36 A.2d 242 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1943
Argued October 1, 1943. Guy Giordano borrowed $3,000 from plaintiff bank in 1936 on a misleading statement of the financial worth of his butter and egg business. He became insolvent in the same year, and although he testified that his assets then were converted into cash and distributed among his creditors by a committee, nothing appears to have been received by the bank to apply on his note. The bank subsequently entered judgment thereon by confession. In 1941, Giordano opened an account with Liberty Title and Trust Company in his own name as trustee for Josephine Giordano, a minor daughter. On March 31, 1942, plaintiff bank issued an attachment execution on its judgment, naming the Liberty Trust Company as garnishee. The total on deposit in the above trust account then was $1,400.10. The questions before the lower court in the present proceeding, tried by a judge without a jury, were whether the deposits made by Giordano in the trust account were his own funds and whether the trust was tentative. The lower court resolved these issues in favor of plaintiff and entered judgment against the garnishee in the total amount of the trust account. Giordano and the guardian ad litem of the minor cestui que trust appealed.
In 1936, about the time Giordano became insolvent, his wife and a sister-in-law, ostensibly as partners trading *454 as American Beauty Egg Company, registered a business to be conducted at a new location, under the Act of June 28, 1917, P.L. 645, 54 PS 21, as amended. Giordano became associated with the business, according to his testimony as an employee, but the lower court found that the "so called American Beauty Egg Company is fictitious more than in name; that the business is in fact that of defendant," Guy Giordano. The source of all but $350 deposited in the trust account was the proceeds of sales by Giordano of fats and waste products of the above business. Eight of the nine deposits were checks drawn to Giordano as payee and on at least five of them the name of American Beauty Egg Company did not appear as endorser or otherwise. The remaining deposit of $350 was the proceeds of insurance in the name of American Beauty Egg Company, paid on a fire loss.
It is the function of the lower court and not of this court to pass upon the credibility of witnesses. Pearlman v. Newburger etal.,
The evidence also is sufficient to justify the finding of the court that the trust was tentative. "A deposit by one person of his own money, in his own name as trustee for another, standing alone, does not establish an irrevocable trust during the lifetime of the depositor. It is a tentative trust merely, revocable at will. . . . . ." "In the absence of a different intention of the depositor, [i.e., to create an irrevocable trust or not to create any trust] the mere fact that a deposit was made in a savings bank in the name of a depositor `as trustee' for another person is sufficient to show an intention to create a revocable trust": Scanlon's Estate,
In strictness the trial judge improperly excluded evidence that well might have been received. But the issues were not tried by a jury and appellants are not entitled to a new trial on that ground, for the excluded proof appears elsewhere in the testimony and they were not harmed. The trial judge had before him all of the essential facts and the judgment of the court in banc, based upon his findings, may not be disturbed.
Judgment affirmed. *456