88 So. 838 | Ala. | 1921
This bill was by the appellant against the appellee, filed on May 27, 1919. The original demurrer and the added grounds were filed June 26, 1919, and November 10, 1919, respectively, and the submission on the demurrers was had November 10, 1919. The decree sustaining the demurrers, from which this appeal is taken, was entered June 4, 1920. The cause was docketed and submitted in this court on December 12-16, 1920.
A recital of the presently material facts set forth in this bill will be made.
The appellant is a bonding company, and the appellee is engaged in a general banking business. In 1906 Clara J. Manegold was the guardian of her stepdaughter, Estelle Manegold, who later married W. H. Beavan. In 1906-07 a shortage in the guardian's accounts was found and its amount determined. To satisfy this shortage in the Clara J. Manegold guardianship, George Manegold, the husband of Clara J., borrowed $12,000 from the appellee (Fourth National Bank); the loan being made to him in or through Joseph Manegold Co., which was the name by which George Manegold conducted his business — a fact averred to be known to the lender, the appellee. The funds thus received were paid into the registry of the court in which the guardianship of Clara J. was pending and was then being investigated; and a decree was entered discharging another bonding company that was bound as the surety for Clara J. in the premises. On, to wit, January 13, 1907, about 30 days after the mentioned loan was effected, George Manegold was appointed the succeeding guardian for the said ward; this appellant becoming the surety of George Manegold on his guardian's bond. "Thereafter," it is averred in the fifth paragraph of this bill:
"On, to wit, the 5th day of February, 1907, the said W. H. Parks, as such register, issued his check No. 69, drawn on the Fourth National Bank of Montgomery to the order of George Manegold, as guardian, for the sum of $12,316.46; that said check is further marked 'a/c Clara J. Manegold v. Estelle Manegold,' and bears the following indorsements, 'Geo. Manegold, Guardian'; that on said 6th day of February, 1907, the said Fourth National Bank opened an account in the name of the said George Manegold, as guardian, and credited said account with the sum of $12,316.46, the same being the said check of the said W. H. Parks, as register, drawn on said Fourth National Bank in favor of said George Manegold, as guardian; that thereafter, on, to wit, the 20th day of February, 1907, the said George Manegold, as guardian, drew a check against said account, payable to Joseph Manegold Co., which was the style under which George Manegold was doing business as aforesaid, for the sum of $5,000, which said check was paid by said Fourth National Bank and said sum of $5,000 credited to the said account of said Joseph Manegold Co. with said Fourth National Bank; that on said 20th day of February, 1907, the said Joseph Manegold Co. drew its check, payable to said Fourth National Bank, which said check was charged to the account of the said Joseph Manegold Co. and the proceeds thereof applied on said indebtedness of the said George Manegold, as Joseph Manegold Co., to the Fourth National Bank in said sum of $12,000; that thereafter, on, to wit, the 12th day of March, 1907, the said George Manegold, as guardian, drew his check on said account in said Fourth National Bank for the sum of $7,300, payable to said Joseph Manegold Co., which said amount was credited to the account of said Joseph Manegold Co. in said Fourth National Bank, and was thereafter applied to the payment of said indebtedness of $12,000; that after the payment of said checks the balance to the credit of said George Manegold, as guardian, of $16.46, remained to his credit until the 1st of November, 1912, when the said George Manegold, as guardian, drew a check therefor; that said three checks for $5,000, $7,316.46 and said deposit of $12,316.46 are all of the debits and credits appearing on said account of said George Manegold, as guardian, in said Fourth National Bank."
Estelle Manegold became of age on the 19th day of October, 1908, the guardianship of George Manegold was apparently settled by the receipt of the ward, and in 1909 a consent decree was entered discharging Manegold and this appellant as the surety on his *654
guardian's bond. The decree was impeached for fraud in a bill filed by Estelle Manegold Beavan, September 15, 1913, and through the contest that followed this decree was annulled in 1913. Manegold v. Beavan,
It also appears from the bill that in June, 1914, while the mentioned litigation was pending, George Manegold filed his petition in voluntary bankruptcy; that he died in December, 1914; and that Estelle Manegold Beavan filed against the bankrupt's estate the claims resulting from his guardianship for her, and that she received in 1918 and 1919, in dividends under the administration of the bankrupt estate of George Manegold, her late guardian, the sum of $8,972.50.
