170 Iowa 166 | Iowa | 1915
The defendant, is the widow of Charles E. Mercer, deceased. The plaintiff was a creditor of Mercer in his lifetime, and after his death filed and secured an allowance of a claim against his estate in the sum of $526.09. There being found no available assets with which to pay the claim, plaintiff brought this action in equity against the widow. The petition states in substance that, in the year 1906, Mercer applied to the plaintiff for employment as a traveling salesman, representing himself to be the owner of bank stock and other property real and personal and to be financially responsible for his contracts, and plaintiff, relying upon said repre
Defendant answers first in denial and further avers that the property of which it is alleged Charles E. Mercer was formerly owner was held by him in trust for the defendant, and that he was at no time the beneficial owner thereof. In reply, plaintiff pleads that defendant, by permitting her hus-. band to hold himself out as the owner of the property and to obtain credit on faith thereof, is estopped to assert her alleged ownership as against plaintiff. By way of amendment to her answer, defendant pleads certain facts to the effect that deceased died indebted to her upon several items named, to an aggregate amount of many thousand dollars, and that upon.
Upon the trial of these issues, the court below found the equities to be with the plaintiff and entered judgment against ■the defendant requiring • her to pay to plaintiff the amount of its claim allowed against the estate of her deceased husband, with interest and costs. It is from such decree this appeal has been taken.
The evidence shows the following facts, most of them without substantial contradiction. At the time of the marriage of Charles E. Mercer and the defendant, he had property or money to the amount of about $500. Defendant had then little or nothing in her own right, but belonged to a family of some considerable financial means. During her married life, defendant received at various times, from her father, mother and uncle, money and property to an aggregate amount of at least $23,000. Included in this sum, were fifteen shares of bank stock worth somewhere from $230 to $250 per share. She' is a woman of no business experience and appears to have a very inadequate and confused idea of business affairs. She says she gave her property little attention and allowed her husband to manage it for her. He was for some years'engaged with defendant’s brother in general merchandising. This business had heen closed out or sold before the' transactions involved in this suit. The money he put into that business was doubtless taken from the funds received from his wife. Just how much this was does not appear, but when the business was settled and the debts paid, but a comparatively small amount remained, and this was in a piece of real estate in Davenport. Later, in March, 1906, Mercer had some negotiation with plaintiff, a wholesale mercantile corporation in Chicago, Illinois, to secure employment as a a traveling salesman. At this time, he owned and held in his own name ten shares in the Washington, Iowa, National Bank, worth perhaps $2,500. He also held title to a half interest in
Such was the situation when Mercer applied to the plaintiff, or its predecessor, for employment. The circumstances attending that employment, as claimed by plaintiff, are to be found in the testimony of one Miller, the agent or manager with whom the matter was arranged. He produced a letter written by Mercer asking for employment and specifying the terms which he thought ought to be embodied in the contract. In this application he makes no reference to his financial ability, except as follows:
“I’m sending you letter from Cashier, F. H. Smith, showing that I am responsible for contracts I make, all of which I very respectfully submit for quick action. ’ ’
The letter from Smith, who at that time was assistant cashier of the Washington National Bank, is as follows:
“John G. Miller & Co.,
Chicago, Illinois.
“Gentlemen: — I have known Mr. C. E. Mercer for years, he is a stock holder in this Bank, has a good business record and is responsible for any contracts he makes.
Yours truly,
F. H. Smith, A. Cashier.”
While employed under this contract, plaintiff alleges that it advanced money to Mercer in excess of his salary to the' amount of the claim allowed in its favor against his estate. In addition to the production of the foregoing documents, Miller testifies that he acted for his company in employing Mercer and that, in a personal interview with him, Mercer told him he was worth $10,000 and was a stockholder in the Washington National Bank. From this point, his examination, question and answer, proceeds as follows:
Q. “You may state whether or not in the making of the contract Ex. 8, you relied upon the statement of P. Ex. 2, and the fact that Mr. Mercer was a stockholder in the Washington National Bank in extending to him the credit, or making the payments to him which are the subject matter of this action?” (Ex. 2 here referred to is Smith’s letter.)
