99 Mo. App. 681 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1903
Plaintiffd is the assignee of the Trader’s Grain Company, a corporation located at Kansas City, Missouri, and as such brought this action against the defendant bank for $1,015.77 alleged to have been deposited by the grain company before the assignment and to have been in the hands of the bank as a deposit at the time of the assignment. The trial was had without the aid of a jury and' the court found the fact to be that the grain company did not own the deposit, and declared the assignee could not recover. Judgment being thereupon rendered for defendant, plaintiff duly appealed.
Plaintiff’s contention is that the court’s finding is not justified by the evidence in the record. It appears that plaintiff had an agent named Flemming located at St. Joseph, Missouri, who had supervision and charge of the company’s business in that part of the State. This agent had an agent at Maryville, Missouri, named Evans, who conducted a business in the name of the company in that vicinity and reported directly to Flemming. There was evidence amply sufficient to justify the court in finding that Evans did not confine himself to legitimate dealings but did an unlawful business in the company’s name; that is, he conducted what is commonly called a bucket-shop business in grain and stocks, contrary to the statutes of this State (sections 2221-2225, Revised Statutes 1899).
One Lee was a customer of Evans at Maryville in the unlawful business and put up with him what is known as “margins” to secure him against loss in the deals. These sums were deposited by Evans in the defendant bank in the company’s name, the understand
Ordinarily a deposit of money by a third- person to the credit of another, being for his benefit, will be presumed to have been accepted by him. But this is only true of a lawful transaction. It is not true where the presumption would establish an unlawful, act, or participation in an unlawful act. For the primary presumption is always in favor of innocence. In conflicting presumptions the latter always prevails. All other presumptions, merely as such, give way to the presumption of innocence. This, though things once shown to exist are presumed to continue. But if their -continuance would develop a crime, the presumption would cease and be succeeded by one of innocence. Thus, if it be shown that a man and woman were man ried and lived together as husband and wife, and one -of them is shown to have afterwards married another person: on a trial for bigamy the presumption of innocence will overcome the presumption of the continuance of tiie former marriage, and it will be assumed, in lack of other evidence, that the first marriage was, in some way, dissolved. The cases on this head are discussed in Waddingham v. Waddingbam, 21 Mo. App. 628-631. And an apt illustration of the power of the presumption of innocence to overcome other presumptions is found in Klein v. Landman, 29 Mo. 259.
It is, however, said by plaintiff that the mere bringing of this action is an acceptance of the deposit. But the institution of this action is not the act of the
The further question, therefore, is, did the deposit, in fact, aside from any presumption, belong to the grain company. The only evidence that it did belong to the company is that it was deposited by Evans in the company’s name. Rut the mere deposit of money in a bank'by a third person to the credit of another does not show ownership in the latter in the absence of a showing of acceptance, or a presumption of acceptance. Branch v. Dawson, 36 Minn. 193.
Counsel claim that defendant admitted in writing that the eoropany owned the deposit. This claim is based on a letter written by defendant’s president to plaintiff a few days after his appointment as assignee, in which the president returned plaintiff’s draft for the deposit unpaid, and in which he stated: ‘‘The Trader ’s Grain Company have no funds in this bank. It did have $1,015.77, but at the time your notice was received it was indebted to us so we charged off the account.” That was merely the statement of defendant based 'on the appearance of the matter on its books. So far as the books disclosed anything, they showed the account of deposit to be that of the grain company. But the appearance of defendant’s books could not show an acceptance of the deposit by the grain company. That was a condition or appearance brought about by the act of Evans in so making, the deposit in furtherance of Ms unlawful business, and of which the grain company was not shown to have knowledge. The trial court was justified in refusing to regard the letter as proof of ownership in the grain company. Plaintiff having failed to show that the company accepted the*1 deposit or had any knowledge of it, and there being no
There were further questions made in the argument of counsel. It appears from the testimony of Flemming (the manager at St. Joseph) that the ac-' count in the defendant bank was made up from margins put up by a customer to protect the dealer in case of loss in the transaction. Defendant contends that as margins they could not be the property of the grain company. That the money, termed a margin, is but an indemnity to the dealer, and that unless there be a loss shown sufficient to swallow up the margin it remains the. property of the customer. That therefore, no loss being shown, the grain company has no right to claim the deposit as its money. And that, if the margins were put up for indemnity against loss in a legitimate transaction, they constituted a trust "fund and did not pass to the assignee by the deed of assignment. But since what we have already said disposes of the case we need not consider those questions.
We are satisfied that the evidence was sufficient to justify the court in its finding of the character of the business carried on by Evans, and that the grain company never authorized the business, nor accepted the deposit.
The judgment is affirmed.