51 Minn. 236 | Minn. | 1892
This action is for converting $1,500, claimed to be the money of the plaintiff. The facts upon which the plaintiff claims the money was his were, that in November, 1887, the plaintiff claimed that there existed between him and the late E. C. Palmer, who then held a certificate of mortgage foreclosure upon certain real estate in St. Paul, the title to which real estate was in the plaintiff, the time to redeem not having expired, and also held other liens on said real estate, a contract or agreement by which Palmer agreed that, upon plaintiff paying him the amount of all his claims and liens upon the real estate, he would convey it to plaintiff, and cancel and discharge all' his liens and claims upon it; and that, Palmer being absent from the state, plaintiff, accompanied by an agent of Palmer, went to the First National Bank in St. Paul, with which Palmer kept his bank account, and, for the purpose of paying or tendering the amount required by him to be paid by said contract, made a general deposit in said bank, to the credit of Palmer, of the sum of $1,500. Whether the agent had authority to accept the tender or payment does not appear, but, at any rate, he did not accept it, and when Palmer was informed of it he refused to accept it. He died in the spring of 1888 without having accepted it. It appears that between said deposit and3 his death there was at all times a credit to him of at least $1,500 in the bank. The defendant was appointed Palmer’s administrator, and in July, 1888, drew out of the bank all that at his death stood to his credit, — some $3,500. Prior to bringing this action the plaintiff demanded of defendant that it pay him the $1,500, and it refused.
When the money was deposited in the bank, the title to it, of course, vested in the bank, and it became debtor to Palmer in the amount of the deposit. No relation between plaintiff and the bank grew out of the deposit. Palmer alone could withdraw it. But the deposit did not vest in Palmer, as between him and plaintiff, at once and absolutely, the right to draw it out and use it. The deposit was made for a specific purpose, and, before Palmer could treat the credit created by it as absolutely his own, it was necessary that he should accept it as made. Plaintiff did not intend to give him the money,
The final decree in what is styled the “equity suit” was wholly immaterial. That plaintiff failed in an action to enforce the alleged agreement between him and Palmer, the ground upon which the decree defeating him was made not appearing, could have no tendency to prove or disprove anything in controversy in this case.
And it was the same with the various files of the probate court in the administration of Palmer’s estate. They would have no tendency to disprove plaintiff’s right to the money, nor to prove that it belonged to the estate.
Upon evidence differing upon one point from that in the case, those proceedings, and especially the fact of distribution of the $1,500 as part of the estate, might have been material, not on the question of the money being in fact part of the estate, but as an element in es-topping plaintiff to dispute that fact. The distribution, even under the order of the court, would not, of itself, make out an estoppel. To constitute an estoppel, it was necessary that the acts of defend
Order affirmed.
(Opinion published 53 N. W. Rep. 457.)