In the seventh paragraph of the bill it is averred, among other things:
"* * * That the said Fourth National Bank was charged with notice of the trust impressed upon said sum of $12,316.46 credited by it to the account of George Manegold, as guardian, it having been put on notice of the character of said funds by said check of said W. H. Parks, register, for said sum, drawn on said Fourth National Bank to the order of said George Manegold, as guardian, and said Fourth National Bank recognized the trust impressed upon said funds by placing the same to the credit of George Manegold, as guardian; that thereafter the said Fourth National Bank, with knowledge of the character of the funds deposited with it, permitted the said trustee, the said George Manegold, guardian, on, to wit, the 20th day of February, 1907, to divert $5,000 thereof to his own use, and thereafter, to wit, the 12th day of March, 1907, permitted the said George Manegold to divert the further sum of $7,300 thereof to his own use, which said funds diverted as aforesaid were by said Fourth National Bank credited to the account of said Joseph Manegold Co., which said firm the said Fourth National Bank well knew was nothing more than the name or style under which the said George Manegold did business and your orator avers that said Fourth National Bank further participated in said breach of trust by permitting said George Manegold to use said trust funds, diverted to the said account of Joseph Manegold Co., as aforesaid, to repay to the said Fourth National Bank said $12,000 loaned by it to the said George Manegold, under the style of Joseph Manegold Co., as aforesaid."
The bill's averments and prayer characterize it as a bill for subrogation of a surety to the rights of the creditor of the surety's principal against a third party who participated in the misappropriation by the surety's principal of money of a cestui que trust. Besides a general prayer, the particular prayer is:
"That said Fourth National Bank be declared to be a trustee of said trust fund to the extent of $12,300 for the estate of said Estelle Manegold Beavan, and that it be ordered and decreed forthwith to pay over to your orator [complainant appellant] said sum. * * *"
The bill's theory refers it to this well-established equitable doctrine: Where the surety of a fiduciary, like a guardian, has been compelled to make good a breach of trust by his principal, the surety is subrogated to the right of the cestui que trust as against the fiduciary, as well as against any participant in the breach which the surety has been compelled to satisfy. 25 R. C. L. p. 1332, § 16; 13 Ann. Cas. pp. 429, 430, collecting decisions affirming the doctrine. Illustrations of its effect are afforded by cases where banks of loan and deposit knowingly accept payment of the individual debt of the fiduciary to the bank out of funds on deposit that the bank knows are funds impressed with a trust character. U.S. Fidelity Co. v. Adoue,
As it appears from this statement of the bill, it is averred expressly that the loan was made to George Manegold, in the name of Joseph Manegold Co., and that, to the actual knowledge of the bank, this company was but the trade name — a commercial alter ego — under which George Manegold conducted his business. The necessary result from these averments is that the check by George Manegold, guardian, passing the trust fund to Joseph Manegold Co., was in effect, a conversion of that fund to George Manegold individually, with the knowledge of the bank, and that when "Joseph Manegold
Co." gave the checks described to the bank to pay this Manegold loan they were, to the knowledge of the bank, in effect the individual checks of George Manegold to the bank to pay the individual debt of George Manegold to the bank while so advised in the premises. Under the facts and knowledge averred, the process pursued was nominally indirect, circuitous; but this course contributed, in legal effect, nothing different had the process been direct, instead of circuitous, omitting the nominal interposition of "Joseph Manegold Co." These acts, with the knowledge the bank is averred to have had, characterized the bank a participant, to its advantage, in the misappropriation of the trust fund to the extent it was thus absorbed, and so notwithstanding it is not specifically alleged in the bill that the bank entertained such design when the loan was thus made. Lee v. Lee,
The foregoing represents the views of the writer, with whom Chief Justice ANDERSON concurs; but the majority of the court, consisting of Justices SAYRE, SOMERVILLE, GARDNER, THOMAS, and MILLER, are not in accord with these views, and entertain the opinion that the demurrer presenting the question of the bar of the statute of limitations was well taken and properly sustained. The views of the majority are stated by Justice GARDNER, as follows:
The statement of the case presented in the opinion of Justice McCLELLAN discloses that the right of action in favor of Estelle Manegold, now Mrs. Beavan, arose in the year 1907, and that she reached her *656
majority in 1908. The bill was filed in 1919. The complainant, the bonding company, as surety for Estelle Manegold, seeks to be subrogated to her rights in the enforcement of the claim against the bank, but the complainant as surety can stand in no higher position than the principal. Colvin v. Owens,
The bill shows that the respondent bank received money which in equity and good conscience belonged to Estelle Manegold, and her right of action accrued at the date of the receipt of this money. Larue v. Kershaw,
"Whenever the subject-matter of a trust can be sued for at law, the statute of limitations may be insisted on as a bar, although the remedy is pursued in a court of equity."
And in Scruggs v. Decatur Min. Land Co.,
"The complainant must positively and distinctly aver the facts and circumstances which constitute an exception to the statute, or which excuse or explain the long acquiescence and delay."
It is sought by counsel for complainant to bring the case from without the general rule as to the statute of limitations by showing that the facts alleged constitute such a trust relationship as against a breach of which the statute of limitations presents no bar. It cannot be contended under the averments of this bill that there are any elements of an express trust as between Estelle Manegold and the bank. McCarthy v. McCarthy,
It is not pretended that the bank in any manner ever declared itself the trustee of funds shown to have been recovered in this suit, or at any time recognized the rights of Estelle Manegold to these funds. We think it clear therefore that, if the bank is a trustee at all, it was such in invitum or the trustee of a constructive trust.
