In a transaction between two banks, the president of one gave
his personal note to the other, accompanied by an agreement of his
bank, signed by himself as president, that the proceeds of the note
should be placed to the credit of his bank by, and remain with, the
discounting bank until the note was paid; while there were certain
transfers of checks between him and his own bank, the record did
not show that the maker of the note personally received the
proceeds thereof, and no contention was made that the agreement was
illegal.
Held that:
Under the circumstances of this case, the discounting bank was
entitled to hold the proceeds of the note, as represented by the
credit given on its books therefor, as collateral security for the
payment of the note and to charge the note against such credit, and
relieve itself from further responsibility therefor.
The receiver of a bank stands in no better position than the
bank stood as a going concern.
144 F. 587 affirmed.
The facts are stated in the opinion.
MR. JUSTICE HOLMES delivered the opinion of the Court.
This suit was brought by the receiver of the Capitol National
Bank of Guthrie, Oklahoma Territory, which we shall call the
Guthrie Bank, to recover the amount of an alleged deposit in the
City National Bank of Kansas City, Missouri,
Page 208 U. S. 542
which we shall call the City Bank. At a trial without a jury in
the circuit court, the facts were found and judgment was given for
the defendant, which judgment was affirmed by the circuit court of
appeals. 144 F. 587. We give an abridgment of the findings of the
circuit court.
The bank examiner had complained of excessive loans by the
Guthrie Bank and especially of three notes for $10,000 each, made,
respectively, by the Missouri, Kansas & Oklahoma Company, the
Wild West Show Company, and the Western Horse Show Company, and had
directed them to be reduced. Thereupon one Billingsley, its
president, who managed its business with the defendant, wrote to
the defendant's cashier, saying:
"I want you to take my note of 30,000.00 and Cr. my Bank with
like amount in a special account, with the understanding that said
account is not to be checked against. My reason for wanting this is
that I have that amount of excessive loans that the Department is
kicking about. . . . You will not be out any money, and loan and
deposit will offset each other on your books."
The Guthrie Bank had a general deposit with the City Bank, but
this, on its face, was a scheme for a separate paper transaction.
The proposal was accepted, Billingsley sent his note, and wrote
saying that he had given the Guthrie Bank his check on the City
Bank for the amount, adding:
"And it is agreed that said [Guthrie Bank] is to keep this 30 Th
with you until note is retired, together with as large a balance as
possible. . . . Chas. E. Billingsley, Pres't."
Billingsley gave the above-mentioned check to the Guthrie Bank,
which credited it to his personal account, in which the bank's
money was kept, as will be stated later. The same day, he gave to
the bank a check against his personal account for the same sum,
which was charged to that account and credited to bills receivable,
and thereupon the three notes objected to by the bank examiner were
taken out of the bank's assets and possession. What became of them
does not appear. It was argued from several circumstances not
necessary to mention
Page 208 U. S. 543
that they were paid by Billingsley, but that fact is not found.
Billingsley does not seem to have been personally liable upon them,
and all that can be said is that the scheme to get them off the
books was carried out. The cashier of the City Bank was away when
the letter with Billingsley's note arrived, and there were
telegrams; after which the City Bank, on September 10 or 11, 1903,
charged the note to bills receivable, the check to Billingsley, and
credited the Guthrie Bank with $30,000 on general account. On
September 14, the cashier, having returned, transferred $30,000 to
a special account, according to the plan. Billingsley was notified,
and all transactions in this matter thereafter were entered by the
City Bank on this special account.
On November 9, 1903, Billingsley's note falling due, the account
was charged with the amount and interest. The same day, a letter
from Billingsley was received, asking an extension. The cashier
replied that they had charged his account with the note, but would
renew it on satisfactory collateral, and returned the note.
