198 Iowa 946 | Iowa | 1924
— The Bank of J. Kelso was a private bank, located in the town of Bellevue, Iowa. On October 10, 1922, in an action brought by private parties, a receiver was appointed for said bank, who qualified as such. In due time, appellee filed its claim against said bank, alleging that it is a municipal corporation, organized under the laws of the state of Iowa, and alleging that, prior to the said 10th day of October, 1922, said corporation had deposited in the said bank, to its credit, the sum of $12,644.43, and that said amount was due and owing from said bank to the said corporation, and praying that the said claim be established as a preference, and that priority of payment of the same be decreed.
Appellant answered the claim of appellee, and admitted the corporate capacity of appellee; that the bank was a private bank, owned by a copartnership; and that, at the time of the appointment of the receiver, appellee “had a general credit deposit in the'said Bank of J. Kelso.” It is also alleged in the answer that the said appellee, prior to and at the time of the closing of the bank, was “a general creditor of said Bank of J. Kelso;” and it is alleged that the deposits as made by appellee in said bank were general deposits, and that, at the time of the closing of the bank, the books showed a general credit in favor
To this answer by appellant, appellee filed a demurrer, on the grounds that the facts stated in the answer show the appointment of a receiver, and that the copartnership constituting said bank is indebted to appellee in the amount set out in its claim, by reason of the deposit alleged and admitted to have been made, and that it affirmatively appears that said sum is due appellee as a municipal corporation of the state of Iowa. The demurrer to the answer was sustained; and, the receiver electing to stand on his answer and on the ruling on the demurrer, judgment was entered establishing appellee’s claim as a preferred claim and directing the receiver to pay the same accordingly.
It is to be noted at the outset that the bank in question is a private bank, and that the receiver was appointed under the general provisions of the statute relating to the appointment of receivers. Appellee claims its'right to a preference in the payment of its claim under the provisions of Section 3825-a, Code Supplement, 1913 (Code, 1924, Section 12719), which provides that, when the property of any person, partnership, company, or corporation has been placed in the hands of a receiver for distribution, after the payment of all costs, claims entitled to priority of payment shall include “debts due or taxes assessed and levied for the benefit of the state, county, or other 'municipal corporation in this state.”
If the deposit in the bank in the name of appellee is a debt due to a municipal corporation of this state, then the claim was entitled to priority, under the language of this statute. We have recently had occasion to discuss this statute and its effect in the ease of In re Receivership of Marathon Sav. Bank, 198 Iowa 692. It is unnecessary that we repeat the discussion in the opinion in said case.
It is contended in the instant case that the deposit was made by the town treasurer, and not by appellee.as a municipal corporation. The difficulty with appellant’s position at this point is twofold. The funds are, in fact, the funds of the municipal corporation, and they were deposited in the. name of the
It is argued that there is no showing that the amount so on deposit was “a debt due to the municipality.” The argument is that the deposit by tlie municipality in the bank was not a debt, and, furthermore, that a general deposit of this character was not “due” until after demand had been made for the payment of the same. That such deposit is a debt, within the meaning of this statute, is decided in the Marathon case, supra.
The bank was insolvent, and a receiver had been appointed. Its assets were sequestered and placed in the hands of the receiver. The debt which the bank owed the municipality on a general deposit was due, within the meaning and contemplation of this statute, at the time the claim of appellee was filed. The question as to the right of the town treasurer to deposit municipal funds in the bank is not involved in this appeal. The answer admits that the funds were deposited by the municipality, and that the municipality itself was a creditor of the bank. We are not concerned, in this appeal, with the question of the liability of the treasurer personally, or of the sureties on his bond to the municipality.
If there are inconsistencies in the statute in permitting certain public officials to deposit public funds in banks and requiring bonds to be given for such deposits, and the provisions of the statute making' such deposits preferred claims, at the instance of the municipality, these are matters for the considera-: tion and determination of the legislative branch of the government. We are compelled to construe the statute as we find it, and when it ‘is so construed, under the allegations in the instant
In view of the allegations of the answer, it is unnecessary that we pass upon the question as to whether the treasurer of the town had a right to deposit the funds in question in the bank, and as to whether or not they became a trust fund. Under the admitted facts, the deposit was made by the municipality in its own name, and it was the creditor of the bank. In other words, the facts as pleaded bring the case squarely within the provisions of the statute.
The order of the district court was in accordance with the statute, and, under the facts as set forth in appellant’s answer, the decree of the district court was correct. It therefore must be, and it is, — Affirmed.