58 N.J. Eq. 154 | New York Court of Chancery | 1899
Mr. Sherman, in the year 1851, while he was surrogate of Mercer county, made certain deposits in the bank of the Trenton Saving
The bill seeks to have the deposit entry reformed by canceling the official addendum to the name of the depositor, and to have a decree that the bank pay upon the check of the complainant. Nothing appears in the ease save the mere facts thus stated. It does not appear that at the time of the several deposits there was any trust fund under the control of the surrogate. Nor does it appear that there is any statutory provision for an official fund to be held by the surrogate, either as surrogate or as an officer of the orphans court. It is impossible, then, to conceive who could be beneficially interested in the said fund apart from the depositor himself.
The appendage to the name of the depositor, I think, was intended as a personal method of marking this money as part of the income of his office, and so to segregate it from other money, or it may have been employed to indicate the position the depositor then held without any other significance. Whichever notion induced the conduct of the depositor, in my judgment the addendum was merely desariptio personae. Such judicial sentiment as I have discovered is to the effect that such a suffix does not imply that the money that he deposited was held in trust. In the case of Swartwout v. Mechanics Bank of New York, 5 Den. 554, the plaintiff had made a deposit in the defendant’s bank in the name of Samuel Swartwout, collector. His term as collector of customs expired, and he drew a check as late collector, which the bank refused to pay, upon the ground that it was an official deposit and belonged to the United States. But the court held that, in the absence of any statute requiring the collector to make a deposit of official funds in a bank, it was to be regarded as a mere personal deposit. The court said : “A county treasurer, sheriff, surrogate or such other officer opens an account with a bank with his addition, and keeps a separate
But if the addendum implied a trust, it would not defeat the right of the personal representative of the depositor to withdraw the deposit. The trust which inhered in the depositor, upon his death, passed to his personal representative, who would be bound to administer all the assets of the deceased as trustee of whatever kind, and to administer the trust with which those assets are charged. 1 Perry Trusts § 264. In Boone v. Citizens’ Savings Bank of the City of New York, 84 N. Y. 83, the facts were as follows: Susan Boone deposited in the bank $500, receiving a pass-book in which was the entry “ The Citizens’ Savings Bank in account with Susan Boone, in trust for Thomas Boone.” The entry was so made at the request of the depositor. After her death the bank paid the amount to her administrator. An action was afterwards brought against the bank to recover the same amount, by the administrator of Christopher Boone, the cestui que trust, who had also died. The court of appeals held that the payment to the administrator of the depositor was valid. Judge Finch, in delivering the opinion of the court of appeals, said: “ They [the bank] received the money as bailees, agreeing to pay to Susan Boone, trustee. What the trust was they neither knew nor were bound to know. That was a matter wholly between the trustee and cestui que trust, at least until the latter gave notice to the bank of a hostile claim. * * * We are of the opinion that upon the death of Susan, her rights as trustee devolved upon her administrator. * * * When therefore he appeared at the bank and produced his letters of administrator and the pass-book,
I am of the opinion, therefore, that the fund now in question is not to be regarded as a trust but as an individual deposit of Mr. Sherman. But if it should be presumed to be trust property, yet, until some beneficiary asserts a claim upon the bank, the administrator of the depositor stands in thé place of the depositor and the bank is bound to pay him, as it would have been bound to pay the depositor himself, if living.
While I have expressed my views upon the question mooted, as the suit seems to be an amicable one, and my views may be of service, yet I regret that I can make no decree which will judicially settle the rights of the parties in this suit. My inability to do so springs from the absence of any feature in the complainant’s claim sufficient to confer jurisdiction upon a court of equity. Under the views I have expressed the claim against the bank is one strictly legal. I am therefore constrained to dismiss the bill.