11 Mo. 374 | Mo. | 1848
delivered the opinion of the Court.
Hyam H. Cohen having obtained judgment against the Mineral Point Bank, garnisheed the Perpetual Insurance Company of 8t. Louis. The company answered the interrogatories filed against her by Cohen, who replied, denying the truth of the answer, when the case was submitted to the court, upon an agreement of facts, who found for the defendant; the plaintiff moved for a new trial, which the court refused to grant him, whereupon he appealed to this Court.
The following is the agreed case submitted by the parties to the Court of Common Pleas :
“It is agreed by the parties aforesaid, that before the time of the service of the garnishment in this case, S. B. Knapp, cashier of the Mineral Point Bank, had deposited with the said garnishee $9,200, of notes of Kentucky banks, for which amount certificates of deposit were issued by said garnishee, payable to the order of said Knapp, cashier, which bank notes were of the value of $8,684. At the time said garnishee was summoned in this cause, the said sum so deposited remained in the hands of the garnishee and belonged to the Mineral Point Bank, and was subject to attachment by its creditors. But that before the service of the garnishment in this cause, the said garnishee had been summoned ' upon other prior attachments issuing from this Court and the St. Louis Circuit Court, in which judgments have since been rendered against said garnishee to the full amount of the principal sum deposited as aforesaid, which judgments have been satisfied out of the principal sum aforesaid, and there is no fund nowin the hands of said garnishee applicable to this attachment, unless the said garnishee is liable for interest on the said principal sum. It is further admitted that the said garnishee
The answers of the garnishee, referred to in the agreed case, and made • a part thereof, present no additional facts important in the decision of the question presented for our consideration.
Is the garnishee properly chargeable with interest on the deposits during the pendency of the attachment suit against her by the creditors of the Mineral Point Bank? The case agreed does not state whether/ the deposite, or any part thereof, was at interest, and if so, when the interest commenced running, and the rate of interest to be paid. We suppose however, that the deposite was of the ordinary character and did not draw interest until demand made and a refusal to pay. The demand in this case would be the service of the garnishment, provided judgment had been previously obtained against the bank, or perhaps more properly at the return term of the process against the garnishee, as she would not be able to answer or pay over the funds in her hands at an earlier period, if payment could then be made with safety to her own interest. Then, up to that period, the garnishee is certainly not liable for interest, as she was not chargeable with wrongfully withholding payment. Did her subsequent conduct operate an unnecessary delay of payment and subject her to interest on the deposite ? The facts show, that Knapp, the cashier of the Mineral Point Bank, made the deposite in his own name and took several certificates therefor, payablé at a future day upon their presentation to the defendant, which passed into the eastern firm of Little & Co-. That prior to their presentation a number of attachment suits had been instituted in the courts of St. Louis against the Mineral Point Bank, by her creditors, and the funds deposited by Knapp with the defendant had been attached to satisfy the demands. After the service of the garnishment on the defendant, the Little’s, holders of the certificates of deposit, presented them to the defendant and demanded their payment, but the defendant refused to pay in consequence of the proceedings instituted against her in St. Louis. The defendant afterwards answered the interrogatories filed against her in the courts of St. Louis, denying her indebtedness to the Bank of Mineral Point, but setting out the transaction between her and Knapp, the cashier, and stating the transfer of her certificates by Knapp to Little & Co., the demand made by them for payment of the same, her refusal to pay in consequence of the proceedings in the courts of St. Louis against her by the creditors of the bank, and desires the court to decide to whom she was liable; and in her supplemental answer she states that Little & Co.
the judgment is affirmed.