158 S.W. 566 | Tex. App. | 1913
The appellee, I. A. Bundy, brought suit in the district court of Hemphill county, Tex., against the appellants, D. J. Young, Robert Moody, Thomas F. Moody, R. A. Moody, and Jim Moody, who it is alleged were a partnership and owned and operated a private banking institution, known as the Bank of Glazier; that on the 28th day of November, 1910, there was deposited to appellee's credit subject to check, in said bank, the sum of $200 by the Farmers' National Bank of Marshal, Okla.; that at various times after the deposit, and before the 1st of November, 1911, the appellee called at said bank upon B. P. Seeger and L. C. Freeman, officers of said bank, and inquired about said deposit, and each time he was informed that the deposit was not received. On November 1, 1911, appellee made demand on the said bank for the money deposited, but the bank refused to pay the same or honor his check; that subsequent to repeated demands by appellee appellants sold the bank and are enjoying the fruits and profits of the same, and yet still fail and refuse to pay appellee his debt of $200 or any part thereof, and are bound and liable to pay appellee the said sum of $200, together with damages for the use of same at the rate of 6 per cent. per annum, and prays for judgment for said amount and damages.
The appellants plead general denial, and that the $200 was not received as a deposit. Prior to the 28th day of November, 1910, appellee delivered to the bank of Glazier a certain deed to property in Marshal, Okla., to be delivered to the purchaser thereof, upon the payment of $200, with the understanding and agreement that the $200 was to be returned to said bank gratuitously and without compensation, received said deed, and forwarded the same and collected the said $200 in the due course of business and without compensation, acting in law only as a gratuitous bailee of the said $200; that after receiving the money the bank in good faith paid out such sum on a check signed by I. A. Bundy December 5, 1910, and that according to custom the bank mailed the same out to Bundy by due course of mail; that Bundy was not at the time of receiving the money a regular customer of the bank, and that the bank had used reasonable care and diligence, and was not therefore liable to appellee. Trial was had before the court without a jury, and judgment rendered for appellee against appellants for the sum of $200, with interest thereon as damages from the 1st day of February, 1912, in the sum of $11.80. The civil jurisdiction of the county court of Hemphill county had been transferred to the district court of said county, and hence suit was filed in the district court. Where a suit is for the conversion of money if damages are allowed, it must be in the form of interest. Commercial Bank v. Jones,
The material facts as established by the judgment of the trial court are: The appellee, I. A. Bundy, owned a lot in the town of Marshal, Okla. The Christian Church of that place contracted to purchase the property from Bundy for the sum of $200. At that time appellee was living with E. Y. Ogilby, a director in the bank of Glazier, who had appellee employed as a common laborer on his farm, and whose place was in Beaver county, Okla., near La Kemp, about 45 miles from Glazier. Some time in the summer or fall of 1910, appellee made a deed to the property and left it with the bank of Glazier, with instructions to hold the deed until the money was paid, and instructed the bank when the money came to place it on deposit to his credit. It appears the first deed drawn was defective, which was returned to the bank of Glazier, to have corrected. The bank notified appellee to that effect by writing him it La Kemp, and in response to the notice appellee went into the town of Glazier a few days later and corrected the deed, but in response to a demand for the abstract declined to furnish it. The court found, and there is evidence upon which the finding can be supported, that appellee never received *568 notice that the deed had been accepted and the money received for the lot by the bank of Glazier, and placed on deposit to appellee's credit in appellants' bank. The money was remitted to the bank of Glazier about November 28, 1910, by a cashier's check by a bank at Marshal, Okla. Two hundred dollars was paid by the Glazier bank on a check for $200, purporting to be signed by appellee, I. A. Bundy, payable to one Z. O. Bain, December 5, 1910. This party could not be found or located. There is no testimony showing where the check was given, but it is the impression of the witnesses that it originated somewhere in Oklahoma, and passed through the First National Bank of Houston, the First National Bank of Amarillo, and the First National Bank of Canadian. This check could not be traced further than the Houston bank for the reason that, in accordance with its custom, it destroyed the records of the transit papers of cash items, such as the item in question. The court below found that the check for $200, payable to Z. O. Bain and purporting to have been signed by I. A. Bundy, was a forgery. There is evidence in the record supporting this finding. The facts show that appellee called upon the bank of Glazier some time in April, 1911, and asked the assistant cashier, Mr. Seeger, if they had heard from the collection. Seeger told him he knew nothing about it, and that he would have to see Mr. Freeman, the cashier, who at that time was out of the bank. He went back in May, at which time Freeman told him he had never heard from it, and he guessed the deal had fallen through. Appellee says he first learned the money had been sent to the bank when he went to Marshal, Okla., nearly a year after the money had been sent to the bank, and after he had paid the taxes on the lots. The bank at that place exhibited to him the returned cashier's check remitting the money and the indorsements thereon, showing its payment, and then gave to appellee a letter showing he had been to see about the matter. In February or March, 1911, E. Y. Ogilby, at whose place appellee was then living, at the request of appellee, called on Freeman, the cashier, for the papers turned over to him by appellee to the property in Marshall. At that time Freeman told the witness the papers were there, and that he would get them and turn them over to the witness before he left town. Again at La Kemp, before Freeman went out of the bank, on a trip up to that place by Freeman, he again told Ogilby the papers were in the bank, and he would get them for him. In January, 1912, Ogilby examined the books, and found the records of the bank in 1910 showing the receipt of the money on the 28th of November, and the books then showed, as they do now, such fact. It appears from the testimony that the money was sent to the bank by cashier's check on November 28, 1910, and entered on the books as a deposit credit in favor of appellee, and was checked out December 5, 1910. At that time Freeman was on a vacation and the cashier's position was filled by a Mr. Harris, who was then assisted by Seeger. Afterwards, some time in July or August, 1911, Freeman's connection was severed with the bank, and Harris soon thereafter succeeded him. Ogilby nor appellee either examined the bank books at either of the times they asked about the papers, or requested that they be permitted to do so. Ogilby states he could have done so for at the time he was a director in the bank. The court finds that there was no notice given appellee of the receipt of the money by the bank, nor that it mailed to appellee the check purporting to have been given by appellee. Harris and Seeger both testified that they duly mailed same out to appellee, but upon cross-examination they show they only testified to the usual course of their business methods, and had no independent recollection of mailing out the statements or the deposit slip, and were not certain which one actually attended to it. The appellee Bundy testifies positively he received no such notice, and did not receive the check on which the money was paid out. We think there are facts warranting the finding of the court to the above effect. Prior to this transaction, appellee had no account with the bank, and this is the only transaction with the bank by appellee. The signature of the appellant was not taken at the bank except on the deed executed by him to the lots. He did not offer to leave his signature with the bank, nor did the bank request him to do so.
Appellants contend that the deposit in the bank was a special deposit, and therefore a bailment, and did not establish the relation of debtor and creditor or banker and customer, and therefore appellants were not liable except for negligence in paying out the money upon the forged check, if it was such. If the deposit was only a special deposit, and did not establish the relation of banker and customer, the care required of appellants in such case was only ordinary care. A special deposit is the placing of something in the charge or custody of the bank of which specific thing restitution must be made. Morse on Banks and Banking (4th Ed.) §§ 183 and 190; Duncan v. Magetee,
The judgment is therefore affirmed. *570