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Lutz v. Williams
84 W. Va. 216
W. Va.
1919
Check Treatment
POEEENBARGER, JUDGE:

• The decision on tbe former writ of error in this case, reported in 79 W. Va., 609, reversed a judgment rendered on a verdict directed and found in favor of the Peoples National Bank of Elkins, in a proceeding against it by D. E. Lutz, a judgment creditor of J. E. Williams, on a suggestion founded upon an execution issued on a judgment; and condemned,’as being unsound and untenable, several grounds of defense and all of the theories of right of recovery set up by the plaintiff, except one, namely, that of a special deposit of the fund in question by Williams, the debtor, making it available for satisfaction of the claims of the plaintiff and others similarly situated. This theory constituted the basis of the new trial resulting in a verdict for the plaintiff, on which judgment was rendered not only for him, but also for six other judgment creditors of Williams* under a stipulation filed in the case. To this judgment, the bank obtained a writ of error.

A decree entered in seven chancery causes heard together and pertaining to this fund was offered in support of a plea of former adjudication, but, in view of the character of the decree and the reservations therein made, the court held the matter set up in this ease was not res judicata by that decree. When Williams’ checks drawn against the fund in question were dishonored, Lutz and six other holders thereof brought, separate chancery suits against the bank, to obtain said fund, upon the theory of agency in Williams for the Virginia Timber Company and title to that fund in his principal. All of them were matured and heard together and the theory on. which they proceeded wholly failed, the court holding that the fund did not belong to the Virginia Timber Company, but that, on the contrary, it was m'oney paid by that com-*219pañy to Williams lor timber. Accordingly, it was held that tbe plaintiffs should take nothing by their several bills and that the bank recover its costs from them. Rights were reserved, however, to the extent and in the manner following: “But nothing herein contained shall be taken to prejudice the right of the plaintiffs to proceed against J. E. Williams for said debt. * * * * * It is further ordered that nothing herein shall be construed to be an adjudication as to the title or ownership of the funds in question in this suit, claimed to be in the hands of the said Peoples National Bank, except to decide that said fund is not owned by the said Virginia Timber Company.” Of course, this decree amounts to an adjudication in favor of the bank, but the saving clause limits and defines the scope of that adjudication, for it is a part of the decree. The effect of a judgment or decree, like that of any other written instrument, is determinable by the language in whieh it is framed. As in any other case of interpretation, one clause, phrase or word may limit or restrain the effect of another. The adjudication in favor of the bank is qualified-by a clause showing the extent to which it goes, namely, a decision against title in the Virginia Timber Company. Exoneration of the bank from liability, on the ground that it was not a mere depositary of that company, precludes the theo'ry of exoneration on any other ground. The maxim, Expressio unius est exclusio alterius, applies. The trial court’s decision as to the decree, however, was right for another reason. The cause of action first set up was against the bank in the capacity of depositary of the Virginia Timber Company. This action proceeds upon an entirely different basis. Its ground is that the bank is the depositary of J. E. Williams. It matters not that both Williams and the bank were parties to the chancery causes in whieh the decree was entered. What was involved in those suits is determinable by the ground of action set up in the bills, all of which were alike and all of whieh differed in respect of the ground of action set forth in them from the one stated in the declaration in this ease. The present cause of action was not set up in *220the chancery causes nor adjudicated in them. A cause of action between the parties to a former adjudication is not res judicata, unless it is identical with the one actually or constructively decided between them. Bierne v. Ray, 49 W. Va. 129; Hudson v. Iguano Land & Mining Co., 71 W. Va. 402; DeSollar v. Hanscome, 158 U. S. 216; Russell v. Place, 94 U. S. 606; Cromwell v. County of Sac, 94 U. S. 351.

