104 Mass. 228 | Mass. | 1870
The plaintiff shows no right to hold the money deposited with the defendant by David Knowles. It was not money that belonged to her originally, as was the case in Farrelly v. Ladd, 10 Allen, 127, and Hunnewell v. Lane, 11 Met. 163, relied upon by the plaintiff’s counsel. The money belonged to David Knowles in his own right. He was not in fact trustee for Eliza Knowles, otherwise than by the form of the deposit. He was under no previous obligation to pay the money to her, or to hold it for her benefit. The voucher for the deposit, without the production of which, according to the conditions under which it was made, it could not be withdrawn, was never delivered to her, but retained exclusively in his own hands. Wall v. Provident Institution for Savings, 3 Allen, 96. The whole transaction was his own voluntary act, to which she was in no way a party or privy. There was no declaration made to
1. The plaintiff contends that the written declaration of trust is conclusive, and objects to the competency of evidence to prove the facts relied on in defence; first, because it violates the rule excluding parol evidence to contradict or vary the terms of a written instrument. But that is a rule which applies to suits upon the instrument and between the parties to it. 1 Greenl. Ev. § 279. The plaintiff is no party to the contract between David Knowles and the defendant. She could maintain no action upon it. If she can recover at' all, it is because the money belongs to her, and the trust, being a mere naked trust for her benefit, is terminable at her pleasure. The contract of deposit is
2. For similar reasons the plaintiff cannot set up, as an estoppel against the defendant or against David Knowles, the by-law of the bank providing that “ any depositor may designate, at the time of making the deposit, the period for which he is desirous that the same shall remain in the bank, and the person for whose benefit the same is made ; and such depositor, and his legal representative, shall be bound by such conditions, by him voluntarily annexed to his deposit.” She is a stranger to that contract. She does not claim under it as his legal representative, but by a superior right, of which the contract is the evidence. There can be no estoppel where there is no mutuality or privity. 1 Greenl. Ev. §§ 189, 204, 211. Merrifield v. Parritt, 11 Cush. 590, 598. Sprague v. Oakes, 19 Pick. 455, 458. Worcester v. Green, 2 Pick. 425. Braintree v. Hingham, 17 Mass. 432. If, upon due presentation of the book, the money had been paid to her, this provision in the contract of deposit might have availed the bank as a defence against the depositor or his legal representatives. But it can have no force as an estoppel, except when so set up by the bank
3. Neither can the plaintiff avail herself of the fact that the alleged purpose of David Knowles, in making the deposits in the form he did, was an evasion or violation of law. Whatever effect any illegality on the part of Knowles might have upon his right to recover against the bank, it cannot operate to confer any title or legal right upon the plaintiff. The effect of illegality is to create a disability to sue, or to derive any legal right from the transaction affected by it. The plaintiff’s right to recover depends upon proof of an intent to make an absolute gift of this money to her The defendant is not precluded from
We have not considered the technical question whether any action could be maintained between these parties, for money so deposited, because that question seemed to be waived by the submission upon agreed facts, providing for a judgment for the plaintiff if the court shall be of opinion that she “ is entitled to said funds.”
Upon the facts stated, we are of opinion that she is not so entitled; and, according to the agreement, the plaintiff is to become Nonsuit.