343 S.W.2d 539 | Tex. App. | 1961
This is an appeal from an order overruling plaintiff’s motion for summary judgment. In the judgment we find this recital r * * * “the Court * * * finds that the-law and the facts are with the defendant,”' * * * and decreed that plaintiff take nothing. The decree is assailed on two' points; they are substantially to the effect that the Court erred because: (1) The bank had sufficient knowledge of the trust character of the funds standing in the name of The Mullan Company to create-a duty of inquiry as to the true ownership-thereof, and appellee was guilty of conversion when it applied such trust funds to its-own use; (2) That the appellant, as the-equitable owner of the trust funds on deposit in the name of The Mullan Company, has a superior right thereto as opposed to-appellee bank which applied such funds to payment of a prior existing debt owed personally by the trustee.
A statement is necessary. The appellant went to trial on its original petition. Pertinent to this discussion it alleged substantially that on March IS, 19SS plaintiff entered into a general agency agreement with Mullan doing business as The Mullan. Company, whereby plaintiff appointed such company as its general agent in Texas for such insurance coverage as plaintiff might authorize from time to time; that by this agreement the Mullan Company was authorized to collect premiums for insurance on behalf of plaintiff; that by a trust agreement entered into by plaintiff and The Mullan Company on March IS, 1955, it was expressly confirmed that all premiums received by Mullan relating to plaintiff’s business be held in trust by plaintiff until such premiums were paid over to plaintiff; that during the period prior to July 1956 The Mullan Company, while conducting the business of a general insurance agency followed the practice of collecting premiums for insurance companies it represented, depositing those premiums to its account in the defendant bank, and subsequently remitting to the insurance companies the net premium after deducting premium commissions; that pursuant to the above agreements, this practice was
We have considered Mr. Schmidt’s testimony, including the exhibits attached to it very carefully and as we view this testimony we think the following facts are without dispute. The record shows that the account was opened November 9, 1953 under the name of Joseph N. Mullan, Jr., dba The Mullan Company as a joint account with his wife, Zenobia Mullan, authorized to-sign checks on said account; that on January 4, 1956, Mullan transferred $13,-500 from appellee bank to Republic National Bank in Dallas for his account; that on January 10, 1956, Mullan’s second wife,. Juanita, opened an account at appellee bank with an initial deposit of $7,457.29; that Schmidt did not know on June 28, 1956 that The Mullan Company was in financial difficulty nor did he' suspicion any such thing; that Schmidt said that on or about this date Mullan’s account had been larger in the past than it was at that time; that the account in question was just an ordinary checking account used by Mullan in his business; that the bank had no-knowledge at all that appellant may have been a beneficiary of any deposit in its bank, nor did it have any knowledge of any trust agreement between Mullan or The Mullan Company or any insurance companies, including appellant, which Mullan represented; that appellant had specific authority from the owner of the bank account, namely Mullan, to charge such account in the manner in which such charges were made; that none of Mullan’s business dealings with the bank indicated in any way that Mullan represented the appellant.
The appellant relies upon the following authorities to sustain its view: City National Bank of Beaumont v. American Surety Company of New York, Tex.Com.App., 52 S.W.2d 259; Commercial State Bank v. Algeo, Tex.Civ.App., 331 S.W.2d 84, dismissed; First National Bank of Schulenburg v. Winkler, 139 Tex. 131, 161 S.W.2d 1053; Tex.Civ.App., 146 S.W.2d
Nor do we think the opinion of our Supreme Court in Steere v. Stockyards National Bank, supra, supports plaintiff’s theory of recovery. As we understand that decision, it shows that the bank in that instance had actual knowledge of the trust fund character of the deposits in the account involved. That situation is nonexistent here. In this case we think it is undisputed that there was no actual knowledge, nor do the facts constitute knowledge of circumstances sufficient to necessitate inquiry on the part of the bank. We think the foregoing view of the trial court, which is supported by the evidence, distinguishes this factual situation from the cases cited by appellant. Moreover, it is without dispute here that a debtor-creditor relationship existed between Mullan and the appellee bank at the time Mullan’s indebtedness to the bank was applied against his account, and in the absence of any knowledge on the part of the bank of the alleged contract existing between Mullan and appellant, appellee had the right to appropriate a part of Mullan’s account in discharge of his debt to the bank. See 6 Texas Jurisprudence 232, Section 100. But, appellant takes the position that appellee would be unjustly enriched at its expense if appellee be allowed to apply money belonging to appellant to a debt owed by Mullan based on credit extended without regard to appellant’s trust funds being on deposit, and contends that such unjust enrichment is not dependent upon knowledge or undisputed knowledge of trust funds at the time of conversion, although such knowledge did exist in the cases establishing the Rule. We cannot agree with appellant’s contention. We think the appellant’s contention is grounded
Finally, the Texas Banking Code of 1943 provides in Article 342-709, Vernon’s Ann.Civ.St. as follows:
“No bank shall be required to recognize the claim of any third party to any deposit, or withhold payment of any deposit to the depositor or to his order, unless and until the bank is served with citation or other appropriate process issuing out of a court of competent jurisdiction in connection with a suit instituted by such third party for the purpose of recovering or establishing an interest in such deposit.”
Under the foregoing statute the undisputed factual situation here precludes the appellant from recovery. It is true that the foregoing statute was discussed by the Circuit Court in Pacific Indemnity Company case, supra, but the opinion shows that the bank had notice of, a restraining order and shows thereafter to have paid itself from a depositor’s account. Needless to say that under the provisions of the foregoing statute the bank acted at its peril after notice.
Accordingly the judgment of the trial court is affirmed.