34 Mich. 153 | Mich. | 1876
The facts out of- which this controversy arises appear to. be the following:
In the fall of 1874 Charles Burrows, the husband of Jane-E. E. Burrows, deposited at different times with the_ Detroit-Savings Bank sums which aggregated six thousand seven hundred and twenty-one dollars and ninety cents. On October 12th, 1874, Burrows made a general assignment to one= Keays for the benefit of creditors. This assignment was.
When Mrs. Burrows returned and found that judgment had been obtained against the bank and had been paid, she employed an attorney and proceeded to the bank to make demand for the money. For this purpose she drew her check for two thousand and eighty dollars, payable to the order of the attorney, and the attorney presented it. The bank refused payment, and this suit was then brought.
In submitting the case to the jury the judge was requested to instruct them that on the evidence the plaintiff was not entitled to recover, but this was declined. He was also requested to instruct them that there was no evidence tending to show collusion between Keays and the bank, and that the jury would not be justified in inferring it; but this was also declined. The question whether the money really belonged to Mrs. Burrows ivas submitted on conflicting testimony. And the instructions left the jury at liberty to infer negligence on the part of the bank in defending the
In order to determine what evidence of negligence there was for the Jury to act upon, it is necessary to consider what the officers of the bank did and what they refrained from doing. They certainly do not appear to have entered into a strenuous and persistent contest with Keays, or to have resorted to any measures to prevent the cause being brought to trial according to the regular course of the court. But were they bound to do so, and if so, on what grounds? Certainly not from any pecuniary interest in the controversy, for it was legally a matter of indifference to the bank whether the moneys should be paid to Keays or to Mrs. Burrows. Moreover the latter had not in any way indemnified the bank for contesting the claim of Keays, and the defense, so far as appears, was being conducted at its own expense. There were no peculiar obligations resting upon the bank to protect the interest of Mrs. Burrows, except such as must be implied in the case of every depositor; and these do not go beyond the requirement of good faith in infusing to surrender the moneys confided to the bank except upon a lawful demand lawfully established. Indeed, there were in this case some presumptions against the claim of Mrs. Burrow^ that were very well calculated to favor the claim of Keays in the mind of any one familiar with the facts; presumptions springing from facts which the attorney of Mrs. Burrows had very properly informed her looked suspicious. It is not at all unlikely that the officers of the bank regarded the claim of Mrs. Burrows as unfounded, and possibly they were influenced by some impressions to that effect in abstaining from a more vigorous and determined defense.
It appears, however, that the bank officers notified Mrs. Burrows of the suit in time to enable her attorney and her agent to take steps to make defense in her behalf if they deemed it advisable. It is fully shown by the evidence, that both the attorney and the agent had conferences with
It is not claimed that the bank kept back any facts on the trial. It is suggested, however, that there ivas negligence in not making use of the facts communicated by Stocks to Bisscll as the foundation for an application for a new trial. But here the question arises, whose duty it was to move for a new trial. The argument on this branch of the case appears to assume that the bank, because it had been made by one party the custodian of a fund which another claimed, was bound to take upon itself the whole burden of the contest on behalf of the party from whom the fund had been received. But nothing could be more unreasonable or more inequitable. The burden of defense properly rested upon Mrs. Burrows; if any new trial was to be moved for after the verdict, her agent should have taken steps for that purpose instead of awaiting the action of a custodian which could have no interest in the dispute.
But the statement of Stocks on this branch o'f the case is somewhat singular, to say the "least. He was put upon the stand as a witness by Keays, and was cross-examined at considerable length. If he knew any facts which would benefit Mrs. Burrows, it is most extraordinary that ho did not divulge them there, instead of ivaiting to make them the ground for a new trial. Nay, it was extraordinary that ho did not previously put Mr. Bissell in possession of them, so that the latter might prepare for trial with such aid as the facts might afford him. So far as we can see, the charge of negligence justly lies not at the door of any one connected with the bank, but at the door of Stocks, who neither as agent for Mrs. Burrows, nor as witness against her, was impelled to make that complete disclosure which the interest of his principal and the cause of justice would appear to have demanded of him in both capacities.
There is a like entire absence of evidence of collusion between the bank and Keays. The only specific facts to
1. No costs were taxed for Keays on his judgment against the bank.
2. The attorney for Keays called for execution immediately, stating in his precipe that “the defendants in the case prefer to have an execution in the case. Both parties want it done at once. Please see to it right off, as it is quite important to both parties to avoid delay.”
3. The conversation between Stocks and Bissell after the trial, in which the former claims to have communicated important facts, of whicli Bissell made no use.
d. The prompt payment of the money by the bank.
What the attorney for Keays may have said is manifestly not evidence against the bank, and may be dismissed from consideration. The communication from Stocks to Bissell seems to call for no further remark than this: that if it evidences bad faith in any one it would bo in Stocks rather than in Bissell. The other facts which are relied upon at tlie utmost prove nothing more than that the bank and Keays were trying in” an amicable suit the right of the latter to the money which the,former held. There was nothing suspicious in this; it was entirely proper that the suit should be conducted amicably, and proper also that if the bank interposed no technical or vexatious defenses, and allowed the case to come to a hearing on the merits according to the ordinary course of the court, no costs should be taxed against it. In justice no costs ought to have been taxed.
Collusion in such a case implies, a secret or dishonest arrangement in fraud of the rights of another. In this Case it might have been shown either,
1. In keeping Mrs. Burrows in ignorance of the proceedings until judgment should have been obtained; or,
2. In concealing or in mis-presenting the facts upon which the trial was to be had.
We do not learn that either the one thing or the other is chargeable to the bank in this case. Mrs. Burrows was
A careful examination of the record leads us irresistibly to the conclusion that the judge erred in not charging the jury that on the facts the plaintiff below was not ■ entitled to recover. The judgment must therefore be reversed, and .a new trial ordered.
We have not deemed it proper to discuss the question whether when moneys are thus deposited by one person on an understanding' with the banker that all orders drawn against the deposit are to be to the order of another, the ordinary relation of debtor and creditor is established between the depositor and the banker. Had the understanding been that the husband himself should draw for the money, probably he must have been considered the creditor. — Lilly v. Hays, 5 A. & E., 548; Malcolm, v. Scott, 6 Hare, 570. But this case was peculiar in that the action of both wife and husband was requisite to draw out any moneys under the directions given. We have found no case which undertakes to explain what the legal position of the parties is under such an arrangement, but we should say that the most Mrs. Burrows could claim would be, that it was a question of fact under all the circumstances whether the money was understood to be deposited for her use, or for that of her husband, or for the joint use of the two who were to .act in drawing it out. — Gibson v. Minet, R. & M., 68; S. C., 1 C. & P., 247.