The evidence adduced on the former trial, tending' to prove the fund in question to have been a special deposit, was deemed and held to be sufficient to carry the issue as to whether it was or not, to a jury for determination. The evidence as to the character of the deposit introduced on the second trial varies in some respects from that considered on the former writ of - error, but the strength of its tendency to establish the plaintiff’s case has not been materially impaired, if at all. Williams, of course, was the principal witness, and slight inconsistencies and contradictions in his testimony are invoked against its sufficiency to justify the giving of the instructions based upon it and sustain the verdict. He had been the agent of one Kelton, in extensive transactions in timber and had made himself liable to the bank for Kelton’s indebtedness to it, in the sum of more than $5,500.00. After having incurred this indebtedness, he continued' to transact business with the bank, in the handling of timber for other parties, particularly, the Virginia Timjber Company. The Kelton failure had occurred in November 1909, and Williams’ pass book introduced in evidence shows an account beginning December 26, 1909, but does not disclose any charge of the Kelton balance or indebtedness. ' From that date until June 30, 1910, he made several small deposits, against which his checks seem to have been honored. On June 30, 1910, he deposited a draft of the Virginia Timber Company for $640.00, and upon that occasion he says he entered into the agreement relied upon in this case, with D. V. Moyle, assistant cashier of the bank, who, he says, then .wrote the words, “Pur Agent,” after his name in the pass book. He says he told Moyle he was purchasing ties for the'Virginia Timber Com*221pany, as their agent, that they were to send him money with which to pay for them, that he wanted it entered in the bank as J. E. Williams, Purchasing Agent, and that all checks would be signed as such agent for the Virginia Timber Company. On July 23, 1910, he deposited another draft of the Virginia Timber Company for $374.92. On July 26, 1910, he made a deposit of $302.16, which he thinks came from that company also, but, as to that, he is not certain. Notwithstanding his heavy indebtedness to the bank, his checks against these deposits were honored. Another draft of the timber company for $1,247.06, substantially the amount in controversy here, was deposited for collection, August 4, 1910. When the deposit was made, Williams did not produce Ms pass, book, to have the entry made in it, wherefore he was given a receipt for the amount of the draft, and a memorandum was filed in the bank. He says Lingamfelter, the casMer, who took the draft and gave the receipt therefor, requested him, in view of the magnitude of the amount, not to draw checks against it until! after notification of its- payment. Lingamfelter admits this. At this time, Williams had a balance of $350.00, and he drew some checks which could not be paid out of that balance, before he was notified that the large draft had been honored. His cheek in favor of Lutz for $481.20 bears date of August 5, 1910, and the following were drawn on August 6: Fenner Hart $106.04, William Batten $70.00, Crawford and Yothers, $31.09, and E. D. Nelson $94.22. Those drawn in favor of Hart and Batten were paid. On August 13, the following checks were drawn: J. H. West Lumber Company, $81.00, 0. A. Goodwin, $201.76, M. L. Osborne, $177.84, D. E. Lutz and Company, $241.67, and F. J. Reed, $64.00. On August 10, Williams made two deposits amounting to $226.46, but he had three outstanding checks amounting to $606.51, drawn since the date of the deposit of the large draft. One of these, the D. E. Lutz check for $481.20, was not presented for payment until August 16. Williams says the Hart and Batten checks were handed to the payees personally, they happening to be in the city, and that *222the others were mailed to the payees on the dates on whieh they were drawn. Lutz expresses the opinion that his was not mailed immediately, and, according to his testimony, it was-sent to his office at Mill Creek. Hart and Batten were evidently paid out of the two deposits made on the 10th, the $350.00 balance of the 4th having been reduced to $13.77, on the 9th. The bank received notice by mail, on the morning of August 12, that the large draft had been honored. On that day and before the bank opened, a meeting of the directors was held at which it was ordered that the amount of the draft be applied on Williams’ check to the cashier for $1,485.00, dated, November 9, 1909, constituting part of the indebtedness growing out of the transaction with Kelton. Whether he was notified of this action on that day or not, he swears he issued the checks of that date, before he was notified. He also swears that, on the morning of August 12, Moyle, the assistant cashier, told him on the street that the draft had been honored and he was at liberty to draw checks against it. This, Moyle denies. As to the date and circumstances of this alleged transaction or conversation, Williams’ testimony is somewhat contradictory: In his testimony on the former trial, he had given August 10th as the date thereof. In his testimony given in the chancery cause, he stated that he had met Moyle in the evening going from the bank to his residence. On this trial, after having ascertained that the bank received notice of payment, on the morning of the 12th, he admits that he may have been in error as to the exact time, in his former testimony, but he swears positively that he met Moyle on the street and was advised by him that he was at liberty tu draw checks against the draft, and that he did so before he received notice of the application of the amount of the. draft to the old check of $1,485.00. Moyle’s denial is somewhat argumentative. In support of it, he invokes improbability of the transaction from the fact that he received notice of the payment of the draft, only on the morning of the 32th., and that, on that day, the application to the old debt had been made. Williams, however, admitting possibility of mistake in his former testimony as to the exact date *223and circumstances, swears positively that he had such a conversation with, Moyle on the street, before he drew the checks bearing date, August 12, and further that he sometimes met Moyle on the street, coming from the bank, and before' banking hours. There is conflict in the evidence concerning the alleged agreement as to the form of the account, or pass-book, also. Both Lingamfelter and Moyle admit that the handwriting of the memorandum on the pass-book, “Pur. Agt.,” looks like that of Moyle. Lingam-felter says he thinks it is his. Moyle denies any recollection of having written it, but does not deny similarity of the handwriting to his own. He says Lingamfelter made up the book, but that the memorandum seems to have been put on after-wards. Nearly all of the checks drawn by Williams bear the addition or letters “P. A.” after his signatures. It seems that all of those given for ties and timber are signed in that way. He swears in this ease he told Lingamfelter, at the time of the deposit of the large draft, he wanted to check against it for ties and timber, but, on cross-examination, he is made to admit that he had made an apparently contrary statement, in his testimony in the chancery causes. On redirect examination, he explains this by saying it related only to the memorandum on the pass-book, as to the capacity in which he carried the account, and not to the use of the fund in question.

