Court Opinion

ID: 8796296
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-11-26 14:12:07.174049+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T17:03:38.812466
License: Public Domain

WOUVERTON, District Judge
(after stating the facts as above).
[1 ] This is the second appeal. Counsel for appellant here say:
“We again desire to present our contention that the cheeks in question were in legal effect negotiable instruments, payable to bearer, and that no liability resulted to the defendant bank in paying the checks as they did, even though the money was in the end misappropriated by McCoy to his own use.”
And they rely upon the provision of 2 Rem. & Bal. Code, § 3400, subd. 3, which reads:
“A bill of exchange is payable to bearer: ‘When it is payable to the order of a fictitious or monexisting person, and such fact was known to the person making it so payable.’ ”
It- is urged, therefore, that the checks' in question were, in a legal commercial sense, payable to bearer, imputing knowledge of the fact that the checks were payable to a fictitious person to the government, because it is assumed McCoy was its agent so to issue the checks. Thus predicating their argument, counsel further rely upon Phillips v. Mercantile National Bank of New York, 140 N. Y. 556, 35 N. E. 982, 23 L. R. A. 584, 37 Am. St. Rep. 596, which it must be conceded is an analogous case, if counsel’s premises are well founded. But there is this obvious distinction between that case and this: The government is a party here, and not a private person, and the government had, through its Treasury Department, promulgated Department Circular No. 102, of which the defendant, being a national depository, was bound to take notice, and it must be assumed had knowledge, in the following language :
“Any cheek drawn by a disbursing officer upon moneys thus deposited must be in favor of the party, by name, to whom the payment is to be made, and payable to ‘order,’ ” with certain exceptions not material to the inquiry.
McCoy was a disbursing officer of the government, and of this fact the defendant also had knowledge. Thus it follows that the paper in ■question cannot be considered or treated as payable to- bearer, so far. as the defendant is concerned, it being a government depository acting and operating under the regulation above quoted, and the case of Phil-Tips v. Mercantile National Bank of New York, supra, is wholly without application.
[2] When the case was here upon the former appeal, this court held that the knowledge of McCoy was not to be imputed to the government, and in the end decided the very question that is now again insisted upon against the contention of counsel. United States v. National Bank of Commerce, 205 Fed. 433, 123 C. C. A. 501. A decision so rendered becomes the law of the case, and the litigant will not again be heard, upon a subsequent appeal, to urge the same question. Nor will the court again entertain his. suit in that relation.
“It has been settled by the decisions of this court,” says the Supreme Court, “that after a case has been brought here and decided, and a mandate issued to the court below, if a second writ of error is sued out, it brings up for revision nothing but the proceedings subsequent to the mandate. None of the questions which were before the court on the first writ of error can be reheard or examined upon the second. To allow a second writ of error or appeal to a court of last resort on the same questions which were open to dispute on the first would lead to endless litigation. In chancery, a bill of *682review is sometimes allowed on petition to tlie court; but there would be no end to a suit if every obstinate litigant could, by repeated appeals, compel a court to listen to criticisms on their opinions, or speculate on chances from changes in its members.” Roberts v. Cooper, 20 How. 467, 481, 15 L. Ed. 969.
So it was said by Mr. Chief Justice Strahan, in Kane v. Rippey, 22 Or. 299, 301, 29 Pac. 1005, 1006:
' “Upon a second appeal, the opinion of the court upon the former appeal, so far as the same facts appear, becomes the law of the case and governs and controls the parties and the court in every subsequent step in the cause.”
To the same purpose see Corning v. Troy Iron & Nail Factory, 15 How. 451, 465, 14 L. Ed. 768; Martin v. Hunter’s Lessee, 1 Wheat. 304, 355, 4 L. Ed. 97; Powell v. D., S. & G. R. R. Co., 14 Or. 22, 12 Pac. 83; Portland Trust Co. v. Coulter, 23 Or. 131, 31 Pac. 280; Stager v. Troy Laundry Co., 41 Or. 141, 68 Pac. 405.
[3] Another question presented by defendant here is whether it is entitled to credit as against the government for moneys paid out by McCoy, if he paid any such, in disbursement on legitimate claims incurred through his agency; it being claimed that the money sued for in the action, or some part of it, at least, was so disbursed by McCoy. But it can hardly be maintained, in any event, that the defendant is entitled- to such moneys, or any part of them, until there is an accounting between McCoy and the govertiment and there is found to be a balance due from the government to him. No such accounting was possible in the present controversy. The question was presented by a requested instruction, which was- denied.
