Court Opinion

ID: 6812742
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-23 18:56:33.285879+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:03:43.529576
License: Public Domain

Whittle, J.
(after making the foregoing statement of facts), delivered the opinion of the court.
In our view of this case it lies within much narrower limits than the scope of the argument would indicate.
The general doctrine is settled that the collection of a draft by a bank for a customer in the ordinary course of business and placed to the customer’s credit amounts to a general deposit by the latter, and creates the relation of debtor and creditor between them. In such case the customer or depositor has the right to demand of the bank an equivalent amount of money, but not the specific coins or other currency deposited. Miller v. Norton & Smith, Receivers, ante, p. 609, 77 S. E. 452, decided at the present term; Tiffany on Banks and Banking, sec. 4, p. 11, et seq. In support of the text the learned author has collected in the notes many decisions.
The influence of the language of the restrictive endorsement of the draft upon the relation between the Bank of Tarboro and its customer (namely, “For collection, and return, remit to National Park Bank, New York, for our credit and advise.”) is a question upon which the authorities are not agreed, and one which we need not discuss. The concrete proposition, upon the correct solution of which the decision must rést, involves the relation between a bank and its customer with respect to a deposit made by the latter in the following circumstances: At the time the cashier of the Bank of Tarboro received the draft in question for collection, and made the collection, he knew that the bank was hopelessly insolvent; but the depositor *678and the other officers of the bank had no knowledge of its insolvent condition. And the insolvency of the bank was due to the defalcations of the cashier and assistant cashier.
The authorities are agreed that when a bank, with knowledge of its insolvency, receives a deposit it perpetrates a fraud on the customer, and is held to be a constructive trustee of the deposit, and the depositor may recover of the receiver the deposit, if it can be identified, or its equivalent, if it cannot be identified, when the customer’s money has been mingled with the bank’s funds, which, to an amount equal to the deposit, has gone into the hands of its receiver. Western German Bank v. Norvell, 134 Fed. 724, 69 C. C. A. 330; Tiffany on Banks and Banking, sec. 89, p. 349, and cases cited in notes.
The correctness of the general principle is conceded; but it is said that this case falls within the exception to the doctrine of imputed knowledge (which doctrine is founded upon the presumption that, an agent discloses his knowledge to his principal), because the fact that the insolvency of the bank was due to the defalcation of the cashier repels the presumption that he imparted the knowledge to the bank. Baker v. Berry Hill Co., 112 Va. 280, 71 S. E. 626.
We cannot agree that this case is controlled by the foregoing exception. The defalcations of the cashier and his assistant, which caused the insolvency of the bank, occurred prior to the receipt and collection of the draft in question; and the transaction was not between him and the bank, but between him, acting for and representing the bank as its executive officer, and the bank’s customer, the Georgia bank.' Throughout the transaction the cashier was acting for, and as the sole representative of, the bank, and in the line and within the scope of the powers and duties of his office with respect to the matter in hand; and, therefore, his knowledge of the insolvency of the bank (though *679brought about by his antecedent misconduct) was its knowledge. In other words, the insolvency of the bank was a condition within the knowledge of its executive officer, and it matters not, so far as the rights of innocent third persons dealing with the bank through him are concerned, how he first acquired knowledge of that condition. Bank v. Richmond Elec. Co., 106 Va. 34, 56 S. E. 152; Atlantic Trust Co. v. Union Trust Co., 111 Va. 574, 579, 67 S. E. 975; Wade on Notice (2nd ed.), ss. 683-a, 683-b; Cook v. Am. Tubing Co., 28 R. I. 41, 65 Atl. 641, 9 L. R. A. (N. S.) 193, 211; Morris v. Ga. &c. Co., 109 Ga. 12, 34 S. E. 378, 46 L. R. A. 506; Bank of U. S. v. Davis, 2 Hill (S. C. of N. Y.) 451; Holden v. N. Y., &c., Bank, 72 N. Y. 286; Le Duc v. Moore (N. C.) 15 S. E. 888, 111 N. C. 516; St. Louis, Ac. Ry. Co. v. Johnston, 133 U. S. 576, 10 Sup. Ct. 390, 33 L. Ed. 683; Atlantic Cotton Mills v. Indian Orchard Mills, 147 Mass. 268, 17 N. E. 496, 9 Am. St. Rep. 698.
In Le Duc v. Moore, supra, in an action by the receiver of a bank on a promissory note against the maker and payee, the latter being the president of the bank to which he transferred the note by indorsement, the president and cashier constituted the discount committee and discounted the note. Held: That the bank took the note subject to equities existing in favor of the maker at the time of the indorsement.
In St. Louis, &c., Ry. Co. v. Johnston, supra, the bank became insolvent by the operations of a firm of which the president of the bank was a member. A draft was deposited in the bank for collection. Held: That the knowledge of the president of the bank’s insolvency, though occasioned by his firm, was the knowledge of the bank.
In the leading case of Atlantic Cotton Mills v. Indian Orchard Mills, supra, Gray was the common treasurer, of two corporations, and in order to make good his deficit in *680one of the corporations, he drew checks upon the other, payable to the order of the first, by which the money was drawn and used, no other officer of either corporation knowing the facts. A similar contention was made in that case as in this, that knowledge of the officer could not be imputed to the corporation. But the'court, at page 273, says: “It is true that no officer of the plaintiff, besides Gray, knew of the fraudulent origin of these checks; but in the very transaction of receiving them, the plaintiff was represented by Gray, and by him alone, and is bound by his knowledge. It is the same as if the plaintiff’s directors had received the checks, knowing what he knew. For the purpose of accepting the checks, Gray stood in the place of the plaintiff, and was the plaintiff. It is quite immaterial, in reference to this question, in what manner or by what officers of the corporation the funds were afterwards used.”
In the course of the same opinion, at page 276, Judge Allen observes: “We have preferred to put the decision of this point upon the broad ground that if the treasurer of a corporation is a defaulter, and his defalcation is as yet unknown and unsuspected, and he steals money from a third person and places it with the funds of the corporation in order to conceal and make good his defalcation, and the corporation uses the money as its own, no other officer knowing any of the facts, the corporation does not thereby acquire a good title to the money as against the true owner, but the latter may maintain an action against the corporation to recover back the same.”
These cases sufficiently elucidate the principle upon which we have chosen to rest our decision.
The decree complained of is without error and must be affirmed.

Affirmed.