note executed to her by one Gustafson for $1,200, upon which there was also then due $96 in interest, secured by a mortgage upon certain lands, and under which agreement the said money was not to be used by the bank for any other purpose. Gustafson and Miss Smith were also made parties defendant to the action, both of whom, however, at the trial disclaimed any interest in the fund in question.
The evidence in the case is very brief, and there is no substantial conflict in it. It shows that on August 31, 1914, the appellee Sundquist had on deposit in the bank $3,000, for which he held three certificates of deposit in equal amounts. Gustafson, the maker of the note and mortgage to Miss Smith, was his son-in-law, and he wished to pay off that indebtedness. On the day mentioned he went to the bank, taking with him two'of the certificates of deposit, aggregating $2,000, had them canceled, received from the bank $604 in cash, a new certificate of deposit for $100, and directed the bank to pay to Miss Smith the remaining $1,296 upon the cancellation of the note and mortgage, which the bank agreed to do, its vice president, Gilchrist, executing to Sund-quist this receipt:
“Centralia, Wash., 190 — .
“Received from John E. Sundquist twelve hundred ninety-six dollars, a/c mortgage, Walter Gustafson to Izella J. Smith, $1,200.00 & int. $96.00.
“O. S. Gilchrist, Y. P.
“$1,296.00.”
On the same day the bank prepared this certificate of deposit, which, however, was not delivered but was retained by it:
“The United States National .Bank.
“Centralia, Wash., Aug. 31, 1914.
“No. 12215.
“Izella J. Smith has deposited in this bank twelve hundred ninety-six dollars, $1,296.00, payable)to the order of herself — on return of this certificate properly indorsed.
“U. S. National Bank, J. W. Daubney, Cashier.
“Not subject to check.
“[In pencil] From Walter Gustafson.”
“Centralis., Wash. September Fourth, Nineteen Fourteen.
“Izella J. Smith, Olympia, Wash. — Dear Madam: Mr. Walter Gustafson of Rochester has deposited $1,296.00 with us to pay a certain note and mortgage held by you. We would ask that you forward the same direct to us will), a proper release and we will be pleased to be of service in effecting settlement.
“Very truly yours, O. S. Gilchrist, Vice President.”
Before the matter was consummated the bank failed, having on hand, according to the testimony of Gilchrist, between $20,000 and $30,000 in cash when it closed. Miss Smith having disclaimed any interest in the $1,296.00, the question is whether the court below was right in giving Sundquist judgment for that sum as against the general creditors of the bank. We think the judgment right.
“All deposits,” said the Supreme Court in Marine Bank v. Fulton Bank, 2 Wall. 252, 256 (17 L. Ed. 785), “made with bankers may be divided into two classes, namely, those in which the bank becomes bailee of the depositor, the title to the thing deposited remaining with the latter, and that other kind of deposit of money peculiar to the banking business, in which the depositor, for his own convenience, parts with the title to his money, and loans it to the banker ; and the latter, in consideration of tho loan of the money and the right to use it for his own profit, agrees to refund the same amount, or any part Giereof, on demand.”
Manifestly the $1,296 left by Sundquist with the bank of which the appellant is receiver, to be paid over to Miss Smith upon her cancellation of the note and mortgage executed to her by Gustafson, was not of the latter character, but, on the contrary, was deposited with the bank for that specific purpose, and under the express agreement of the bank to execute the purpose. It was in no sense a loan by Sund-quist to the hank of $1,296, and the bank did not owe him that sum or any other amount by reason of that transaction, but held it in trust for the purpose stated. The obvious result is that it did not pass to the general creditors of the insolvent bank, and on the failure of the latter to execute the trust, for whatever reason, the owner of the money is legally and justly entitled to its recovery.
A case directly in point is that of Montagu et al. v. Pacific Bank et al. (C. C.) decided by Judge Morrow and reported in 81 Fed. 602, where a number of authorities are cited in support of his conclusion, which need not be repeated here.
The judgment is affirmed.