DocketNumber: Nos. 5715 and 5689
Citation Numbers: 36 F.2d 736, 1929 U.S. App. LEXIS 2258
Judges: Bryan
Filed Date: 12/19/1929
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/18/2024
These two suits arose out of the failure of the First National Bank of Dublin, Ga. The bank failed to open its doors for business on Monday, September 24, 1928, and later during the same day a receiver was appointed by the Comp.troller of the Currency.
In No. 5715 the facts were these: On September 21, 1928, the appellant railroad
In No. 5689 the facts were these: On September 19,1928, the Dublin hank received for collection a draft drawn by appellee on M. H. Hogan for $4,222.29, which represented the purchase, price of two carloads of cattle. Hogan was acting as agent for E. T. Bames. On September 18, Bames, who was a director and a depositor of the Dublin hank, hut whose account was overdrawn, nearly $1,200, in anticipation of the appellee’s draft, of which he was advised, and in order to provide funds with which to pay it, drew a draft for $6,000, payable to that hank on the Carson Naval Stores Company of Savannah, which the Dublin bank sent for collection to the Eulton National Bank of Atlanta. The Carson Naval Stores Company paid Bames’ draft, and the proceeds were remitted to the Fulton hank, which received them on September 21, and after the failure applied them on the Dublin bank’s indebtedness to it, which was secured by collateral. By the application of the Dublin bank’s balance, and by the sale by the Fulton bank of a portion of the collateral, the debt of the former to the latter was paid, and there has been turned over to the receiver of the Dublin bank collateral of a value greater thau the amount of the appellee’s draft.
On September 22, the day after payment of Bames’ draft was received by the Fulton bank, the Dublin bank accepted Barnes’ cheek for the amount of appellees draft and mailed its own cheek to appellee for a like amount, less exchange, but because of its failure on September 24 that check was not paid.
In No. 5715 it is,not shown that the cheek reached the Savannah hank during banking hours on Saturday, September 22. On the 24th the Savannah bank, at about the hour of opening, and before the check in question had come to its attention, was given notice by the Dublin bank that the latter had failed to open for business pursuant to an order of its board of directors. In banking eireles this notice could only mean that the Dublin bank had failed, and that its check should not afterwards be paid. The appellant was the payee of the check, and could have no right of action upon it against the Savannah bank until the latter had accepted it. Fourth Street Bank v. Yardley, 165 U. S. 634, 17 S. Ct. 439, 41 L. Ed. 855. The check was a mere order for the payment of money, and the maker of it had the right to withdraw the order and stop payment at any time before acceptance. Glennan v. Rochester Trust & Safe Deposit Co., 209 N. Y. 12, 102 N. E. 537, 52 L. R. A. (N. S.) 302, Ann. Cas. 1915A, 441. It follows that in our opinion the decree in favor of the receiver was correct.
In No. 5689 the situation is much the same as it was in No. 5659, Pearson, Receiver, v. Summey & Tolson, 36 F.(2d) 732, this day decided, in which it was held that there had been an equitable assignment of the funds of a failed hank, and that such funds belonged to the drawer of a draft who was able to trace and identify it as his. The appellee in this case was successful in showing that the proceeds of his draft, at the time of the Dublin bank’s failure, were in the Fulton National Bank, and that it subsequently came into the hands of the receiver. Those proceeds did not belong to the Dublin bank. Bames testified that the purpose of his draft was to supply funds with which to pay appellee’s draft. It is true that there is no direct evidence that the Dublin bank treated the proceeds of Bames’ draft as a special fund out of which appellee’s draft was to he paid; but the circumstances could reasonably lead to no other conclusion. The Dublin bank received appellee’s draft, and held it for two days, and until Bames’ draft
The judgment in each ease is affirmed.