Billingsley v. Pollock
Billingsley v. Pollock
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the court.
In Ryan v. Paine, 66 Miss., 678, we held that parties who sent a claim to a bank “ for collection,” which the bank collected by taking the check of the debtor on itself, the debtor having no money in the bank, but merely becoming the bank’s debtor by this overdraft, after the insolvency of the bank was declared, had the right to treat their debtor as still such, and enforce their claim to what he owed tbe bank for account of this transaction.
In Kinney v. Paine, 68 Miss., 258, we held that parties who had sent their claim to an insolvent bank for collection, and which it collected by a check on itself by the debtor, who had no funds in bank, could follow and reclaim their own in the hands of the receiver. We are well pleased with these decisions, and re-affirm the obvious principle supporting them, but are, unwilling to establish the proposition that a correspondent of a bank, whose claim it has collected and failed to pay over, has an equitable lien on all the assets of the bank, securing precedence over all other creditors of the bank. Some of the courts so hold, but we will not follow their lead to this absurd result. It is enough to allow the correspondent who sends his claim to a bank “ for collection ” to pursue and reclaim his own, without depriving others of their rights. There is no such magic in the word “ trust” as to convert all the assets of a bank into a fund, to secure one who deals with it for convenience of collecting claims, in preference to others who trust it and deal with it.
The maker of the hote collected, in this case, was discharged, for she paid it. True, she did not have the money
Affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Lizzie A. Billingsley v. W. A. Pollock, Receiver
- Cited By
- 11 cases
- Status
- Published
- Syllabus
- Bank. Collection. Commingling of assets. Trust. Where a bank, having a note for collection, receives payment by check on itself of one having ample funds on deposit, whose account it debits, and, after thus mingling the collection with its general assets, remits therefor its New York check, but fails, and passes into the hands of a receiver, its check being dishonored, the owner of the note has no lien on. the assets of the bank, and cannot enforce priority of payment out of the same. Ryan v. Paine, 66 Miss., 678, and Kinney v. Paine, 68 lb., 258, distinguished.