Billingsley answered, enclosing a note for $30,000, and requesting
that the former arrangement be continued. In answer to this, the
president of the City Bank wrote that they preferred a demand note,
and that, to satisfy the Comptroller, they would rather that it
should be for $25,000 instead of $30,000. On November 30, 1903,
Billingsley enclosed his note for $25,000 in a letter to the
president, requesting that the proceeds be placed as a special
deposit to the credit of the bank, and repeating the old
agreement:
"It being expressly understood and agreed that this fund is not
subject to check, but is to remain with the City National Bank for
the payment of the note, and you are hereby authorized to charge
this note to said account at any time you desire."
Originally the note was signed "Chas E. Billingsley Pt.," and
the letter with his name, without addition. On December 12 the
president of the City Bank wrote that the note should be signed
individually and the letter as president, and enclosed the letter
for the change. Billingsley admitted the mistake, added "Prest."
to
Page 208 U. S. 544
his signature, and returned the letter, at the same time
authorizing the City Bank to strike off the "Pt." from the
signature on the note, which was done.
On November 30, 1903, in order to make the balance of the City
Bank account on the books of the Guthrie Bank correspond with the
books of the City Bank, Billingsley gave the teller of the Guthrie
Bank his check upon it in favor of the City Bank for $5,000, which
was stamped paid, and the amount credited to the City Bank on the
books of the Guthrie Bank. On December 7, the City Bank credited
the Guthrie Bank with $25,000 on the special account. It credited
two percent interest at the end of each month while the account was
open, and there was a small deduction as the result of the first
stage for interest on the $30,000 note, so that, on April 4, 1904,
the special credit to the Guthrie Bank was $24,994.54. On that day,
the City Bank, having no knowledge that the Guthrie Bank was in a
failing condition, charged the note to the account, returned the
same duly cancelled, and closed the account. Later on the same day,
the Guthrie Bank failed, and went into the hands of a receiver. The
receiver notified the City Bank that the note was not a liability
of the Guthrie Bank and that the City Bank would be held.
There are few other facts needing mention. Statements of account
were made monthly by the banks to each other up to February 1,
1904, and after that, daily reconcilements were made. The
statements of the City Bank showed the special or No. 2 account as
well as the general one, and these were entered in the Guthrie Bank
reconcilement book as No. 1 and No. 2. The Guthrie Bank also
recognized the existence of the special account in corrections sent
to the City Bank. But the whole amount appeared in its general
account. It should be added that the Guthrie Bank was in the habit
of borrowing money by issuing notes and crediting the proceeds to
Billingsley's personal account, the notes being paid by
Billingsley's checks. Billingsley also entered his personal
deposits and drew his personal checks upon the same account. It
should be added
Page 208 U. S. 545
further that, in the circuit court, both counsel agreed that it
was not contended that the contract was illegal because it enabled
a false showing to be made of the condition of the Guthrie
Bank.
The plaintiff, the receiver of the Guthrie Bank, argues that the
foregoing transaction was really a loan to Billingsley, with an
attempted pledge of a deposit of the Guthrie Bank in the City Bank,
and is shown to have been so by the facts that he gave his personal
note, that he gave his check on the City Bank for the amount to the
Guthrie Bank, and that, by means of another corresponding check,
the three notes objected to by the bank examiner were taken out of
its assets and possession. It is added that Billingsley was
interested in two at least of these notes, as he was vice-president
of the companies that made them, and that the entries on the books
and other facts show that they were paid. But, as we have said,
neither legal interest on Billingsley's part nor payment is found,
and we cannot find those facts here.
Generes v.
Campbell, 11 Wall. 193. Leaving them on one side,
the argument for the plaintiff stands mainly on the technicality
that Billingsley, instead of merely writing the letter in which the
agreement was embodied, and having the credit on special account
issued without more to the Guthrie Bank, gave his check on the City
Bank as the means of getting the credit on to the Guthrie Bank's
books. We will deal with these arguments in our own order and
way.
