257 P. 345 | Wyo. | 1927
It is true, as counsel argue, that, as part of the defense herein, it was alleged that Paul L. Gray represented that he individually owned the note and mortgage from which the money in question herein was derived; and counsel, accordingly, further argue that Gray was charged with conversion of the funds, the bank participating therein by taking $150.00 of the money and applying it on the individual debt of Gray. The court made a general finding, *10 and it does not appear whether it took the view that Gray was guilty as stated. But even if it did, the result could be no different. If the defense above mentioned was true; if Gray was actually guilty of conversion, then he came before the court as one attempting to take advantage of his own wrong. The action was brought by him as administrator of the estate of Irad Wilson Gray. The beneficiary of the trust money in his hands did not make any claim. Paul L. Gray, while administrator of the estate, was responsible for the money in his hands and would be personally liable for any act of conversion of which he was guilty, and it would not lie in his mouth to say, if guilty of conversion, that because the bank assisted him in his unlawful acts, he should be relieved from his personal responsibility by having the claim against the bank established as a preferred claim. To hold otherwise would certainly not be equity toward the general depositors. But we do not take the view that he was guilty of any unlawful conversion, or that in making the deposit he acted in bad faith. His statements in the petition herein negative that fact. It further appears that he kept other money belonging to the estate in his individual account with knowledge of Rachel E. Gray, the beneficiary of the trust money, and she, in fact, claimed the very money now in controversy, and apparently without objection, upon the individual check of Paul L. Gray. Not even the fact of the payment of the small amount to the bank — the sum of $150 — on the individual indebtedness of Gray can, standing by itself, be accepted as proof of a dishonest conversion of the money in view of the fact, of which we take judicial notice, that an administrator is entitled to a commission on the property of a decedent coming into his hands, and is entitled to be reimbursed for his expenses, and it may well be that the small amount of money taken by the bank was not more than to cover the amount to which Paul L. Gray was lawfully entitled. Hence we *11 may well hold, as was held in Paul v. Draper, supra, that the facts in this case do not show and did not effect any misappropriation of money, and that the account, therefore, may well be treated as though the deposit had in fact been made in the name of Paul L. Gray, as administrator of the estate of Irad Wilson Gray. It is true that the lower court allowed the whole claim without deducting the $150, indicating thereby that this amount should not have been taken by the bank. But that is not at all the equivalent of a finding that the deposit was made fraudulently or in bad faith within the meaning of Paul v. Draper, supra, and could be allowed as a general, rather than a preferred claim, without necessarily violating the rule of that case.
We find no reason for a rehearing, which is, accordingly, denied.
Rehearing Denied.
KIMBALL, Justice, concurs.
POTTER, Justice, absent.