German Savings Bank v. Wulfekuhler

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Valentine, J.:

statement of iaots‘ *631.Bank officer; presumptfo’n. *642. Knowledge of overdrafts. *653.Bankstock; £ank.ase y *61This was an action brought by the German Savings Bank of Leavenworth, against Henry W. Wulfekuhler, for the sum of $2,100, alleged to have been obtained wrongfully from the bank by the said Wulfelcuhler. Judgment was rendered in the court below in favor of the defendant, and the bank now brings the case to this court. The principal facts of the case are as follows: The bank was organized under the laws of the state of Kansas; the defendant was one of the original incorporators, and a subscriber for 100 shares of the capital-stock of the bank; each share was for $100. He paid two assessments on said shares—each assessment being ten per cent, of the amount—and received two receipts therefor, each receipt being for $1,000. No certificates of stock were ever issued to him; and these receipts were the only evidences of *62his ownership of said stock which he ever held. The books of the bank however, furnished other and sufficient evidence of his ownership of said stock. He was a director of the bank, and also its vice-president, during the occurrence of all the following transactions, although at the time of said occurrence he was sick, and did not take any active part in the direction or management of the business of the bank. Also, during the same time he and his brother, Fred, Wulfekuhler, were partners carrying on a wholesale grocery business under the firm name of Rohlfing & Co. Said bank stock really belonged to this firm, although it was purchased and held in the name of the defendant, Henry W. Wulfekuhler. On the 4th of September 1873, and for some time previously, the bank was in an embarrassed condition. On that day, Fred. Wulfekuhler sold said bank stock to Henry M. Herman. The defendant indorsed his name on said receipts, and Fred. Wulfekuhler delivered the same to Herman; and Herman, in return, drew a check on said bank in favor of Rohlfing & Co. for $2,100, and delivered the same to Fred. Wulfekuhler. Herman was at-that time, and had been for several months previously, owing the bank on an overdrawn account; and the president of the bank had only a few days previously instructed both the cashier and the assistant-cashier of the bank not to honor any more of Herman’s checks. Herman delivered said receipts to the cashier of the bank, and on the next day, September 5th, obtained a credit therefor for $2,100, to be entered in his favor on the books of the bank. Herman and the cashier considered this transaction as a sale of said stock to the bank, but the stock was never transferred on the books of the bank as required by statute, (Gen. Stat. 197, § 27,) and also as required by the by-laws of the bank; but the stock still continued to remain on the books of the bank, in the name of the defendant. Neither does it appear that the cashier had any authority to purchase said stock. Also, on that same day, (September 5th,) the book-keeper of Rohlfing & Co. took said check of Herman’s to the bank, and the cashier gave to Rohlfing & Co. a credit therefor of *63$2,100, and charged Herman with a like amount. Eohlfing & Co. (or in other words, the defendant and his brother Ered.,) afterward, but not for some days thereafter, drew out of the bank said $2,100, with which they had been credited on Herman’s check. On September 17th the bank, on account of financial embarrassment, closed business. On September 18th the president of the bank tendered said receipts to the defendant, and demanded that the defendant should pay back to the bank said $2,100, but the defendant declined to do so, and then the bank commenced this action to recover said amount. The bank was reopened for business on 29th September 1873. The only question necessary to be now considered is, whether this action can be maintained upon the foregoing facts, and the law of the case. Now for the purposes of the case, we shall assume that the defendant acted in the best of faith in all the foregoing transactions; that the transaction with Herman was intended to be a bona fide sale of the defendant’s stock to Herman; that in fact the defendant and his brother did not know of the embarrassed condition of said bank; that they did not know of the condition of Herman’s account with the bank; that they did not know that Herman’s check was not good; that they did not know anything concerning the transactions between Herman and the cashier; that they did not know, when they received said money from the bank on Herman’s check, that they received it in consideration of a credit given to Herman for said stock receipts; and that in fact they believed, when they received said money, that they were simply receiving money from the bank which Herman had previously deposited with the bank; and assuming all these things, (which are assumptions in favor of the defendant and against the plaintiff,) then can the plaintiff recover? We think it can. For while we assume,

as a matter of fact, that the defendant knew nothing of the condition or management of said bank,