It is hardly necessary to say the questions of credibility and veracity arising out of this mass of testimony fall within the province of the jury, unless they are governed and disposed of by some controlling fact admitted or conclusively established by the evidence. Nothing of that kind is perceived. Williams’ testimony as to the character of his account is not limited to the one draft of $1,247.06. It goes back to June 30, 1910, and includes all deposits of checks and drafts on account of purchases of timber after that date, and it finds very strong support in the admitted conduct of the bank and its officials, with reference to his account and de.posits of that kind. He swears that he knew his financial condi*224tion and Ms contemplated sources of money for deposit; and they did, for Ms principal in former transaction had failed, and in Ms failure had involved him in large indebtedness to the bank. They also knew his lilability for tMs indebtedness was bitterly disputed. From December, 1909, until June 30, 1910, he had carried a small checking account, in which the old indebtedness had not been charged up. On June 30 or July 1, he deposited his first draft of the Virginia Timber Company, $640.00, and, it was on that date, he claims, that the bank agreed with him, through its cashier and assistant cashier, to permit Mm to make such deposits and check against them, and changed the character of his account from that of J. .E. Williams, to J. E. Williams, Purchasing Agent. Checks against that deposit and other similar ones were honored by the bank, notwithstanding the existence of the old indebtedness. Although, after notice not to draw checks against the large deposit of August 4, until after notification of payment of the draft, he drew several checks, including the one in favor of Lutz, before.he was notified of the payment of the draft, he no doubt had absolute confidence in the financial ability and the integrity of the drawer and felt that he could safely check against the deposit, even though some of Ms checks might be presented before notice of payment of the draft. According to Ms testimony, the only condition of payment of his checks was payment of the draft he had deposited, and, having full confidence in the integrity of the deposit, he may have felt that the possibililty of slight delay in the payment of his checks was not a Matter of serious consequence. The informal understanding between Mm and Lingamfelter may have meant no more than notice that his draft had been honored. That would not be an unfair interpretation of it, and, so interpreted, it did not forbid the drawing of the checks. Having a balance of $350.00 and other money in prospect, wMch came in on the 10th, and having deposited a good draft of $1,247.06, he may have thought he had made reasonable provision for the checks, and the circumstance relied upon, namely, the drawing of checks for *225$782.65, in addition to some already out, is not sufficient to preclude tbe jury from passing upon tbe direct and circumstantial evidence tending to prove tbe agreement claimed. It is not wholly nor vitally inconsistent with tbe oral evidence of tbe agreement. Nor is tbe fact that be drew some small checks against these deposits for other purposes than payment for timber. He says bis commissions included lb tbe payments to him were sufficient to provide for such checks. The evidence warranted tbe finding that .all his deposits and checks of considerable size were on account of timber. He was induced to say, on cross-examination, that the account was a general checking account, but that verbal characterization of it is not conclusive. It must be considered in the light of all other evidence.

