71 P. 93 | Cal. | 1902
Plaintiff brought the action to compel the claimants to interplead and litigate among themselves the right to $336.43, which was on deposit with plaintiff in the name of John O. Welsh, on October 22, 1898. It appears that on that day Welsh drew a check on plaintiff bank in favor of Virgin Co., Ashland, Or., for $37 and mailed it to the payee. On October 22, 1898, he drew two other checks on plaintiff, one for $125, in favor of J.J. Sheafor, and one for $200 in favor of J.W. Parker. The Sheafor check was delivered to Sheafor a day or two after it was drawn. The third check, for $200, was not delivered until after October 27, 1898. In an action pending in the United States circuit court, wherein John O. Welsh was plaintiff and Southern Pacific Company was defendant, the latter obtained judgment against Welsh for $1,150.12. On October 24, 1898, said Southern Pacific Company caused a writ of execution to issue out of said circuit court, but in the title of the case in such writ the name of plaintiff therein was spelled Welch instead of Welsh. The writ was served on plaintiff herein by defendant Shine, United States marshal, on October 27, 1898, by notice of garnishment. After the service of garnishment these several checks were presented for payment, and payment was refused. Thereafter they were assigned to defendant Willey, who is now the holder. In the pleadings in the present case the name Welsh was again misspelled and he was referred to as Welch. The trial court found that the defendant referred to as John O. Welch in plaintiff's complaint and in the cross-complaint of the Southern Pacific Company and Marshal Shine is the same person referred to as John O. Welsh, plaintiff in the said action in the United States circuit court and in the said writ of execution, and is the same person who on October 22, 1898, had on deposit with plaintiff, in the name of John O. Welsh, the said sum of $356.43, which was *185 still so on deposit on October 27, 1898, when garnishment was served upon plaintiff and as alleged in the cross-complaint. Upon these facts the trial court decided that the checks to Virgin Co. and J.J. Sheafor ($37 and $125) should be paid to the holder. As to the $200 check, which was not delivered until after service of the garnishment, the court held that the holder was not entitled to payment. Judgment was accordingly rendered in favor of Willey for $162, and the balance of the funds, after deducting the costs of the action, were ordered paid to the marshal for the Southern Pacific Company. Defendants the Southern Pacific Company and Shine appeal from the judgment on bill of exceptions.
1. A bank-check is a bill of exchange. (Civ. Code, sec. 3254) The statute provides that "All persons having in their possession or under their control any credits or other personal property belonging to the defendant, or owing any debts to the defendant, at the time of service upon them of a copy of the writ and notice, as provided in the last two sections, shall be . . . liable to the plaintiff for the amount of such credits," etc. (Code Civ. Proc., sec. 544.) It is obvious that unless the Virgin Co. and the Sheafor checks had the effect to assign or transfer the deposit pro tanto to the payees at the date of their delivery (which was prior to the garnishment) the amount on deposit with the bank to the credit of Welsh was a credit belonging to Welsh, or, in other words, was a debt owing to him by the bank, when it was summoned as garnishee. The assignment, if such it was, must have changed the title to the credit from Welsh to the payees and made it their property. The contention of respondent is, that such was the effect of the checks, and that they worked an equitable assignment pro tanto; that the attaching creditor can only acquire such rights to the property attached as the debtor had at the time the attachment was served; and as the debtor's authority over the fund ceased after he had given checks for its withdrawal, the creditor gets nothing by his attachment. In support of his contention respondent cites Hassie v. God Is WithUs Cong.,
In section 71 of Rood on Garnishment, cited by respondent, some of the cases on both sides of the question are given in the notes. But in section 72 the author states: "It is believed that, with the above exceptions, the holder of a mere order upon the garnished fund has no claim to it which he can maintain against a garnishment served between the giving of such order and its acceptance by the drawee," (citing Poole v. Carhart.