[4] Another proposition advanced is that the government has ratified the acts of McCoy in drawing the money from the defendant bank in the manner he did, or at least as to $5,718 thereof, and that, the .government having elected to treat the money as government funds, it is now estopped to proceed against the bank, on the hypothesis that the money was the property of the bank. The contention arises in this way: McCoy was prosecuted by the government for embezzling its funds, namely, $5,718, being part of the very funds sued for. It is claimed that, prior to süch withdrawal by McCoy, they were not the' funds of the government, but of the bank, by reason of the fact that they had been deposited with the bank, and that thenceforward the government and the bank occupied the relationship of depositor and debtor; the bank becoming and being indebted to the government only, ■and not a holder of the public funds. So that, when the government was willing to treat the money withdrawn as its money, it ratified what McCoy did in withdrawing it through checks drawn to fictitious payees, and pretending to indorse them with the fictitious payees’ names, and thus it has relieved the bank of all obligation.
Answering the contention, the very simple and obviously reasonable and common-sense view of the situation is that the bank was the depository of public moneys, to be drawn upon by the government or its authorized agent for public use, and it can make no sort of difference whether the bank is regarded as a debtor to the government to the amount of such moneys so deposited, or as holding the same in specie subject to the government’s check or demand. The funds are *683nevertheless the funds of the government. Nor can it make any difference whether they are drawn out by the fraudulent practices of the government’s agent, or paid out without lawful warrant by the bank; the liability of either to reimburse the government is just the same. While the bank may not be, and is not, liable criminally, it is liable civilly. As in the case of United States v. National Exchange Bank, 214 U. S. 302, 29 Sup. Ct. 665, 53 L. Ed. 1006, 16 Ann. Cas. 1184, the defendant might have been sued as it was, or for money had and received, so McCoy may be sued for money had and received to-his use, although he embezzled the public funds. We find no merit in the contention.
[5] Another instruction was requested to the effect that, if the jury should find from the evidence that, at the time the account was opened with the bank in the name of McCoy, the plaintiff instructed the defendant bank to honor all checks' drawn upon said account by him, without limitation or condition, then the defendant had the legal right to honor any checks so drawn by McCoy, regardless of the fact as to whether the payees were fictitious or otherwise. This was refused, and error assigned. We have examined the record diligently, and find no pertinent testimony upon which to base such a request, and it was therefore properly denied.
[6] The next question urged is that the trial court erred in denying defendant’s motion for a new trial. The motion is predicated upon alleged newly discovered evidence. A showing is made by affidavits to-, the effect that McCoy, when he entered upon his appointment, gave a bond in the sum of $3,000, conditioned upon the faithful performance of the duties of his office, with the United States Fidelity & Guaranty Company as surety,- and that since McCoy’s defalcation the Surety Company has -paid to the government the amount of the bond; that upon the payment of said sum, the government proceeded to reconstruct McCoy’s account, and charged back to him $3,000 for salary,, which it was claimed McCoy did not earn during the time he was. perpetrating the frauds in question. It is claimed, therefore, that the government should be required to give credit for the amount to the defendant, and that the cause should be opened up, so that defendant might have the same allowed as an offset to- the government’s demand. The government, by counter affidavit, has shown that the Treasury Department had a settlement with McCoy February 9, 1910, which comprised the item of $3,000 paid by the Surety Company, and there was found to be due the government the sum of $15,221.54 — a sum greater than the amount sued for. The action was not commenced until December 22, 1910. Upon this showing, pro and con, the trial court decided that the defendant was not entitled to a new trial.
No error is assignable from a denial of a motion for a new trial. Pickett v. United States, 216 U. S. 456.1 And that the motion is based upon newly discovered evidence does not constitute an exception. Holmgren v. United States, 217 U. S. 509, 521, 30 Sup. Ct. 588, 54 L. Ed. 861, 19 Ann. Cas. 778.
Judgment affirmed.

 30 Sup. Ct. 265. 54 L. Ed. 566.