Some small and unexplained deposits which may have been, timber money and probably were and the drawing of a few-small cheeks for purposes other than payment for timber are-not conclusive, nor do they make the deposits in question general in the sense of lilability to appropriation or set-off, in violation of the bank’s agreement. The issues here are not matters of technical definition, accounting or bookkeeping. The first inquiry is whether there was an agreement, possibly contrary to the form of the account, and the second, whether the bank shall be required to comply with its agreement. The former is one for jury determination, and nothing in the policy of the law absolves a national bank or another kind of bank from the obligation of such an agreement. Authorities cited in the opinion delivered in the former decision in this court amply sustain both propositions. They also define the character of the evidence requisite to the establishment of such an agreément, in accordance with, the rule enunciated in that opinion. The agreement need not be formal or specific. In kind and qualilty, the evidence may be such as suffices to establish any other agreement. Here we have direct and positive evidence of a specific agreement, supported by strongly probative circumstances.

The four instructions given for the plaintiff do not de*226part in any material respect from the legal principle governing the case. It is said two of them assume that the Lutz «heck was part of the deposited draft, hut a close scrutiny of their terms does not reveal anything of the kind. It is charged that another, No. 4, propounds the theory that the deposit was specially set apart for payment of eertan checks, ancl that it was improperly given because there was no evidence to sustain that theory. Williams swears he told the cashier it was to he used in payment for timber and the latter does not deny it. All of the checks in question were timber checks. The criticism of the remaining one is based largely on Williams’ definition of the account, to which reference has been made. Whether the deposit was special does not depend wholly upon that. The other evidence justified the giving of the instruction. The modification of defendant’s instruction No. 4, so as to put in the element of consent, as an ■essential requirement of authority in the bank to convert a special deposit into a general one, was clearly proper. To have given it without such modification would have been erroneous.

The stipulation under which judgment was rendered for the seven creditors proceeding by suggestion against the fund, on the final determination in this case, of the issue as to right to charge it, expressly provided for such judgment. The entry thereof was made the subject of an assignment of ■error, but it seems to have been abandoned.

It is insisted, however, that the judgment departed from "the stipulation, or violated it, in respect to two matters, the amount of the fund and allowance of interest thereon. The •stipulation fixes the amount of the fund at $1372.90, by inclusion of the small balance of $126.46 due Williams at the • date of notice of payment of the draft. The stipulation effectively removed the question of the amount of the fund from ' the arena of combat. But for it, the amount included in the ■agreement between the bank and Williams might have been -an issue in the trial and the. jury might have found either way •as to the small balance. As the bank took the fund in ques*227tion and used it in violation of the agreement and did not hold it as a trust fund subject to the order of the court, it was properly chargeable with interest thereon, unless the stipulation excluded interest. Shank v. Groff, 45 W. Va. 543; Thompson v. Lyon, 40 W. Va. 97; McVeigh v. Howard, 87 Va. 599; Hatcher v. Lewis, 4 Rand. 157; Jones v. Williams, 2 Call 106. 'Allowance of interest is not precluded by the stipulation. As to interest, it is silent. The fund was in Mitigation in the chancery causes, but those causes were defeated, in them. Since August 12, 1910, the bank has had the use of the money and the status of the fund was not altered by any procedure.

Perceiving no error in the judgment, we will affirm it.

Affirmed.

Case Details

Case Name: Lutz v. Williams
Court Name: West Virginia Supreme Court
Date Published: May 13, 1919
Citation: 84 W. Va. 216
Court Abbreviation: W. Va.
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