OPINION
This appeal is from the granting of summary. judgment in an interpleader action. At issue is the propriety of such action. We affirm.
This is the second appeal of this case. The previous opinion is reported as
Commercial Credit Corp. v. Fire Insurance Company,
after reading the pleadings, the Motion for Summary Judgment and affidavits and exhibits attached and hearing argument of counsel thereupon, the Court is of the opinion and so finds that the Summary Judgment of COMMERCIAL CREDIT CORPORATION has proven it’s [sic] claim to the remaining funds interplead into the regeristry [sic] of this Court and that no other claimant has properly proven its claim to said funds and that COMMERCIAL CREDIT CORPORATION is entitled to the whole of said interplead funds remaining ... which fund when withdrawn from the registry of this Court by Oak Forest Bank and Northshore Bank amounted to $43,349.96 and futher [sic] finds that Oak Forest Bank and Northshore Bank have, at this time, no legal claim to the. funds that they withdrew from the registry of this Court and that judgment should be entered against Oak Forest Bank for $7,650.00 and against Northshore Bank for $35,699.26
In its first point of error, appellant contends it was error to grant summary judgment “because the response of Northshore Bank established its claim as equal or superior to that of Commercial Credit Corporation.” In its response to appellee’s motion for summary judgment, appellant asserted:
(1) its claim to the interplead funds was superior to that of appellee;
(2) the matter was moot since the funds had been withdrawn from the registry of the court and “there is no longer a fund to be divided by the Court;”
(3) no pleadings exist which would support a judgment in favor of appellee against appellant;
(4) the summary judgment proof is insufficient since it does not “affirmatively negate the claims of the other creditors ... to this fund;” and
(5) there “is no basis for dividing the funds in dispute on a pro rata basis as suggested by [appellee.]”
As stated above, appellant did not move for summary judgment and we find it difficult to understand its present complaint.
It is clear that a garnishee may pay funds into the registry of the court and by interpleader bring into the suit all claimants to the funds in order to protect itself against multiple liability.
Thompson v. Fulton Bag & Cotton Mills,
An interpleader suit involves two successive litigations: one between the plaintiff (in the bill) and the defendants upon the question whether the defendants shall interplead; the other between the different defendants, i.e., the interpleading itself. The subjects of these two litiga-tions are wholly separate and distinct, and therefore they require separate allegations and separate proofs.
In this interpleader suit all claimants and parties were properly before the court. When this occurred, the court then had jurisdiction to adjudicate the conflicting claims to the funds in question.
Thompson, supra.
As we understand the rule, where there are multiple claimants to inter-pleaded funds, each claimant has the burden of proving its own claim and its relative priority as to all other claimants.
Worden v. Thornburg,
In its second point, appellant contends the court erred in granting summary judgment “because Commercial Credit Corporation had no pleadings on file to support the judgment entered.” While far from clear, we believe from the argument in support of the point, appellant’s position is that since appellee had not filed suit against appellant, appellee was not entitled to the judgment entered by the court that it “do have and recover its judgment as against ... Northshore Bank for $35,699.26 ... for which let execution issue.”
As stated above, the previous judgment dividing the interpleaded funds was not superseded pending appeal and the two banks withdrew said funds from the registry of the court. When that judgment was reversed appellant was then holding the funds without authority and should have returned them into the registry of the court. A bill in interpleader is a creature of equity and the proceeding is controlled by equity practice.
Wall v. Wall,
The judgment is affirmed.
