14 S.D. 410 | S.D. | 1901
This is an action in equity to compel an interpleader between the defendants to determine the right to the possession 0: certain securities deposited with the plaintiff bank. Judgment was entered for the defendants, and the plaintiff appeals.
The appeal is from the judgment, and the principal ground re relied upon for a reversal of the judgment is that the conclusions of law are not supported by the facts. The case is somewhat complicated and the findings of the court are quite lengthy, and we shall only attempt a brief summary of them. The court finds that on the 9th day of November, 1896, the defendant, Lien, together with John Sundback, H. H. Natwick, and Jacob-Schatzel, Jr., executed and delivered to the plaintiff their promissory note for the payment of the sum of $4,000, and that to secure the payment of the same twenty shares of the capital stock of the State Banking and Trust Company of South Dakota and a certain note and mortgage for $2,500 were deposited as collateral security for the payment of the same; that on or about the 23rd day of June, 1897, the plaintiff commenced an action against said Sundback, Natwick, Schatzel and Lien, to recover the amount due « on said note, which action resulted in a judgment in favor of the plaintiff, and against the defendants, and the proceedings in said action are set out in full in the findings; that on the nth day of October, 1898, the defendant Lien paid said judgment in full and the plaintiff thereupon executed a satisfaction of said judgment, and the same was filed in the office of the clerk the same day; that on the same day, and after said Lien had paid the amount due upon said judgment, he made written demand on the plaintiff for the securities pledged
It will thus- be seen that the litigation in this case has given rise to four actions. The first was the action by the bank, the present plaintiff, against Sundback and the three others, to recover the amount of the note executed by them to the .bank. From that judgment no appeal has been taken. The second action was brought by Lien, claiming to be one of the sureties of Sundback upon the note, for the conversion of the note, mortgage and bank stock. To this action the plaintiff pleaded the fact that it had deposited the note, mortgage and bank stock with J. W. Crisp as clerk of the circuit court, under the provisions of chapter 65 of the laws of 1895; and to this answer a demurrer was interposed, which was sustained by the court below, which decision was affirmed by this court on the ground that the defendant was not authorized to deposit the securities with the clerk of the court, but, under the facts as they then appeared, should have delivered them over to Lien upon his payment of the judgment. The third action, it seems, was one in claim and delivery, brought by Kirby to recover possession of the securities from Crisp, to whom they had been delivered by the bank. In that action the plaintiff has intervened, and served its complaint of intervention, which has been answered by the defendant Crisp, and demurred to by the defendant Kirby, and is now undetermined. The fourth is the present action to compel Lien, Crisp and Kirby to interplead as between themselves as to the rights of the respective parties to the said securities. It is provided in the judgment in the action of the bank against, Sundback and the others as follows: “It is, on motion of the plaintiff, ordered, adjudged, and decreed, that the plaintiff, the Sioux Falls Savings Bank of Sioux Falls, South Dakota, have and recover of the defendant John Sundback, as
It is further contended on the part of the appellant that, if the property was the property of the defendant Kirby, he was the real pledgor, and the transaction, as between the bank, Sundback, Lien, and the others, was in fact a pledging of the property of Kirby to secure the joint debt of all the makers of the nóte, and his property so pledged stood in the position of a surety for all the male
This brings us to the last and most important question in the case. As has been before stated, the bank, after the demand made upon it by Lien for the collaterals, and the demand of Kirby for the same, placed them in the hands of Crisp as clerk of courts of Minnehaha county. The. bank cannot, therefore, bring the collaterals into court, as is required in an action of interpleader; but the bank contends that the collaterals are in fact in custodia, le gis, and therefore under the control of the court, notwithstanding Kirby has, by his suit in claim and delivery, taken the collaterals from Crisp and disposed of them by collecting the sum due upon the note and mortgage and selling the bank stock. It is therefore contended by the bank that the bond given by Kirby in the suit in claim and delivery is not only security for these collaterals, but that, in case the court decides that Kirby was not entitled to the same, the collaterals can be brought into.court under its process, in whosoever’s hands the same may be found, and that the party paying the note and mortgage paid the same pendente lite, and can be required to pay the sum into court. We do not deem it necessary in this decision to go further than to hold that the securities, in contemplation of law,
It is asserted on the part of the bank that the fact that the securities have not been brought into court has not been pleaded by either Lien or Kirby, and hence that no notice of the failure to bring the securities into court can be taken in this case, but we prefer to base our decision upon the broader ground that'the securities are, in contemplation of law, in court, and that the court should proceed and require Lien and Kirby to interplead, and adjudicate the rights of the respective parties to these collaterals. The contention of the respondents in this case would lead to the result that Lien
The claim on the part of the respondents that the bank was.