Benton Co. Savings Bank v. First National Bank
Benton Co. Savings Bank v. First National Bank
Opinion of the Court
Plaintiff is a state bank, doing a general banking business at the town of Norway, and defendant is a national bank, doing business at Lake Mills, in Winnebago county. At all times material to our inquiry one P. M. Joice was the president and active manager of the defendant bank, and one J. H. Picka-rt was cashier, and had the active manage
The negotiations with reference to the notes opened with a letter written on bank stationary bearing the defendant bank’s letter head, as follows: “April 16,1907. J. EL Pickart, Norway, Iowa — Dear Sir: I have two notes as follows: One for $3,000 due January 10th drawing 7 per cent, and another for $2,500 due November 10th drawing 7 per cent. Can you use these on my guarantee on a six per cent, basis ? The paper is perfectly good. Yours very truly, P. M. Joice, President.” Doubtless in response to a statement that plaintiff would take the $3,000 note, this letter was written by Joice: “April 25th, 1907. J. H. Pickart, Cashier, Norway, Iowa — Dear Sir: . . . I now enclose note, N. Jessen, dated April 10, 1907, due January 10, 1908, at 7 per cent, interest from date, with my personal guarantee which you are to carry at 6 per cent, interest. Kindly remit $3,000 to the Continental National Bank of Chicago for the credit of the First National Bank of Lake Mills, Iowa, and please remember to send this note to me or notify me at least ten days before due and I will have this remitted for without any exchange or charge of any kind to you. Yours very truly, P. M. Joice.” Parenthetically we may say that all the correspondence down to January 10,
The notes, so far referred to, were all genuine, and were apparently made payable to Joice, who indorsed and guaranteed the same. Several other letters passed between the parties between this date and the next letter, with reference to partial payments, etc., and on May 26, 1909, the following letter went to plaintiff’s cashier: “May 26, 1909. J. H. Pickart, Cashier, Norway, Iowa — Dear Sir: I have just been going over some unfinished stuff and I find your several letters among this lot. I would now like to clean up the whole busi
In payment for these notes plaintiff bank remitted $4,200 to the Continental Bank of Chicago for the credit of the defendant bank, and on July 6, 1909, upon receiving credit advices from the Chicago bank,- this amount was charged to that bank upon the books of the defendant bank, and the same amount thereafter credited to the individual account of Joice; of this latter transaction plaintiff had no knowledge. It appears that none of the notes which plaintiff bank purchased was ever entered upon the books of the defendant bank, and they did' not bear the bank numbers — of neither of these facts
Plaintiff brought this action to recover the amounts advanced by it on the Ramsey, the Jessen, the Larson, and Oppedal notes, amounting in the aggregate to $4,307.54 and 6 per cent, interest thereon from December 1, 1910. Defendant denies all liability on any of the notes for the reason that the entire transaction was with Joice personally, and not with the bank; that it had no notice or knowledge of Joice’s negotiations of the notes and no authority as a national bank to indorse, guarantee, or in any manner become responsible upon Joice’s notes and papers.
The questions presented are largely of fact, with the rules of law very well settled, although counsel do not agree in the application of these rules. The initial inquiry is, Were the transactions in question or any of them personal with Joice, or were they with Joice for and on behalf of his bank, the defendant herein? It will be noticed in the first place that Joice himself was not personally acquainted with any of the officers or directors of the plaintiff bank, and that.the correspondence was begun by a letter signed by Joice as president of the defendant bank. Again, until Joice left the bank in January of the year 1910, all his correspondence with
As against these and other circumstances in the record tending to show that all the transactions in question were with defendant bank, or with Joice, as a representative of the bank, defendant contends that the correspondence shows that plaintiff was dealing with Joice individually, and not as an officer of the bank; that in some cases it remitted to Joice individually for the notes; that as the notes did not bear any bank number plaintiff had notice that the transactions were not with the bank, but with Joice individually; that plaintiff had a special and individual contract with Joice as to the interest charges, which fact put it upon inquiry as to the actual ownership of the notes; that after it discovered the spurious character of some of the notes, and after Joice left defendant bank, it wrote to Joice, demanding payment, thus recognizing that the deals were with him (Joice) individually; that defendant bank had no knowledge whatever of the transactions save as it might be implied from the fact that Joice was its agent, but that notice will not be implied under such circumstances because of the fraud perpetrated
In this connection, we may well quote the rules of law applicable to such circumstances as announced in the recent «ase of State v. Bank, 139 Iowa, 338, as follows:
