5 P.2d 65 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1931
The interveners in this action had judgment, from which judgment the plaintiff appeals.
The action was begun by the plaintiff against C.E. Masten and James A. Long, doing business as copartners, to recover the sum of $732.57 alleged to be due from said defendants to the plaintiff. Following the filing of the complaint a writ of attachment was issued under and by virtue of which the sum of $558.59, theretofore deposited by C.E. Masten in the Savings Bank of Sutter County, was garnisheed by service of said writ and notice upon said bank. The interveners thereupon filed a third party claim with the sheriff of Sutter County, and also filed a petition in intervention in this action, setting forth that the sum mentioned was money collected by C.E. Masten on account of insurance policies issued by the interveners.
The testimony shows, and the court found, that C.E. Masten was the agent of all of the interveners, acting *375 severally and not jointly, and that the money on deposit in the bank was solely and exclusively money which he had collected for and on account of the insurance policies, as aforesaid, and which money belonged to the interveners.
It further appears from the testimony that C.E. Masten, while acting as the agent for the several insurance companies, collected premiums upon insurance policies, and also collected rents for different persons (not involved in this action), and deposited the money so collected in his own name in the Savings Bank of Sutter County. That from the money so deposited he paid to the persons for whom he had collected rent the amount to which they were entitled and also from time to time paid to the insurance companies represented by him the amounts to which they were severally entitled. No moneys belonging to Masten individually were deposited in the fund just referred to, nor were any checks drawn by him against said fund to pay for any of his private indebtedness or living expenses. The fund created by such deposits was drawn upon only to pay the persons or companies for whom he had collected money. Upon the trial it developed that none of the moneys on deposit belonged to any of the persons for whom Masten had collected rent, but the whole thereof belonged to the interveners in this action. The trial court filed a written opinion in which appears the following statement, which seems to us to be amply sustained by the testimony, to wit: "I think the evidence in this case discloses that the money on deposit in the bank and the subject of this action, belongs to the Insurance Companies, interveners herein. It represents `premiums collected from the insured by Mr. Masten, the agent of the companies'. It was his custom to collect these premiums for the Companies when due, place them to his credit in the bank, and forward by his check to the several companies. . . . The fact that he handled the affairs of the companies in this way did not divest the companies of their ownership of the moneys so deposited. . . ." The findings of the court are in accordance with the views expressed in the above quotation.
[1] Upon this appeal it is urged that there is a misjoinder of parties as interveners, and that the respective amounts due the interveners are not stated. An inspection of the record discloses that no demurrer was filed, and *376 that no objection was taken to the complaint in intervention by the plaintiff's answer thereto. Section 430 of the Code of Civil Procedure, subdivision 4, provides for taking advantage of any defect in this particular if it appears upon the face of the complaint. Section 433 of the Code of Civil Procedure permits the taking advantage of such defects by answer in the event that such defect does not appear upon the face of the complaint. Section 434 of the Code of Civil Procedure sets forth that if no objection is taken either by demurrer or answer, the defect is waived.
[2] Again, it is objected that the form of the action does not permit recovery on the part of the interveners. Section
In Title Ins. Trust Co. v. Ingersoll,
In the case of Elizalde v. Elizalde, supra, the court in its opinion said: "If a trustee pay trust money into a bank to the account of himself, not in any way ear-marked with the trust, and also keep private moneys of his own to the same account, the court will disentangle the account and separate the trust from the private moneys and award the former specifically to thecestui que trust. If the trustee, after so *378 mingling the funds, has drawn from to time, it will be presumed that the moneys so drawn were from his own portion of the fund, rather than from the moneys held by him in trust." (Citing cases.) In that case it was held that the property could not be applied to the satisfaction of his debts owing to general creditors.
In Keeney v. Bank of Italy,
In Newport v. Hatton,
[4] The question of notice is not material in this case. There is no contention that any credit was given by the plaintiff to Masten on account of the manner in which the moneys belonging to the interveners was deposited in the bank. The ownership of the money so deposited only, is involved.
The alleged misjoinder or nonjoinder of parties not having been taken before issue joined, it was too late to raise that objection thereafter. (Sec. 378, Code Civ. Proc.; Chan Yo Chow
v. Lim Sing,
The judgment is affirmed.
Thompson (R.L.), J., and Preston, P.J., concurred. *379