This suit, it will be remembered, is to recover an alleged
deposit, and the first thing to notice is that the whole business,
from beginning to end, was and was intended to be, a mere juggle
with books and paper to deceive the bank examiner. The City Bank
never received anything from the Guthrie Bank, the Guthrie Bank
never parted with anything to the City Bank, or with anything for
the loss of which the City Bank is responsible, if it parted with
anything at all. It would stretch the findings to say that the
Guthrie Bank does not still own the three notes. But, if it does
not, the City Bank had nothing to do with its giving them up. The
supposed surrender was not a consideration to the City Bank, and,
so far as appears,
Page 208 U. S. 546
never was known by it to have taken place. It was a transaction
wholly between Billingsley and his own bank. So far as the
surrender of the notes goes, the parties stand exactly as if that
had taken place without a check, in consideration of Billingsley
making the note on which the credit was given to the Guthrie Bank.
It is said that the Guthrie Bank got the money, but did not get the
benefit of the loan. As between the banks, no one got any money,
and the only benefit of the loan in fact or contemplation was a
swindle upon the bank examiner. If the City Bank should be held, it
would be held without ever having received a
quid pro quo
except in the most narrowly technical sense. The consideration
would be the delivery of Billingsley's note by the Guthrie
Bank.
Again, the alleged deposit was a parol contract made by the
letters of which we have given extracts. There is no other contract
but the one so made. But, by those letters, the City Bank did not
promise to hold $30,000, or at the later stage, $25,000, to the
credit of the Guthrie Bank, out and out. On the contrary, it merely
agreed to credit these sums against the notes which it held, on the
express condition that no checks should be drawn against them, and
that, when the first note matured, or, after the second, whenever
the bank pleased, the notes should be charged against the account
and extinguish it. We perceive no sufficient ground for
substituting a fiction for the only promise the City Bank ever
really made. If the Guthrie Bank had sued while it was a going
concern, it could not have recovered, and the receiver stands no
better than the bank.
This promise, however, the City Bank made to the Guthrie Bank at
the first step of the transaction, and not to Billingsley. The plan
was proposed as a plan for the help of the Guthrie Bank. It
provided from the start for a credit to the Guthrie Bank. At the
moment when the agreement was reached and Billingsley sent his
note, he signed a promise as president embodying the terms. He
corrected the letter with his second note to an official promise in
like form. This meant a promise
Page 208 U. S. 547
by the Guthrie Bank, and shows that the Guthrie Bank, not
Billingsley, was the other party to the bargain. It is true that
Billingsley's personal obligation was given to the City Bank, but
the only reasonable interpretation is that he lent his credit to
the bank, of which he was the leading spirit, to help it to
perpetrate its fraud. It seems to us too plain for further argument
that the contract concerning the credit was made between the banks
at the beginning and governs all that happened later.
The only material thing that happened was Billingsley's drawing
his check on the City Bank for the amount of the loan and
depositing it to his credit in his own Guthrie Bank. Even if this,
as in other cases, was regarded as a deposit of the bank's money,
still it was not quite logically consistent with his contract that
Billingsley should make his check upon the City Bank for money
which it had agreed with the Guthrie Bank to credit to it. But the
check was only a documentary form to justify the entry of a
deposit. To the City Bank, it was immaterial, as the result to less
was the credit to the Guthrie Bank upon the special account and
subject to the terms to which both parties had agreed. The
subsequent check on the Guthrie Bank to the Guthrie Bank was
another documentary form to give a plausible justification for
getting the three notes out of the assets. But with that, as we
have said, the City Bank had nothing to do.
In view of the statement of counsel at the argument to the
circuit judge that they did not contend that the contract was
illegal, a disclaimer repeated to us, and in view of the
possibility that the facts were found as they were with that
agreement in view, we shall not consider that aspect of the case.
It would not help the plaintiff.
McMullen v. Hoffman,
174 U. S. 639. We
are of opinion upon the facts that we have set forth that the
courts below were right.
Judgment affirmed.
MR. JUSTICE WHITE and MR. JUSTICE McKENNA dissent.