Source: https://supreme.justia.com/cases/federal/us/114/224/
Timestamp: 2019-04-20 16:17:22+00:00

Document:
The declaration of a cashier of a national bank concerning a disputed payment of money into the bank to take up a note left there for collection may be used by the plaintiff in a suit against the bank to recover the amount received by it from the sale of collateral held as security for the payment of the note -- if the declaration was made at the time of the transaction, or in response to timely inquiries by parties interested.
It is within the scope of the general authority of the cashier of a national bank to receive offers for the purchase of securities held by the bank and to state whether or not the bank owns securities which a customer wishes to buy.
A statement by the cashier of a national bank that the bank is not the owner of a security in his manual possession as cashier is within the line of his duty, and is admissible in evidence against the back as the act of its authorized agent.
A letter signed by a cashier of a national bank on official paper of the bank respecting the transaction which forms the subject of the controversy, written to a party to the transaction and while it was going on, is admissible in evidence in a suit against the bank.
On an issue whether a deceased party had furnished money to pay a note, it is not allowable to attempt to show that for more than a year previous, he had been hopelessly insolvent and had experienced great difficulty in procuring means to meet his obligations.
A creditor of a person having possession of property of the debtor cannot, without judicial process, and against the debtor's will, sell the property and apply its proceeds to the payment of his debt.
This was an action brought by defendants in error against plaintiff in error to recover the value of thirty certificates of shares in the bank of the plaintiff in error owned by defendants' intestate in his lifetime and sold by the bank after his death. The facts are stated in the opinion of the Court.
The only issue in the case was found by the jury for the defendants in error. The judgment should therefore be affirmed unless the court, in the progress of the trial, committed some error to the prejudice of the plaintiff in error. This the latter insists was done.
The first assignment of error relates to the admission in evidence of certain declarations of F. H. McClure, the cashier of the plaintiff in error.
shares of the capital stock of the bank standing in his name upon its books, represented by two certificates, one for twenty and the other for ten shares; that on the day just mentioned, he made his note for the payment, six months after date, to the order of F. A. McClure, of $2,600; that he attached the certificate for twenty shares to this note as security for its payment, and through the medium of the payee, McClure, who was the cashier of the plaintiff in error, the note was discounted by one James K. Hyde, and that the remaining ten shares were deposited with the plaintiff in error, and held by it for safekeeping and not for any other purpose; that on Monday morning, October 23, 1876, McMillan died, and that on the afternoon of that day, McClure, the cashier, having heard of the death of McMillan, sold his thirty shares of stock to E. H. Munger for $4,200, and credited that amount to McMillan on the books of the bank.
"Q. What conversation did you have with McClure subsequent to this -- subsequent to leaving said note for collection -- with reference to that certificate? (twenty shares)."
"A. He told me he had full power to transfer it at any time on the books and apply it to the payment of the note."
"Q. What was said to you by McClure at the time of the payment of the note, in reference to this certificate of twenty shares?"
that I should hold the certificate of deposit until an administrator was appointed, when an arrangement might be made for its purchase. . . ."
"Q. What statement did McClure make to you at the time of the payment of the note, as to who was making payment?"
"A. He said the payment was made from money which was sent there by McMillan. He told me the money was left there the Wednesday previous."
"Q. Was any statement made to you by McClure with reference to this certificate of stock after McMillan's death in reference to Mrs. McMillan; if so, what?"
"A. He told me after McMillan's death that she preferred to keep the stock. . . ."
"Q. How long after the talk on Wednesday after McMillan's death till the other talk in which McClure told you Mrs. McMillan wished to keep the stock?"
"A. Two months, I presume."
"Q. Where did the latter take place?"
"A. In the bank; they all took place there."
The ruling of the court in allowing these questions and answers to be read to the jury notwithstanding the objection of the plaintiff in error is now assigned for error. Its contention is that it furnished the money to pay McMillan's note for $2,600, held by Hyde, for which the certificate for twenty shares was pledged, and that it thereby, on the delivery of the certificate to it by Hyde, became entitled to the possession thereof as security for the note. The defendants in error insist that the money to take up the note held by Hyde was paid by their intestate, McMillan.
The plaintiff in error complains that upon this issue the statements of McClure, its cashier, made several days after the alleged payment of the note by McMillan, were admitted to show such payment, and insists that this was error on the ground that the declarations of an agent concerning a past transaction cannot be given in evidence to bind this principal.
