Himstedt v. German Bank

46 Ark. 537 | Ark. | 1885

Smith, J.

This is a continuation of the case of the Bank v. Himstedt, reported in 42 Ark., 62. Himstedt had sued Prank Marko and Elizabeth, his wife, for a debt due by the husband; had taken out an attachment and summoned the bank as a garnishee. The answer denied any indebtedness to Frank Marko, but disclosed that the bank held $75, which had been deposited by Elizabeth in her own name. The plaintiff discontinued his action against the wife, and the bank honored her cheek for the amount standing to her credit. Judgment having been rendered against the defendant and the attachment having been sustained, the garnishee was ordered to pay into court a sufficient sum to cover the plaintiff’s debt and cost of suit. But on appeal this last mentioned order was reversed.

Upon the second trial the evidence showed that Frank Marko, being indebted to Himstedt in a small sum, had sold his real estate in Little Rock and, by his direction, the purchase money had been paid to his wife, who deposited it in the bank. An attempt was also made to show that the bank had actual notice that the money deposited in the name of Elizabeth Marko belonged to her husband.

On this branch of the case the finding of the court below correctly summarizes the evidence, thus :

“ On the morning of the day on which the attachment was issued the plaintiff saw A. J. Thompson, who was the collector of the bank, and a director in it, and a member of the discount board, passing in front of his store. At the time Thompson was not engaged in the business of the bank, but was merely passing casually on the way to his dinner. -The plaintiff and Thompson were acquainted with each other, and a conversation took place between them. The plaintiff told Thompson that Marko was trying to beat him out of his debt, and was about to leave tow7n, -and that the money in bank belonged to him and not to his wife.
“ Himstedt did not tell Thompson that he asserted any claim to the money, nor did he direct Thompson to hold the money as the money of Marko. Thompson understood the conversation as only a friendly and social oner and did not understand that it was directed to him as an officer of the bank, or that he was expected to take any action, or refrain from taking any, in consequence of what Himstedt had said. He did not communicate the information which he had derived from Himstedt to the other officers of the bank, and never took any action in consequence of it.”

The issue was whether or not the bank owed anything to Frank Marko. And as it had never had any dealings with him, and the deposit it held had never been adjudged to belong to him, and no appropriate , proceeding, having that object in view, was then pending in any competent tribunal, with the necessary parties before it, the judgment was necessarily for the bank.

1. Relation bants'and depositors. The attempt to reach this money by process of garnishment, indicates a misconception of the relation which ex- . ists between a bank and its depositors. A general deposit is not a contract of bailment, in which the title to the thing deposited remains with the owner. But the title to money deposited passes to the bank, and the bank becomes debtor to the depositor. In consideraton of the loan of the money, and the right to use it for its own profit, the bank agrees to refund the same, or any part thereof, on demand. The nature of the relation created by the transaction, as being that of debtor and creditor, and not bailor and bailee, was pointed out by this court as early as the case of Dawson v. Real Estate Bank, 5 Ark., 296. And such is the law everywhere. Foley v. Hill, 2 Clark & Finnelly, 28; Marine Bank v. Fulton Bank, 2 Wallace 252; Phœnix Bank v. Risley, 111 U. S., 125.

The debt which the bank owed was to Mrs. Marko, not to her husband. Marko may have given the money to-his wife, and his intention, in so giving it, may have been to defraud his creditors. But this would not alter the relation between the parties to the deposit, nor vary their rights and' duties. The money, if not exempt by law, might, no doubt, have been subjected to the satisfaction of the plaintiff’s demand by some proceeding, to which the debtor, his wife and the bank were parties. Éor instance, the plaintiff might have filed a bill in equity, setting up his claim and attachment, Marko’s insolvency and contemplated removal from the state, and fraudulent purpose in causing the money to be paid to his wife. And he might have obtained an injunction restraining the bank from paying to Mrs. Marko, pending the suit, and at the final hearing, a decree that the .money belonged to Marko, and should be applied for the benefit of the plaintiff. But the question whether the gift to the wife was fraudulent could not be tried in the garnishment proceeding. It did not concern the bank that Marko chose to sell his property and turn the proceeds over to his wife.

We have decided the case upon general principles of law, independently of the married woman’s act.

But the payment to Mrs. Marko was authorized by sec. £6£7 of Mansfield’s Digest-.

“ When any deposit shall be made in any savings bank or other institution by any woman, being, or hereafter becoming, a married woman, in her own name, it shall be lawful for the officers or trustees of such bank or institution to pay such depositor such sum or sums as may be due such woman, and the receipt or acquittance of such depositor shall be sufficient legal discharge to the corporation thereof.”

Judgment affirmed.

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