and nothing of the condition of Herman’s account with the bank, yet still as a matter of law we think we must presume that he knew all about these matters. He was a director. *64and the vice-president of the bank, and it was his duty to have such knowledge, and therefore the law will conclusively presume that he had it. Merchants’ Bank v. Rudolf, 5 Neb. 527; United Society of Shakers v. Underwood, 9 Bush. (Ky.) 609; Morse on Banks and Banking, 90, et seq., 97, et seq., and 115. He cannot now, as against the interests of the bank and its stockholders, and perhaps its creditors, be allowed to plead ignorance and innocence, and thereby profit by his own want of knowledge, and by his own failure to do his duty as an officer of the bank. Such would be against both morals and law. Of course, we do not hold that a director is bound to know everything that transpires in a bank, and at the very time when it occurs. But we do hold that a director, having personal and private dealings with his bank, is bound to know (so far as the same affects his said personal dealings) the general condition and management of his bank, and everything of importance that occurs therein, either at time it occurs, or soon thereafter. In the present case, the defendant was bound to know when he received Herman’s check, and when he obtained the credit thereon, that the bank was embarrassed, and that Herman had no funds in the bank. And he was bound to know when he drew the money out of the bank that Herman was-still owing the bank, and that the said credit to Herman of' $2,100 was merely for said stock receipts. Said -stock receipts we suppose really belonged to the firm of Rohlfing & Co., which was composed of the defendant and his brother Fred.; and the said money was drawn from the bank by the-firm, and not merely by the defendant. But this makes no-difference; for each member of the firm was bound to take notice of all of which the other had notice, or was bound to-take notice; (Merchants’ Bank v. Rudolf, supra;) and each member of the firm is liable in a separate action for all that the firm might be held to be liable. And as the firm obtained said money from the bank without any legal consideration therefor, as we shall presently see, the bank may recover it back. In Pennsylvania it has been held that it is a fraud upon *65a bank for the holder of a check to present the same to the bank and receive a credit therefor, when he knows that the drawer of the check has no funds in the bank with which to meet it. (Peterson v. Union National Bank, 52 Penn. St. 206.) The supposed sale of said stock from Herman to the bank was void. The cashier had no authority from the bank, or from any one else, to purchase it; and no one had any power to give him any such authority. A bank cannot purchase its own stock, except in some few cases for the purpose of securing some previously-existing debt. There is no law that attempts to give a bank any such power. And the purchasing by a bank of its own stock is not one of the objects for which banks are created, and is not legitimate banking business. Eor a bank to use its funds in the purchase of stock, is to withdraw that much of its capital from legitimate banking business; and to purchase its own stock, is in effect a withdrawal of that much of its stock from actual existence, and in that way the bank might reduce the amount of its capital stock below the amount required by law, (to-wit, $50,000; Gen. Stat. 225, §128,) and might also impair or even destroy all security given by law to the creditors of the bank. The law provides in effect that not only the bank, with all its property, shall be liable for its debts, but also that each stockholder in the bank to the amount of his stock, shall also be held liable. (Const., art. 12, §2; Gen. Stat. 198, §32.) But if a bank may purchase in all its stock, and own it itself, then where would be the security to the creditors of the bank, except in the bank itself? They could not, after exhausting the property of the bank, find any 'stockholders to sue. The law never contemplated any such a thing. But the law not only fails to authorize a bank to purchase in its own stock, but in effect it prohibits such a thing. Section 26 of the act authorizing the creation of banks provides, that “no corporation created under the provisions of this act shall employ its stock, means, assets, or other property, directly or indirectly, for any other *66purpose whatever, than to accomplish the legitimate objects of its creation.” (Gen. Stat. 197.)

5 cashierestoppei. . Now as the defendant, or rather himself and his brother as partners, received said money from the bank, without the bank ever receiving any consideration therefor, and as the defendant was at the time a director and the vice-president of the bank, and is therefore conclusively presumed to have known all the facts, the bank may recover the money back from the defendant. The acts of the cashier cannot estop the bank as against the defendant, who is a director, and the vice-president of the bank. Such officers cannot be allowed to wrongfully use the funds of the bank, and then plead that the same was allowed by either the one or the other of such officers. They make themselves liable by so using the funds of the bank. The court below tried this case upon the theory that the defendant, as a director and vice-president, was not bound to know the condition of the bank, and the condition of Herman’s account, and was not bound to know when he and his partner drew said money out of said bank that they drew the same out of the bank without any consideration to the bank; and for this reason the court erred in instructing the jury, and especially erred in not granting a new trial to the plaintiff.

The judgment of the court will therefore be reversed, and cause remanded for a new trial.

Horton, O. J., concurring.