The several notes and warrants were negotiated by La Rue as president of the Corning bank. That he acted with, such apparent authority that the bank was bound thereby appears from Griffin v. Erskine, 131 Iowa, 444, and Martin v. Well, 110 U. S. 7 (3 Sup. Ct. 428, 28 L. Ed. 49). La Rue, though president, was the chief executive officer of the Coming bank, and the Des Moines bank had the right to rely upon him as representing his bank in negotiating the paper. It may be that he appropriated the proceeds of these notes (probably he did) ; but that was not the lookout of the Des Moines bank. It dealt with him as an officer and representative of the Corning bank as it had the right to do, and without notice of any want of fidelity in the discharge of his duties as its executive officer. Having armed him with apparent authority to represent it in transacting business appropriate to the proper discharge of its corporate functions, the bank or the receiver standing in its shoes cannot be heard to complain as against those who in good faith and without notice dealt with him as its representative. In such a case the doctrine obtains that, where one of two innocent persons must suffer through the misfeasance of an agent of one, that one who has placed the agent in a position to perpetrate the fraud must suffer. City National Bank v. Thomas, 46 Neb. 861 (65 N. W. 895). It is urged, however, that the condition of the paper was such that in connection with the magnitude of the business intervener was charged with notice. In the light of present knowledge there would be little difficulty in detecting the spurious paper negotiated by La Rue ostensibly for the Coming bank. Thus the numbers on the notes were irregular, the numbers of the later being smaller than those of an earlier date, and others bearing numbers of too great disparity, and there was marked similarity between the signatures attached to the forged paper. But, as the notes were received at different times, the officers of the Des Moines bank, unless their suspicions were aroused, would not be likely*721 to notice the irregularity in the numbering, or to compare the numbers on each note received with those previously purchased, nor to make such comparison of signatures. Its officers knew nothing of the signatures of the persons whose names purported to be attached to the notes, nor of the Corning bank’s system of numbering the same. Necessarily it must have been purchased on the faith and largely in reliance on the representations made. The magnitude of the transactions-would not necessarily put the Des Moines bank on inquiry, for each was plausibly and reasonably explained by La Rue.
Going again to the testimony, we are constrained to hold from the letters which we have set forth, from other letters appearing in the record, which are even stronger than those quoted, from the oral testimony given by the officers of the plaintiff bank, that plaintiff believed it was purchasing the notes in question from the defendant bank, acting through its official head and managing officer, Joiee; that while it took' Joiee’s personal guaranty this in no manner indicated' that. it was dealing with him individually; that while it wrote Joiee after it became suspicious of the paper, asking him to make the paper good, it had a right to do so, and from such fact no inference should be drawn that it regarded the entire transaction personal with Joiee. In this connection it appears that plaintiff also wrote the defendant bank about the same matters.
Another significant fact appearing from the record is that after defendant batik discovered the delinquencies of its president, and after a cheek had been placed upon his powers, the final 'transaction with reference to the $4,200 referred to in the letter of June 26, 1909, occurred, and defendant’s officers, although cognizant of the transactions or some of them, and with full knowledge that the $4,200 had been placed to the credit of defendant bank with the Continental Bank of Chicago, permitted a transfer of this credit to the individual account of Joiee. It was willing to take the money, although it knew plaintiff was advancing it as if it were a bank transaction and to credit it to the account of
We have already quoted the first letter with reference to the discount of notes, but the initial correspondence between these parties was a letter of March 8, 1907, written on a letter head of defendant bank, reading as follows: “Lake Mills, Iowa, March 8, 1907. J. H. Pickart, Cashier, Benton County Savings Bank, Norway, Iowa — Dear Sir: Your letter of the 7th received this morning and we inclose our certificate for $3,000. Please remit said amount to the Continental National Bank of Chicago for our credit and oblige. Yours very truly, P. M. Joice, President. ’ ’ This letter clearly refers to a bank transaction, and it was the first matter of business which passed between the two banks. In most instances the purchase price of the notes was passed to the credit of the defendant bank in Chicago as per Joice’s directions; but in a few instances the payment was in the form of a draft, sent directly to Joiee. Again, on February 28, 1908, the defendant bank, in response to a letter written to it by plaintiff, sent plaintiff the following letter: “2-28 1908. J. H. Pickart, Cashier, Norway, Iowa — Dear Sir: Your letter dated 27th is at hand. Our President Mr. Joice has been giving your matters his
After a careful examination of the entire record, we are constrained to hold that the decree of the district court is correct, and that it should be Affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Benton Co. Savings Bank v. First National Bank of Lake Mills, Iowa
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- 1 case
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- Published