1. The relation between a bank and a depositor is that of debtor
and creditor. P.
286 U. S.
261.
2. A savings depositor of a national bank, pursuant to
conversations with his bank's officer, increased his account by
deposit in the usual
Page 286 U. S. 255
way to an amount sufficient to pay for some bonds which the bank
had undertaken to purchase for him. Thereafter the officer told him
that he had his bonds, and handed him a charge slip showing the
cost, including principal, accrued interest, and commission. The
total was charged against the depositor's account, and was credited
as a "deposit" in a "bond account" appearing on the bank's books.
When the bank soon afterwards closed its doors, it was discovered
that in fact no bonds had been purchased, ordered, or received for
the depositor.
Held that no trust had been created, and that the
depositor continued to be a general creditor. P.
286 U. S. 263.
52 F.2d 821 reversed.
Certiorari, 285 U.S. 531, to review the affirmance of a judgment
against the receiver of a bank in a suit for money alleged to have
been held by the bank on a trust.
Page 286 U. S. 258
MR. JUSTICE STONE delivered the opinion of the Court.
Respondent brought suit against the petitioner, receiver of the
First National Bank of New Bern, North Carolina, an insolvent
national bank, to recover money alleged to have been paid to the
bank upon trust for the purchase, for respondent, of United States
bonds. Judgment of the United States District Court for the Eastern
District of North Carolina for respondent was affirmed by the Court
of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit. 52 F.2d 821. This Court granted
certiorari.
The case was tried to the court without a jury, and the facts
are not in dispute. Respondent maintained an interest-bearing
Page 286 U. S. 259
savings account with the bank, in which his credit balance on
October 14, 1929, was $1,961.31. Shortly before that date,
respondent had had conversations with an officer of the bank in the
course of which the latter signified the willingness of the bank to
purchase $4,000 of United States bonds for respondent. On October
10, he stated to respondent that the bank would send to Richmond
for the bonds, and asked him to bring to the bank on the 14th such
amount, in addition to his credit balance, as would be required to
pay for the bonds. On the latter date, respondent drew a check for
$2,100 upon another bank, which he deposited in his savings
account, thus increasing his deposit balance to $4,061.31. On the
15th, the same officer of the bank informed respondent that the
bonds had been ordered, and, on the 19th said to him, "I have your
bonds," and handed to him a charge slip which stated:
"This is to advise you that we have this day charged your
account as follows:"
4,000 Fourth L. L. 4 1/4% Bonds . . . . $3,960.00
Acc. Int. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .60
Commission. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4.00
---------
$3,964.60
On October 21 the bank charged respondent's savings account on
its books with $3,964.60, and credited a like amount as a "deposit"
in a "bond account" appearing on its books. The bond account
contained only a daily record of credits in the account of checks
and deposits and their total, without any reference to respondent
or any other customer of the bank. The nature and purpose of the
account does not otherwise appear. When the bank closed its doors
on October 26, it was discovered that, in fact, no bonds had been
purchased, ordered, or received for the respondent. The only
transactions had with respect to respondent or his account were the
conversations
Page 286 U. S. 260
with the officer of the bank and the entry of the debit and
credit items mentioned.
On these facts, the District Court concluded that the bank had
received the $3,964.60 in trust for the purpose of purchasing the
bonds, and that, as the funds in the hands of the receiver had been
augmented by the wrongful commingling of the trust fund with the
other funds of the bank, respondent was entitled to payment in
preference to the general creditors of the bank. The Court of
Appeals thought that the trust arose only on the 19th, when the
bank stated that respondent's account had been charged with the
purchase price of the bonds, but reached the same conclusion as
respects the increase of the funds in the hands of the receiver and
the right of respondent to preferential payment.
The petitioner insists, as matter of law, that no trust ever
came into existence as the result of these transactions. He also
relies on the facts that the $2,100 check credited to respondent's
account had been included in a clearing house settlement of the
bank with a correspondent, and its proceeds in the form of a draft
for the balance due upon the settlement had been indorsed and
turned over by the New Bern bank to a third bank in settlement of
its account with the latter. From this it is argued that the check
did not augment the bank's funds, and that the proceeds could not
be traced into the hands of the receiver; hence, as to them, the
respondent could not be preferred over general creditors.
