Court Opinion

ID: 3435636
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-05 20:08:15.251339+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T13:35:01.845050
License: Public Domain

The essential facts are not in dispute. On April 2, 1924, the Exchange State Bank of Stuart had to the credit of the appellant, Schmidt, the sum of $2,280.53. This *Page 791 
1. BANKS AND     was received through a bank in Omaha, and was BANKING:      the proceeds of cattle sold by appellant. The insolvency:   source of the credit, however, in view of purchase of   subsequent events, is of no importance; nor is draft:        it at all material whether appellant was then a effect.       depositor in the Stuart bank. It is conceded that, on April 2, 1924, the appellant personally drew his check for the amount of such credit, and with that and $219.47 in cash or other checks procured the draft of the Exchange State Bank upon the Iowa National Bank of Des Moines for $2,500, payable to himself or order. On May 3, 1924, appellant presented at the Stuart bank a draft for $1,800, and received therefor $100 in cash and the draft of the Stuart bank on the same Des Moines bank for $1,700, payable to himself or order. Appellant retained these two drafts in his possession until after the Stuart bank closed its doors, on May 8, 1924, when he presented them to the Iowa National Bank, and payment was refused. The Stuart bank is insolvent, and is in the hands of the state superintendent of banking, as receiver, for liquidation. Appellant sought to have his claim for the amount of the two drafts so issued to him allowed as a preference. The claim was denied, and properly so.
I. The transactions between appellant and the Stuart bank amounted to nothing more than the purchase by him of the drafts — the purchase, to that extent, of the credit of the bank. Instead of the cash to which he was then entitled, he, for purposes of his own, elected to take instead the bank's draft or order upon its correspondent for the amount. The relation between him and the bank was that of debtor and creditor, out of which no trust and no right to a preference arose.
We have recently had occasion to consider the rights of the parties to such a transaction, and have held that no right to a preference arises from the mere purchase of a draft. See Leach v.Battle Creek Sav. Bank, 202 Iowa 875; Leach v. Mechanics Sav.Bank, 202 Iowa 899; and Leach v. Citizens' State Bank of Arthur,203 Iowa 782.
II. It is claimed that the Stuart bank was insolvent when the drafts were issued, and that the facts of the case bring it *Page 792 
2. BANKS AND     within the rule of Whitcomb v. Carpenter, 134 BANKING:      Iowa 227, where it was held that the act of a insolvency:   banker in taking money for a draft which he knew draft by      would not be paid, would give rise to a relation insolvent     of trust. It appears from the record, however, drawer:       that numerous drafts drawn by the Stuart bank on effect.       the Iowa National Bank after the purchase of the last draft in question were paid by the latter bank up to as late as May 7th. It is clear that the drafts in question would have been paid, had they been promptly presented. There is nothing whatever in the record to justify the application of the doctrine of Whitcomb v. Carpenter, supra.
The appellant was clearly not a depositor of the amount of the drafts; and the judgment below, giving him the status of a general creditor, was proper, and it is — Affirmed.
De GRAFF, C.J., and EVANS, STEVENS, FAVILLE, ALBERT, and MORLING, JJ., concur.