215 Mass. 489 | Mass. | 1913
This is a bill in equity in which the plaintiff seeks to interplead the two defendants in respect to a fund of $10,000 alleged to be held on deposit by it. There was a demurrer by the defendant Mary Rennison which was sustained and a decree was entered
We think that the decree sustaining the demurrer and dismissing the bill was right and should be affirmed. From the facts alleged in the bill it appears that John Rennison the husband of the defendant Mary Rennison died testate on the ninth day of July, 1911, and that on August 17 his will was duly admitted to probate and letters testamentary were issued to the defendant Charles R. Batt, the executor named therein. On the eighth day of July, the day before he died, John Rennison drew on the plaintiff bank, where there was then on deposit to his credit the sum of $10,354.12, a check for $10,000 in favor of Mary Rennison, and delivered-the same to her. This check was'presented by Mary Rennison on Monday, July 10, to the defendant Batt, who was the president of the bank, and to the cashier, and payment thereof was demanded by her, which was refused by Batt on the ground that he did not then know whether the bank could rightfully pay it. Previous to the presentation of the check by Mary Rennison and before the bank knew of that check, the bank had paid a check for life insurance for $444.10, drawn by John Rennison, so that at the time of the presentation of the check for $10,000 by Mary Rennison the amount on deposit to the credit of John Rennison was $9,910.02. The amount to the credit of John Rennison’s estate continued to be less than $10,000 until July 13, when Batt, in anticipation of the receipt of rents due to John Rennison before his death and which were to be paid and were in fact paid before August 1, caused the sum of $108.33 to be deposited to the credit of John Rennison’s estate, which with the amount then standing to the credit of the estate made the total amount to the
It is manifest, we think, from this recital, that the defendant Mary Rennison may have a claim against the plaintiff growing out. of the transactions between it and her because of the transfer by it of $10,000 from the account of John Rennison to her account, which is independent of the question whether she or the executor would be or is entitled to the fund of $10,000 represented by the check given to her by her husband. In other words it may turn out, according to the allegations of the bill, that, if she has any right or title to the $10,000 for which she has brought suit, she has derived it from the plaintiff and not from her husband, although the check which she received from her husband was what led to the transactions between her and the plaintiff on which she relies. In such a case it is plain that a bill cannot be maintained by the bank to compel her and the executor to interplead. As was said in Fairbanks v. Belknap, 135 Mass. 179, 184, “The office of such a suit is to protect a party, not against a double liability, but against a double vexation on account of one liability.” See Third National Bank v. Skillings Lumber Co. 132 Mass. 410; National Life Ins. Co. v. Pingrey, 141 Mass. 411; Weatherbee v. New York Life Ins. Co. 182 Mass. 342; Welch v. Boston, 208 Mass. 326. By its allegation that it holds the fund for the true owner and has incurred no independent liability to either of the defendants, the plaintiff cannot avoid the effect of other allegations relating to the transfer by it of the sum of $10,000 from the account of the estate of John Rennison to the account of the defendant Mary Rennison. Whether, as the defendant Batt argues, no contractual relation between the defendant Rennison and the plaintiff was created by the putting of the $10,000 to her credit by the bank, and whether she acquired thereby any independent cause of action, cannot be
It follows that the decree dismissing the bill with costs was right.
Decree affirmed with costs of the appeal.
In the Superior Court by order of Morton, J.