A. “I did.”
Q. “You may state what if any statement Mr. Mercer made to you regarding the amount of his holdings of Washington National Bank stock, to the best of your recollection ? ’ ’
A. “I can’t remember exactly, but it was not a large amount. Something like either three or five shares, something like that. Five I think it was, I am not sure. It has been some time ago. ’ ’
Q. “You may state whether or not in the absence of knowledge of the ownership of the five shares of stock in the Washington National Bank, you would have entered into the contract P. Ex. 8 you have heretofore identified ? ’ ’
A. “We would not.”
Q. “When you say ‘we would not,’ do you mean John G. Miller & Co. would not have entered into such contract?”
A. “I do.”
The foregoing is the sum total of all the evidence offered
It further appears that, in 1908, and after the account or claim due plaintiff had accrued, Mercer arranged to go into partnership with one Dede to carry on a clothing business at Oskaloosa. About this time, he sold the ten shares of bank stock owned by himself, the proceeds of which, or the principal part thereof, were used to pay a debt which he owed to the bank. At the same time, he also sold his wife’s shares of bank stock for about $3,600 and of the proceeds put about $1,300 into the business at Oskaloosa. What became of the rest of the money so received is not clearly shown, but it is quite certain none of it was paid over to defendant, unless it be in the final transaction, of which we shall later speak. The widow swears, and there seems to be nothing in the record contradicting her, that the sale of her stock and the use made by Mercer of the money so received were wholly without her knowledge or consent, and the fact did not come to her knowledge until very shortly before Mercer’s death. '
Not long after entering upon the Oskaloosa venture, Mercer’s health began to fail, and he died on June 2,1909. Shortly before his death, he sold his interest in the clothing business to his partner. The amount received upon this sale does not clearly appear, but we infer it was substantially the sum deceased had invested therein. Thereafter, and in evident view of his early decease, he expressed his desire to turn over to his wife all the property in his possession, saying it all belonged to her and he could die easier if he knew she had what she was entitled to. At that time, he had one or more bank certificates of deposit of a total value of not to exceed $2,500, and about the same time, a further sum of $563.09 was received from the sale of the' Davenport property. He called in a friend and with his advice and assistance endorsed and delivered the certificates to his wife and paid or caused to be paid to her the cash item last above mentioned.
It should be said that, when not in business for himself, deceased was usually employed at a salary of $50 to $75 per month, but there is nothing in the record to indicate that he had made any accumulation from that source or indeed from any other source, unless it be the ten shares of bank stock which he held in his own name for some years and finally sold in November, 1908. He put no capital of his own into the mercantile business which he carried on in partnership with his brother-in-law, a business which seems to have resulted in no profit except, perhaps, the margin of $563.09 already mentioned. He put nothing into the Oskaloosa business'except the $1,300 paid from the proceeds from his.wife’s bank stock. No other venture or investment of importance by him is shown and no other source of income or profit except the money and property he had received belonging to his wife. He took no pains to conceal the fact that he was dealing with her money, and it was commonly and well known by the banks and others with whom he dealt that such was the case. He was regarded, however, as a man of integrity, was active and industrious and enjoyed a fair degree of credit. That he dealt with her money and property as freely and unreservedly as if it were his own (except the one item hereinafter mentioned) is clear. She says she gave it into his hands to manage for her, and the evidence shows she permitted him to do so without restraint. He was evidently not a practical success as a business man and the funds he received from his wife gradually, dwindled away until, at the time of the transactions immediately preceding his death, the remnant in his hands was little, if any, in excess of $3,000. The one item mentioned which he did not for a considerable period convert or deal with as his own individual property was the bank stock which the defendant had received from her parents. This stood and remained in her name at all times up
At the threshold of this inquiry, we have to determine whether defendant was a bona fide creditor of her husband to the extent of the value of the property received from him. Of this there is no room for doubt. Even if, for the purposes of this case, it be conceded that as to all other items of her property there was no contract relation with her husband and no contract obligation on his part which the law would enforce in her favor, this is certainly not the ease concerning the promissory note of $1,864 and interest which she received from her father’s estate, or the item of bank stock to the amount of $3,600, which he sold and disposed of without her knowledge or consent. The first was an express contract to pay, which was as valid and enforceable in her favor as it was in favor of the payee; and as to the second item, the law implies a promise to pay the' value of the stock converted by him to the same extent
Now what does the record show the plaintiff to have relied upon in extending credit to Mercer? Counsel for appellee argue the case as if defendant had allowed her husband to take and use her property as his own, and in such manner that plaintiff was justifiably misled into believing him the true owner and, on the strength of such apparent ownership, it was induced to extend him credit. The record wholly fails to make any such case. Plaintiff was doing business in Chicago and Mercer was living at Washington, Iowa. So far • as appears, plaintiff knew nothing and had no information as to what property Mercer had in his possession or control, or what, if any, property there might be over which he was exercising dominion or acts of ownership, save only the statement of Mercer himself that he had four or five shares of stock in the Washington National Bank, and the general statement in the letter written by Smith that Mercer was a stockholder in the bank. Mr. Miller, the man who acted for the plaintiff, simply says that he relied upon the letter of Smith ‘ ‘ and the fact that Mercer was a stockholder in the Washington National Bank in extending him the' credit and making the payments to him which are the subject-matter of this action.” He then
The' decree below must be reversed and plaintiff’s bill ordered dismissed. — Reversed.