226 S.W. 322 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1920
The plaintiff sued defendant bank to recover the amount due him as a depositor, alleging that he had on deposit in said bank the sum of $1508.57 which said bank had refused to pay him on demand. The answer of the bank admitted that it held the sum of $1465.13 deposited in the name of plaintiff but that same was a joint account of plaintiff and his wife, Clara Addison, and that plaintiff had consented that his wife, Clara Addison have authority to draw checks on such account, which she had been doing for a number of years, and that during the month of December, 1919, the defendant bank had paid out all the money to plaintiff's credit to Clara Addison on checks drawn by her. The bank's defense as stated in its answer depended solely on the authority of Clara Addison to draw out said money on her checks. Thereupon Clara Addison filed her motion to be made a defendant in said cause on the grounds afterwards set up in her answer and the court sustained the motion over plaintiff's objection. She then filed her answer setting up, in addition to the alleged authority given her by plaintiff *625 to draw checks against the funds deposited in his name, that the entire funds deposited in his name was in truth and in fact her money which plaintiff had taken without her consent in writing. Two issues were presented: (1) that, though the money on deposit belonged to plaintiff, yet because of the authority given by plaintiff to his wife to check same out, the defendant bank should be protected in so doing; and (2) that, though deposited in plaintiff's name, this money really belonged to his wife and the bank should be protected in paying it over to her. These issues were tried and submitted to the jury resulting in a verdict and judgment for defendants. Only the first of these issues was raised by the bank; the second was raised by the wife.
A serious question arises on the right of the wife to be made a defendant on her own motion and over plaintiff's objection and to defend the action on an issue not raised by the only defendant plaintiff wished to sue and against whom alone he asked any relief. The plaintiff never amended his petition so as to make Clara Addison a defendant and never asked any relief against her. There are two sections of our statute invoked by defendants as justifying the court's action. Section 1732, Revised Statutes 1909, provides that "any person may be a defendant who has or claims an interest in the controversy adverse to plaintiff, or who is a necessary party to a complete determination or settlement of the question involved therein." This section would apparently leave it discretionary with plaintiff to say whom he will make a defendant within the limits fixed therein. And so it has been construed (Kortjohn v. Seimers,
We are cited to and have examined several cases where third parties have been allowed to become defendants against the objection of plaintiff. [State ex rel. v. Hudson,
An examination of all the evidence convinces us that the defendant bank failed to sustain, and the court should not have submitted to the jury, the issue that, granting that the money in the bank to plaintiff's credit was his money, yet the bank was justified in paying it over to Clara Addison, his wife, on her check. Relative to this issue the pertinent facts are that Clara Addison had separated from her husband some twenty days before drawing out this money on her check and shortly before so doing had instituted a suit for divorce and alimony. These parties had lived together a good many years without discord. Plaintiff was running a newspaper, a bottling plant and some other enterprises. The *628 wife had invested considerable of her own money in his business or permitted him to so use it. The bank account was kept at all times in his name. The wife took a more or less active interest in the business, which was conducted also in his name, and often looked after collections and made deposits. She also at times, especially in his absence, paid the employees and other current bills connected with the business and in so doing signed the checks. She was also permitted to and did draw checks to pay the current family expenses and for small sums of money for her own and family use. This had been going on for years and the officers of defendant bank say that plaintiff not only permitted this but expressly authorized it. Under the authority so given defendant bank says it was authorized to and did pay her the sum of $1500 on her check, exhausting his account. We note, however, that the course of dealing mentioned was while plaintiff and Clara Addison were living together as husband and wife. She was acting more as his agent than otherwise in drawing checks on his bank account and same were drawn in connection with his business and to pay current bills and expenses. When she separated from him and began shaping proceedings for permanent divorce and separation all this was changed. How radical was the change needs no elaboration. They became as strangers an antagonistic. The checks thereafter drawn were not for the payment of current bills and family expenses to which he was consenting but were solely for the purpose of placing the money beyond his control and to enable her to use it as she saw fit. The defendant bank knew these facts — knew the changed relation of the parties and the changed purpose for which Clara Addison was withdrawing this money and that plaintiff was not consenting to it. Her father and brother were chief officers of the defendant bank and she was herself a director. After her separation from plaintiff she again became a member of her father's family. The father and brother not only knew of the separation but of the divorce suit then instituted. They handled the money for her, transferring it from his name to hers. If they did *629 not actively advise her to check this money out for her own use pending the divorce litigation they knew the motive and purpose of her so doing. We must hold therefore that whatever authority was given to or exercised by Clara Addison while she and her husband were living together in amity as man and wife ceased because of the changed relations of the parties and the wholly different purpose for which subsequent checks were drawn; that the defendant bank is in no way to be protected as an innocent party. It became the province of the court in the divorce suit to protect the wife by suitable allowance for temporary alimony and she could not arbitrarily appropriate this money for such purpose.
The cause is therefore reversed and remanded.
Farrington and Bradley, JJ., concur.