In McEwen v. Johnson,
Pierce v. Robinson,
In Pope v. Huth,
Grain v. Aldrich,
Hobart v. Tyrrell,
Cashman v. Harrison,
In Lawrence Nat. Bank v. Kowalsky,
In the case of Curtner v. Lyndon,
So in McIntyre v. Hauser,
These are the only cases we have found which bear upon the question now before us, and they seem to me to leave the precise point at least res integra, but with a tendency towards the contention of appellants. *190
Turning to the view of the question presented by appellants, we find the cases quite numerous holding that an order, check, or bill of exchange drawn for part of a fund, does not operate as an assignment of that part or give a lien as against the drawee, unless he consent to the appropriation by an acceptance of the draft. We are not concerned with those cases holding that a check or bill of exchange may be treated as an equitable assignment protanto where the drawer and payee intended the check to have such effect; nor with those cases dealing with checks drawn against a special fund; nor with cases where the order or check is for the precise balance due from the depositary, from which an inference may be drawn that an assignment was intended; nor with the question whether the payee may, in his own name, have an action on the check against the drawee with or without presentation and refusal to pay; nor whether he must look to the drawer; or if he sue, that he must sue in the drawer's name for the use of the payee. Much learning has been expended on these questions, and while they may have more or less bearing, arguendo of the question here, it seems to us that unless we can hold the check to be an assignment, legal or equitable, pro tanto we must hold that the garnishment takes precedence.
It was held by the supreme court of the United States in FourthStreet Bank v. Yardley,
It was held in Bullard v. Randall, 1 Gray, 605,2 that a check for a part of the drawer's funds in a bank constitutes no assignment of that part of such funds, until presented for payment and accepted by the bank, although verbally assented to by the cashier when absent from the bank; and in that case the bank, summoned as trustee of Randall, was compelled to account to Randall as between him and the payee of the check. In Sands v.Matthews,
Without pursuing the inquiry further, we conclude, guided by principle as well as by weight of authority, that the court erred in directing the bank to pay the Virgin Co. and Sheafor checks to the holder.
2. Respondent makes the point that the variance in the name of Welsh is fatal to the writ (citing Rood on Garnishment, sec. 266, and Freeman on Executions, sec. 42). The finding of the court clearly established the identity of the person named, and the rule idem sonans would seem to apply. (See Galliano v. Kilfoy,
3. It is also contended that no authority is given the United States marshal to serve execution under United States laws by way of attaching debts due or owing to the plaintiff in an action in the United States courts. It is said that here a defendant in an action where he has obtained judgment seeks to attach a debt due to the plaintiff in such suit, and it is claimed that the attachment law of the state is made for the benefit of the plaintiff who brings the action and not for the benefit of the defendant in the action. There is nothing in the point. "The party in whose favor a judgment is given, may . . . have a writ of execution," etc. (Code Civ. Proc., sec. 681), "and the goods, chattels, moneys," etc., of the *194 judgment debtor "may be seized and held under attachment," etc. (Code Civ. Proc., secs. 544, 688.)
4. The notice of garnishment was addressed to the Donohoe-Kelly Company, instead of the Donohoe-Kelly Banking Company, and it is claimed that for this reason the notice is void. There is no pretense that the notice was not served on the right party, — i.e. "the person owing such debts," (Code Civ. Proc., sec. 542, subd. 5), — and the levy was made as required by law. (Code Civ. Proc., sec. 681 et seq.) No question is made that the corporation intended to be reached was the Donohoe-Kelly Banking Company. (Civ. Code, sec. 357) The point is not well taken.
On the facts as found, judgment should have been as prayed for in the cross-complaint of Southern Pacific Company and John H. Shine, United States marshal, and it is recommended that the judgment as entered be modified so as to conform to this opinion. The costs of appeal should be taxed against defendant Willey.
Haynes, C., and Cooper, C., concurred.
For the reasons given in the foregoing opinion the judgment is modified, with directions to enter judgment in accordance with the prayer of the cross-complaint and as in the opinion suggested. Van Dyke, J., Harrison, J., Garoutte, J.