As we conclude that petitioner's first position is well taken,
it is unnecessary to consider the second. It would have been
equally competent for respondent to have provided for the purchase
of the bonds either by the creation of a trust of funds in the
hands of the bank, to be used for that purpose, or by establishing
with it a credit to be debited with the cost of the bonds when
purchased. But only if the former was the method adopted could
respondent,
Page 286 U. S. 261
upon the bank's insolvency and failure to purchase the bonds,
recover the fund or its proceeds, if traceable, in preference to
general creditors.
See Minard v. Watts, 186 F. 245;
Fallgatter v. Citizens' National Bank, 11 F.2d 383;
Northern Sugar Corp. v. Thompson, 13 F.2d 829.
The relationship established between the bank and respondent by
his savings account was, from its inception, that of debtor and
creditor, and the credit balance of $1,961.31 in respondent's
account on October 14 represented the amount of the bank's
indebtedness to him.
Planter's Bank v. Union
Bank, 16 Wall. 483,
83 U. S. 501;
Phoenix Bank v. Risley, 111 U. S. 125;
Manhattan Co. v. Blake, 148 U. S. 412,
148 U. S.
425-426.
Although there had been anticipatory talk of the purchase of
bonds, and the bank's officer had stated that they would be
purchased, nothing said or done before the 14th purported to carry
out the proposal or to alter the relationship established by the
savings account. On that date, respondent's credit balance was
augmented by the deposit of the $2,100 check, made in conformity to
the usual course of business with respect to deposit accounts.
Respondent obviously did not alter the debit and credit
relationship with respect to the $1,961.31 balance by asking the
bank to purchase bonds, or by handing to the bank the deposited
check of $2,100. All that happened on that date was inconsistent
with any purpose to create a trust of the check or its proceeds,
and showed unmistakably that the amount of the check, as in the
case of any other deposit in the savings account, was to be added
to the existing balance and treated like it. In making the deposit,
respondent used the customary form of deposit slip, and, in
accordance with its instructions, the deposit was credited by the
bank in the usual manner, both in his passbook and in his savings
account on its own books.
Page 286 U. S. 262
After the deposit of the check, as before, the bank remained a
debtor and the respondent a creditor for the amount of the credit
balance.
The situation thus created continued without change until the
19th, when the bank's officer advised respondent that the bonds had
been purchased. If the advice was true, as respondent believed it
to be, he was then called upon to pay to the bank the amount of the
purchase price, and the bank proceeded, with the assent of the
respondent, to liquidate the supposed obligation by charging his
savings account with the exact amount of the stated purchase price,
with interest and commissions added. We can find in this method of
discharging a supposed obligation no hint of an intended alteration
of the debtor and creditor relationship, with which respondent had
been content from the beginning, to that of trustee and
cestui
que trust.
The court below thought that the legal consequence to be
attributed to the debiting of the account with the supposed
purchase price of the bonds was the same as if the respondent had
cashed a check for the amount and had then proceeded to hand the
money back to the bank under a specific agreement between him and
the bank that the money was to be held as a special fund for the
sole purpose of completing the purchase. This view is not without
support.
See Davis v. McNair, 48 F.2d 494;
State v.
Grills, 35 R.I. 70, 75, 85 A. 281;
Northwest Lumber Co. v.
Scandinavian American Bank, 130 Wash. 33, 225 P. 825;
State v. American Exchange Bank, 112 Neb. 834, 201 N.W.
895.
See, contra, Beard v. Independent District of Pella
City, 88 F. 375, 381;
Mark v. Westlin, 48 F.2d
609;
First National Bank v. Williams, 15 F.2d
585;
Howland v. People, 229 Ill.App. 23;
Miller v.
Viola State Bank, 121 Kan.193, 246 P. 517;
People v.
Merchants' & Mechanics' Bank of Troy, 78 N.Y. 269;
Hecker-Jones-Jewell Milling Co. v. Cosmopolitan Trust Co.,
242 Mass. 181, 136 N.E. 333.
Page 286 U. S. 263
Such a procedure, if actually carried out, might afford a basis,
which is lacking here, for the inference that respondent, no longer
content with the role of creditor, had sought to establish a trust
fund. But the mere debiting of his account, without more, for the
reimbursement of the bank for the obligation which it was supposed
to have incurred or paid, lends no support to such an inference.
The cancellation of the credit balance by the debit neither
suggests any intention to establish a trust nor points to any
identifiable thing which could be the subject of it.
The debit entry may be disregarded, because respondent's assent
to it was procured by a false statement, but the only consequence
is that his status as a creditor is unaffected, and he is entitled
only to share in the funds of the bank on an equal footing with
other creditors who similarly are the victims of its
insolvency.
Reversed.