149 Ind. 136 | Ind. | 1897
By this action the appellee invoked the equity powers of the court to restore to her a certain amount of money which is charged to have been unlawfully diverted by her agent and trustee and placed to the account of appellant, Pearce, in the First National Bank of Crawsfordsville, Indiana, a co-appellant herein. The complaint is in four paragraphs. The second substantially alleges that during the months of May, June and July, 1895, the pláintiff, Aravella Dill, was the owner of a. certain amo’unt of money, to wit, $5,000.00, on deposit in said bank in her own name, and that she had a pass book given her by the bank, showing her said deposits as entered therein, and that her husband, E. S. Dill, had the custody of said pass book as her trustee and agent; that the defendant, Alfred Pearce, had and occupied a room in the city of Crawfordsville, Indiana, for the purpose of gaming and wagering in margins and option deals, and for the purpose of betting and wagering on the market price of wheat, corn, oats, and other produce; that the defendant had his said room and place of business supplied with a telegraph instrument, blackboards, etc., and other paraphernalia usually belonging to a “bucket shop,” for the purpose of gaming and wagering upon the market price of wheat, corn, oats, and other products; that in fact the room and place of business was a “bucket shop” operated for the purpose of gaming and wagering on the rise and fall of the market price of wheat and other cereals. It is further shown by the averments of the complaint that her said husband and agent, E. S. Dill, patronized the defendant, Pearce, in said business, by betting and wagering with him on the rise and fall of the market price of‘wheat, corn, oats, and pork; that Pearce would sell to said Dill, and the latter purchase from him, option deals in wheat, corn, oats, and pork, to be set-
A trial by the court resulted in a finding in favor of the plaintiff, and it was adjudged and decreed that at the time this suit was commenced there was on deposit in the said bank, the sum of $2,677.77 in the name of the defendant Pearce, and of this amount the sum of $1,607.00 was wrongfully transferred from the bank account of the plaintiff to that of the defendant, Pearce, by means of the checks set forth in the complaint, and that the defendant bank was the custodian of said fund and money, and each’ of the defendants then held and had, and now has and holds said sum of $1,607.00 in trust for the plaintiff as for money had and received to her use, and the same belongs to her in her own right, etc.; and it was further ordered and decreed that the said defendants pay into court for the use of the plaintiff, said sum of $1,607.00 within ten days, etc. A separate motion for a new trial was filed by each of the defendants, and overruled, and each separately assign errors in this court.
No question is raised in regard to the sufficiency of the complaint, appellants basing their claims for a reversal of the judgment upon the insufficiency of the evidence, and other alleged erroneous rulings of the • trial court. Accepting as we must, the evidence which the trial court deemed most worthy, and it sustains, among others, substantially the following facts: The appellee is the wife of E. S. Dill, and in the spring and summer of 1895, at different times, she deposited in
The insistence of counsel for appellee is that E. S. Dill, the agent of their client, committed a breach of trust and wrongfully diverted the money of his principal into the hands of the appellant, Pearce, and that she has the right, under the facts and the law applicable thereto, to trace it into Pearce’s bank account, to which it had been transferred,"and have it restored to her by the court as her- property. The authorities generally affirm and support the right of a cestui que trust to pursue and recover trust funds wrongfully diverted, where their identity has not been lost, and where they have not passed into the hands of parties for value without notice of the trust. Whenever any property, or fund, in its original state, has once been impressed with the character or nature of a trust no subsequent change of its original form, or .condition, can devest it of its trust character, so long as it is capable of being identified, and the beneficiary thereof may pursue and reclaim it, regardless of the form into which it may have been changed, provided it has not gone into the possession of a tona fide purchaser without notice. All that the law contemplates by requiring the property or fund to be identified is a substantial identification, and, in case the fund consists of money, the cestui que trust may reclaim it, although not able to trace the identical coins or bills, so long as its identity as a fund can be ascertained. It is a well-settled principle that the abuse of a trust fund by a trustee, or fiduciary, confers no right upon him, nor upon those who claim in privity with him. Where the fund has been misapplied, or converted into other
The rule is, when the right to pursue and reclaim a trust fund exists, that the true owner thereof, when the fund is traced to the possession of another and identified, has the right to have it restored to him, not as a debt due and owing to him, but for the reason . that it is his property, wrongfully diverted and withheld; and it can make no difference in regard to the right of recovery in such a case, whether the fund has been traced into the possession of a single individual, or into the hands of a firm or association composed of many persons, or into the form of a bank account. In re Hallett’s Estate and Knatchbull v. Hallett, L.R. 13 Ch. Div. 696; Englar v. Offutt, 70 Md. 78, 16 Atl. 497, 14 Am. St. 332; National Bank v. Insurance Co., 104 U. S. 54.
The evidence, as we have seen, discloses that Dill was the agent of the appellee, and only authorized to draw checks upon her money in the bank, for her use, or in her business. The relation between him and the
The evidence fully proves that the appellant Pearce was operating what is commonly denominated a “bucket shop;” in fact, this is established by his own admissions on his cross-examination. He was engaged in conducting the illegal business of selling “futures” or “options.” The products which he pretended to sell to his customers, he did not have at the time, and it was mutually understood and intended by both parties that the wheat or com which was claimed to be sold and purchased was not to be delivered, but when the time fixed for its delivery arrived, the market value at Chicago of such cereals should constitute the basis upon which the settlements would be made. As the market price would rise or fall, there would be a loss or gain to the purchaser. The deals or transactions were understood to be a speculation solely on chances, and were in contravention of, and hostile to public policy, and therefore illegal. Such transactions are of like character and akin to bets made on a game of poker or faro, and are equally as uncertain and hazardous. The business or operations of the “bucket shop,” have been the source of much evil. Embezzlements and other crimes on the part of public officers, and bank officials, having the custody of money belonging to others, have been in the past some of the evil fruits directly traceable to dealing in futures in these institutions; and the question of prohibiting such transactions or business, as it is generally conducted, merits the consideration of
To summarize, in conclusion, the agent of the appellee is shown to have abused his trust by wrongfully diverting the money of his principal into the hands of Pearce, for an illegal consideration. The. latter accepted the checks in controversy with knowledge that the funds upon which they were drawn belonged to appellee, and that Dill, with whom he dealt, was misappropriating the money. By the means of these checks, which, in his hands at least, were tainted with the illegality of the transactions in the settlement of which they were drawn, appellant procured the bank to swell his account with the money belonging to appellee. Under the facts certainly it must be said that the equities are all with the appellee, and neither of the appellants are in a position to successfully assail her right to recover.
Some other alleged errors are discussed by appellants’ counsel, but the judgment is so manifestly right upon the evidence, that even if we should concede that the intervening rulings of which they complain wmre erroneous, they would not result in a reversal. See section 670, Burns’ R. S. 1894 (658, R. S. 1881).
The judgment is affirmed at the cost of the appellants.