38 S.C. 372 | S.C. | 1893
The opinion of the court was delivered by
This appeal presents two general questions: 1st. Whether the Circuit Judge erred in refusing the motion to dismiss the complaint, upon the ground that sufficient facts are not therein stated to constitute a cause of action? 2d. Whether there was error in refusing the motion to vacate the order of arrest, upon the ground that the affidavits used for the purpose of obtaining such order do not state sufficient grounds for the arrest?
It seems to us that these facts show, beyond dispute, that the plaintiff has a cause of action against the defendants. When the defendants assigned and delivered to the plaintiff the choses in action, as collateral security for the loans of money represented by the notes, the plaintiff acquired a qualified property in said choses in action, or rather in the money due thereon, and when that money was collected, such money belonged to the plaintiff, and became at once applicable to the payment of the said notes, so far as might be necessary for that purpose. When, therefore, the defendants collected any money on the said choses in action, they were under a legal, as well as a moral, obligation to apply such money to the payment of the notes, and when, after demand, they failed and refused so to apply it, they were guilty of a wrong in violation of plaintiff’s rights, and this afforded a good cause of action against, defendants by the plaintiff. It is clear, therefore, that there was no error in refusing the motion to dismiss the complaint upon the ground stated.
The affidavits of the cashier and assistant cashier of the plaintiff bank show that the appellant, William A. Jennings, admitted to them that he had collected a considerable sum of money (stating the amount) on the collateral securities pledged to the bank to secure the payment of the said loans of money to the defendants, and had not paid over the same to the bank, but had applied the same to the uses of his firm, and that he knew that the money so collected by him belonged to the bank, and should have been turned over to it by hiin, but that he expected to pay the notes of the firm in the bank “with other money wliicn he hoped to have — thought he could replace the money so used.” Finally, the affidavit of the bookkeeper of defendants’ firm shows that the appellant, William A. Jennings, was the senior member and manager of the business, made most of the collections himself, and was fully cognizant of those not made by him personally, and knew perfectly well
It seems to. us that these facts show that this is an action for the recovery of money received by a person in a fiduciary capacity and fraudulently misapplied, and, therefore, the-order of arrest was fully justified by the facts stated in the affidavits, and there is no counter-showing by affidavit calling for a reversal or modification of such order. When these choses in action, upon which the collections were made, were assigned to the bank as collateral security for the payment of the loans of money made by the bank to the defendants, they knew’— the appellant admits that he knew — that all money collected on such collaterals belonged to the bank, and should be turned over to it as soon as collected. When, therefore, the appellant undertook to collect, and did collect, money on these col-laterals, he voluntarily assumed a trust which he was, both legally and morally, bouud to perform. He thereby assumed a fiduciary relation to the plaintiff, and became bound to fulfil the duties incident to such relation. It may be that, in the absence of an agreement to that effect, he was not bound to assume such a relation, and was not bouud to make collections on the collaterals, and hence not bound to apply the same to the payment of the debt which they were given to secure. But when he voluntarily assumed the duty of collecting the collaterals, he, at the same time, necessarily assumed the obligation to apply such collections to the purposes for which the collaterals were transferred to the bank; and when, in violation of that obligation, he misapplied the money entrusted to him in such fiduciary capacity — converted the money of another to his own use — he not only received money in a fiduciary capacity, which he fraudulently misapplied, but also was guilty of fraud in contracting the debt for which he is now sued.
It seems to us, that where one receives the money of another, under an understanding, either express or implied, that it is to be applied to a certain purpose, and, in violation of such understanding, not only diverts it to some other purpose, without the consent of the owner, but actually converts it to his ■ own use, such a transaction cannot be properly characterized
The views which we have adopted are not without the support of authority. In Clark, v. Iselin, 21 Wall, at page 368, the U. S. Supreme Court quotes with approval the following language, directly applicable to the case under consideration, from White v. Platt, 5 Denio, 269: “Where promissory notes are pledged by a debtor to secure a debt, the pledgee acquires a special property in them. That property is not lost by their being redelivered to the pledgor to enable him to collect them,, the principal debt being still unpaid. Money which he may collect upon them is the specific property of the creditor. It is deemed collected by the debtor in a fiduciary capacity.” To same effect, see, also, Powers v. Davenport, 101 N. C., 286; s. c., 7 S. E. Rep., 747; and Travers v. Deaton, 107 N. C., 500; s. c., 12 S. E. Rep., 373.
The judgment of this court is, that the orders appealed from be affirmed.