68 A. 1001 | Conn. | 1908
The trial court did not err in overruling the demurrer to the complaint. The facts alleged justified the plaintiff in making the savings-bank, and Sarah A. Clark who claims an equitable right to the deposit, parties to the action. The case comes clearly within the provisions of the Practice Act, which provides for bringing before the court in one civil action all parties to the controversy involved, whose rights and interest in respect to the subject-matter are such that a complete determination of the controversy cannot be had without their presence. A complete determination of the controversy could not well be had without the exercise of equity jurisdiction. We have held that where several persons claim the whole, or portions, of a debt by adverse titles, and the debtor admits a certain amount to be due, although not to the full extent of the claim against him, the debtor is entitled to an action in the nature of interpleader, in which all parties in interest may be brought before a court and the controversy determined.Consociated Presbyterian Society v. Staples,
Money deposited in a savings-bank may be regarded as property of the depositor in the hands of the bank, and may be treated for certain purposes as visible and tangible property. Osborn v. Byrne,
The claim that the court has found material facts without any evidence is unsupported by the record.
The court finds that none of the moneys on deposit in the Society for Savings, account No. 41,250, were the property of Sarah A. Clark, but that the amount on deposit was the property of Gilbert M. Clark at his death. This was a question of fact, and substantially the only fact in issue. The defendant executor assigns as error the claim that the facts set forth in the finding do not support this conclusion. It is sufficient if the facts found are not legally inconsistent with the conclusion; but in this case they are obviously sufficient to support it. A conclusion of this nature is, in the absence of any inconsistent subordinate fact found, one of fact drawn from all the evidence, and is conclusive and is binding upon us. State v.French,
The court did not err in overruling the defendant's alleged claims of law. It appears from the finding that on November 10th, 1883, there was distributed to Sarah A. Clark, as her distributive share of the estate of Lucy Selden, about $2,000 in cash and other property; that of this amount Gilbert M. Clark then turned over to his wife $614 ($100 in cash and the remainder in other property), and divested himself of his rights and interests in said property as statutory trustee ; and that there then was an oral agreement between him and his wife that the former, out of the cash coming to her upon the distribution, should *424
have $600 for his services in connection with her legacy and said estate, and on November 13th, 1883, Gilbert M. deposited $600 of the cash distributed to his wife to his account in his book No. 41,250 in the Society for Savings. There is nothing in the finding inconsistent with the conclusion of the court that this agreement, in view of all the circumstances disclosed by the evidence, was upon good consideration for the benefit of the wife. If the defendant executor's assignments of error can be treated as claiming that no agreement of this nature between a husband and wife married prior to 1877 can be valid in equity, and that the law is so that Mrs. Clark, having used the property turned over to her by her husband, can in equity, after seventeen years of acquiescence, hold her husband responsible to her as statutory trustee of the $600 he has expended in pursuance of their agreement, we think the claim cannot be maintained. In equity, contracts made directly between husband and wife, if bona fide and on good consideration, may be enforced by one against the other. Corr's Appeal,
The claim that the plaintiff is estopped from proving in this action his ownership of the deposit in the Society for Savings, by reason of the peculiar finding of the commissioners in respect to the allowance of claims against his intestate's estate, was properly overruled. A fact as to which a conclusive estoppel of this kind can be invoked must be one established by a final judgment, and must have been in issue under the pleadings and have been actually litigated and determined. Fuller v. MetropolitanL. I. Co.,
The other claims of law, alleged in the appeal to have been overruled, call for no mention, as they have no application to the facts as found by the court.
Upon the trial the court, against the objections of the defendant, admitted testimony for the purpose of showing that at and before the appointment of the plaintiff and his qualification as administrator, Sarah A. Clark, by her counsel and agents, made certain admissions and agreements, and certain promises that the savings-bank book in question would be delivered to the plaintiff if he would undertake the administratorship, and other representations, which were inconsistent with claims subsequently made by Sarah A. Clark when testifying in her own behalf to determine the title of the bank-book in question, and also for the purpose of contradicting the testimony given by said Sarah A. Clark and showing that the claims made by her were false. The exceptions taken to the rulings of the court in the admission of such testimony, and assigned for error, are not well taken.
It is manifest from the record that the trial court was satisfied by the whole evidence that the $212 due upon Gilbert M. Clark's deposit-book at the time of his death, was his property, and that the claims interposed by Sarah A. Clark and her son, the defendant executor, to prevent the plaintiff from collecting this asset of the estate, were unjust, and that the testimony in support of these claims was untrue. None of the evidential and subordinate facts stated in the finding justify us in questioning the legality and correctness of this conclusion.
There is no error in the judgment of the Superior Court.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.