"Whatever an agent does or says in reference to the business in which he is at the time employed and within the scope of his authority is done or said by the principal, and may be proved as if the evidence applied personally to the principal."
American Fur Co. v. United States, 2 Pet. 358.
It is because the declaration of an agent is a verbal act and part of the res gestae that it is admissible, and whenever what he did is admitted in evidence, then it is competent to prove what he said about the act while he was doing it. Mechanics' Bank of Alexandria v. Bank of Columbia, 5 Wheat. 336; Cliquot's Champagne, 3 Wall. 114; Cooley v. Norton, 4 Cush. 93; Hannay v. Stewart, 6 Watts 487; Garth v. Howard, 8 Bing. 451.
Applying these principles, we think the testimony objected to was properly admitted. The declarations of McClure were made, so the record states at the time that he paid Hyde the amount of the note. They were therefore clearly a part of the transaction, for Hyde, being the holder of the certificate of stock as collateral security for the note, was entitled to know by whom the payment of the note was made, so as to decide whether to return the certificate to McMillan or turn it over to the bank, or if it was left with the bank, in what capacity the bank took it, whether for its own security or as agent for McMillan.
The declarations of McClure were made to Hyde in explanation of the payment of the money to him, and was therefore admissible as a part of the act of payment. The declarations of McClure, in reference to the purchase by Hyde of the twenty shares of stock, were made at the same time, and as they were offered as tending to show by whom the money to pay the McMillan note was furnished, they were also a part of the transaction, and on that ground admissible.
The plaintiff in error contends that a conversation which took place two months after the payment of the note, between McClure and Hyde, in reference to the purchase by the latter of the twenty shares of stock, was wrongly received in evidence.
But it plainly appears from the record that this second conversation was part of a treaty between McClure and Hyde, commenced on the Wednesday after McMillan's death, when the McMillan note was paid for by the purchase of the twenty shares of stock by Hyde. It was offered to show by the declarations of its cashier that the bank did not, when the declarations were made, claim any general or special property in the stock, but in effect admitted it to be the property of the estate of McMillan. The declarations made by an officer or agent of a corporation, in response to timely inquiries, properly addressed to him and relating to matters under his charge, in respect to which he is authorized in the usual course of business to give information, may be given in evidence against the corporation. Bank of Monroe v. Field, 2 Hill 445; McGenness v. Adriatic Mills, 116 Mass. 177; Morse v. Connecticut River Railroad Co., 6 Gray 450; Abbott, Trial Evidence 44.
As cashier, McClure had charge of all the money, securities, and valuable papers of the bank. Wild v. Bank of Passamaquoddy, 3 Mason 505; Franklin Bank v. Steward, 37 Me. 519. It was his duty to surrender securities pledged for the loans of the bank upon payment of the loans. Fleckner v. United States, Bank, 8 Wheat. 360. And although he might not be authorized to dispose of the securities of the bank without the order of the directors, yet it was within the scope of his general authority as cashier to review offers for their purchase, and to state whether or not the bank owned securities which a customer wanted to buy. This naturally fell within his duty as the executive officer of the bank and the custodian of its assets. His statement to a person who was in treaty to purchase, that the bank was not the owner of a certain security in his manual possession as cashier, was clearly within the line of his duty, and was therefore binding on the bank. We think there was no error in admitting in evidence the declarations of McClure.
"A. HIRLING, Prest. Capital, $120,000. F. A. McCLURE, Cash"
"XENIA, O., Oct. 16, 1876"
"DEAR SIR Mr. Mc's letter of 14th to hand, and in reply I enclose the Marshall note cancelled. I have the ctf. in my possession, and have some prospect for raising some money on same. Will write again soon; nothing new; all well."
"secured by ten shares of said stock, and that McMillan procured the surrender of the stock, giving mortgage security in lieu thereof, he desiring to use said stock in bank."
The plaintiff in error assigns for error the admission of the letter in evidence, on the ground that it was but a fragment of a correspondence; that there was nothing to show that it was written for the bank, and that it was only a letter from McClure, and not from him as cashier.