It is well recognized that constructive trusts are within the operation of the statute of limitations. We quote the following from James v. James,
"It was, however, a constructive, not an express, trust. It is 'superinduced upon the transaction by operation of law, as matter of equity, independent of the particular intention of the parties.' * * * The recovery sought in this case is pecuniary, not of property, or its possession. The uniform course of decision in this court has been that such trusts are within the operation of the statute of limitations, and all remedy for their enforcement barred by the limitation which would bar a corresponding legal right and remedy in courts of law. * * *
"It is no longer a question whether a court of equity obeys the statute of limitations, or adopts it by analogy. The statute expressly declares that the limitation of suits at law shall apply to suits in chancery. * * * If the right now asserted was legal, and the remedy pursued in a court of law, it would be in form an action for use and occupation, and for money had and received, barred by the lapse of six years from the time the cause of action accrued."
The following quotation from Martin v. Branch Bank, supra, is likewise pertinent:
"Upon the foregoing facts, a right accrued to the complainant to recover from the respondent the several sums collected by him on the Austin note. That right accrued, as to each sum so collected by him, as soon as he collected it. As to those sums, he was the trustee of the complainant; but he acquired his character of trustee only by implication. No express or direct trust as to him is shown. The right of the complainant, as against him, is founded entirely upon an implied trust. And beyond all doubt, the statute of limitations of six years is, in a court of equity, applicable to this case, and to all other cases of implied trusts in relation to personal property; and the right of action, in equity, will be considered as barred in six years, in analogy to the limitation at law, unless the bar, when set up as a defense, is avoided by matter alleged in the bill and duly established."
These principles have not been departed from in this court. On the contrary, in the very recent case of Blythe v. Enslen,
"It is well settled that a subsisting, recognized and acknowledged trust, as between the trustees and cestui que trust, is not within the operation of the statute of limitations. But this rule must be understood as applying only to those technical and continuing trusts which are alone cognizable in a court of equity; and trusts which arise from an implication of law, or constructive trusts, are not within the rule, but are subject to the operation of the statute, unless there has been a fraudulent concealment of the cause of action, and the statute is as complete a bar in equity as at law."
It was likewise recognized in the recent case of Veitch v. Woodward Iron Co.,
The opinion of Mr. Justice McCLELLAN rests the conclusion upon the language of the *657 court in the cases of Lee v. Lee and Wolffe v. State, supra. In both of these cases the language of the opinion is that the conduct of the parties constituted them trustees in invitum. The expression of the court in the Lee Case that the company and Lee were joint trustees of the fund and liable to account as such to the beneficiary was but the expression of a well-understood principle of law, but which in no manner involved the question of the statute of limitations. They were trustees — Lee a trustee by an express trust, and the respondent company a trustee in invitum, under such circumstances as constituted a constructive trust. We do not understand the language of these opinions to militate in the least against the conclusion which the majority have here reached. The bank, under the allegations of this bill, was a trustee in invitum. There was created a constructive trust, and, under all the authorities, the statute of limitations is applicable.
As previously stated, the bill showing prima facie that the cause of action is barred, it was incumbent upon the complainant to clearly state facts and circumstances which would bring the cause from without the operation of the statute of limitations. It is not pretended that any fraud or concealment is shown as would come within the operation of our statute to relieve the case from the bar of limitations. Estelle Manegold became of age in 1908, but her previous disabilities did not suspend the operation of the statute. Riggs v. Fuller,
Nor can it be insisted that the fact that her guardian procured from her a receipt discharging him as such, followed by a court decree to like effect, could be held to suspend the statute of limitations until this decree had been set aside. The bank, so far as here appears, had nothing to do with the receipt or the settlement, with the procurement of the decree of the chancery court, or knew that such a receipt had been procured or decree rendered. It was not a party to the suit wherein the decree was procured. The statute of limitations had already begun to run. There is no exception under our statute applicable to a case of this character, and we are of the opinion that this suit did not operate to suspend the statute of limitations. Wagner v. Buttles,
As previously stated, the bill shows a right of action in Estelle Manegold to recover in a court of law for money had and received, and that such a right of action was long since barred by the statute of limitations at the time the bill was filed. The bank is attempted to be held liable under the doctrine of constructive trusts, to which the statute of limitations is applicable; and, as said by this court in Blythe v. Enslen, supra:
"The respondents are entitled to the benefit of this statute of limitations in a case of this character under the express provisions of section 3091 of the Code of 1907."
We are therefore of the opinion that the bill discloses on its face that the right of action here sought to be enforced is barred by the statute of limitations of six years, and that the decree sustaining the demurrer was correct, and should have been affirmed.
It results from the foregoing views of the majority that the decree of the court below is correct, and will be here affirmed.
SAYRE, SOMERVILLE, GARDNER, THOMAS, and MILLER. JJ., concur.
ANDERSON, C. J., and McCLELLAN, J., dissent, as stated in opinion.