13 S.D. 188 | S.D. | 1900
This is an action by the pjaintiff, as sheriff, to recover from the defendant bank the sum - of $1,100, which was deposited in said bank by one Corkins, against whom the plaintiff had an execution under which he claims he levied upon the money in the bank. Verdict and judgment for the defendant, and the plaintiff appeals.
On November 7, 1895, the defendant loaned to one George W. Corkins $2,000, for which he executed a promissory note
It is contended on the part of the appellant that certain evidence, offered and admitted, of conversations between Gorkins and the bank officers, tending to prove an agreement as to the application of any moneys that might be deposited by him in the bank in payment of the said note, wTas improperly admitted, as tending to vary and contradict the terms of a written instrument- and not admissible under the issues raised by the pleadings; that the bank had no right to apply any of the moneys so paid to it to the credit of Corkins upon this note, for the reason that it was notdue; and that the bank had no lien or other claim upon the said money at the time the papers were served upon it. The respondent insists, in support of the judgment of the court below, that the conversation or agreement between Corkins and the officers of the bank regarding
The contention of appellant that the evidence admitted was not admissible under the issues l'aised by the pleadings is not tenable. The issue presented was as to whether or not anything was due to Corkins at the time the sheriff levied his execution. The plaintiff claims that $1,100 was due, and the bank, by its general denial, put this allegation in issue. Evidence, therefore, tending to show that no money was due from the bank to Corkins when the plaintiff sought to levy his execution, because previously applied upon the note under the agreement with Corkins, was admissible. If, therefore, the bank could have applied this money in payment of that note as against Corbins, it could apply it as against this plaintiff, who stood in no better jjosition than Corkins. The defendant hay
The judgment of the court below is sustained upon the theory that the agreement between Corkins and the bank constituted the officers of the bank his agents to apply his deposits in payment of the said note whenever they saw proper to to do so. In the ease of Gardner v. Bank, supra, the supreme court of Montana assumed in its opinion that an agreement similar to the one in the case at bar, between a depositor and the bank, was a valid and binding agreement upon the depositor during his lifetime; but it reversed the decision of the lower court in that case for the reason that the money of the depositor was not applied in the payment of his notes during his lifetime, and held that the authority of the bank officers to so apply it ceased at the depositor’s death. The judgment of the court below is affirmed.