But there is nothing in the record to indicate that there were any other letters that had passed between the parties. The face of the letter shows that it had reference to the Marshall note, and very probably to the ten shares of stock which had been pledged by McMillan as security therefor, and of which he had procured the surrender, so that he might use it in bank. The letter was written upon the paper of the bank, and by the person shown to be its cashier, and it appears with reasonable certainty to have referred to the business of the bank. The court was therefore right in not excluding it from the jury.
previous to his death McMillan had been "hopelessly insolvent," and had experienced "great difficulty in procuring means to meet his interest obligations." The defendants in error objected to this evidence. It was ruled out, and the plaintiff in error now assigns its exclusion as error.
The purpose of the evidence was to prove that McMillan had not furnished the money to pay his note for $2,600 held by Hyde. The evidence offered was inadmissible because too remote and conjectured. The law requires an open and visible connection between the principal and evidentiary facts and the deductions from them, and does not permit a decision to be made on remote inferences. United States v. Ross, 92 U. S. 281; Carter v. Pryke, Peake 95; Hollingham v. Head, 4 C.B.N.S. 388; Jackson v. Smith, 7 Cowen 717; Baird v. Gillett, 47 N.Y. 186; Thompson v. Bowie, 4 Wall. 463. In the case last cited, where the issue was whether certain promissory notes dated on a particular day were given for money lost at play, testimony was offered to prove that the party giving the notes was on the day of their date intoxicated, and that when intoxicated he had a propensity to game. It was held that the evidence was properly excluded.
The evidence offered in the present case was too weak and vague to contribute to an intelligent decision by the jury of the question in issue, namely, whether McMillan had paid his note. It is common for both solvent and insolvent men to pay some of their debts and to leave some unpaid. Proof of the insolvency of a debtor is no more competent to show nonpayment than proof of his solvency is competent to show the payment of his debts. These two kinds of proof stand on the same footing. The latter kind has been held to be incompetent. Hilton v. Scarborough, 5 Gray 422. The insolvency and pecuniary embarrassment of a person may be shown as evidence that he has not paid all his debts; but they do not tend to show that he has not paid a particular debt. We think the evidence of the insolvency of McMillan was properly excluded.
"Had you any information, from any source, of any money being received at the bank on or about the Wednesday preceding McMillan's death from McMillan?" Having put the question, counsel for the plaintiff in error stated that they expected the witness to answer it in the negative.
The court excluded the question, and its action is assigned for error.
The inadmissibility of both the question and the answer, had the answer been given, is obvious. The question called for the information which from any source might be in the possession of the witness, and not for his knowledge. An answer detailing the hearsay statements of others, whether verbal or in writing, made at any time or place, would have been responsive. The objection to the question was well taken, and the court was right in excluding it.
Upon the authorities already cited a negative answer to the question would have been too vague and conjectural to be admitted as evidence. It did not appear but that many payments of money might have been made to the bank without the knowledge of the witness. It was not shown what his duties were, whether to receive or pay out money; it was not shown that he was in the bank on or about the Wednesday when the payment by McMillan was alleged to have been made; it was not shown that if the payment had been made by draft or certificate of deposit sent to the bank in a letter, it would have passed through his hands. On the simple statement that he was teller, and engaged in the discharge of his duties as such during the year 1876, we think that his answer that he had no information of any payment made by McMillan does not rise to the dignity of evidence, and was properly excluded.
The plaintiff in error contends, lastly, that upon the pleadings, and notwithstanding the verdict, it was entitled to judgment.
The ground of this contention is that as it was admitted in the pleadings that McMillan was indebted to the bank at the time of his death more than the value of his stock, and as the stock was in the possession of the bank, endorsed by McMillan in blank, the law would make the application of its value to the payment of the indebtedness.
"when upon the statements in the pleadings one party is entitled by law to judgment in his favor, judgment shall be so rendered by the court, though a verdict has been found against such party."
No motion for judgment, notwithstanding the verdict, appears to have been made in the circuit court. If this Court could now consider this assignment of error, we think it does not furnish a ground for the reversal of the judgment.
It was settled by the verdict of that jury that the plaintiff in error did not hold the stock of McMillan as security for his indebtedness. The contention of the plaintiff in error therefore comes to this: that a creditor, who has possession of the property of his debtor, as his agent or trustee or bailee, may, without reducing his debt to judgment, and without the process or order of any court, and without the consent and against the will of the debtor, sell or otherwise dispose of the property, and apply its proceeds to the payment of his debt. We do not think the law gives a creditor any such right.

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