1 Pa. Super. 144 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1896
Opinion by
In the application of the general rule of equity as to the right to follow trust funds so long as they can be traced in spite of transmutation of form or change of possession, it is uniformly held that the true ownership of a fund deposited in bank may be proved to be in another than the person in whose name the deposit is made, but whether the bank is chargeable to the true owner must depend upon the circumstances of the case: Stair v. York Nat’l Bank, 55 Pa. 364. Where the depositor could recover it in an action at law, if he were the true owner, the latter can recover in his own name, by an action for money had and received: Frazier v. Erie Bank, 8 W. & S. 18; Stair v. York Nat’l Bank, 55 Pa. 364; Farmers’ and Mechanics’ Nat’l Bank v. King, 57 Pa. 202. Whether the bank will be protected against a suit by the cestui que trust, when, in the usual course of business and without notice of the secret trust, it has credited the deposit upon the overdrawn account of the depositor or with his consent has charged against it a protested bill upon which the depositor is liable to the bank is one of the questions raised in this case, but it is not the only one. There
The maker of accommodation paper cannot, as against a third person who, without notice of the equities between the parties, has taken it in payment of an antecedent debt, set up as a defense, that it was misappropriated by the payee: Bardsley v. Delp, 88 Pa. 420. See also Stedman v. Carstairs et al., 97 Pa. 234. We cannot see why this principle would not protect the bank against the plaintiff’s suit. Even if it does not strictly apply, and assuming that the bank’s right of action against Tyson revived when it received notice that Tyson had misappropriated the check, still the fact remains that the bank had been induced by Tyson’s apparent ownership of, and right to use the fund for general purposes, to forbear taking any measure to enforce its right, to suffer delay which might be very serious in the ease of a debtor in failing circumstances. It seems too plain for argument, that the deposit of the plaintiff’s $300 check, gave or assisted in giving to Tyson a credit which entered into
We cannot see that the defendant’s failure to honor the Tyson 1400 check to the plaintiff, entered into the question ; for (1) that is not the cause of action alleged in the declaration ; (2) the holder of an unaccepted check or draft cannot maintain thereon an action in his own name against the drawee: Maginn v. Dollar Savings Bank, 131 Pa. 362; (3) the refusal to pay the check was entirely legitimate. Tyson did not have money enough in bank to pay this check and the other checks he gave and the draft upon which he was liable; so far as the bank knew he had a perfect right to appropriate the whole fund to payment of the latter, and it was not fraudulent on. the part of the bank to permit it.
There being no disputed questions of fact, and the equities' of the bank being superior to those of the plaintiff, the court properly gave binding instructions.
Judgment affirmed.