53 Mo. App. 202 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1893
— By the first and second subdivisions of section 4903 of the Revised Statutes of 1889, certain property therein mentioned, when owned by the head.
The breaches of the bond are well assigned. Brady failed to notify the relator of his exemption rights, and afterwards refused to pay to him the money when notified of the claim. It was not necessary to allege that the relator did not have the property mentioned in the first and second subdivisions of section 4903; for, whether he had it or not, his right to select and hold as exempt the money in the hands of the bank existed. State ex rel. v. Beamer, 73 Mo. 37. Neither was it necessary for him, in order to recover
It was admitted that Brady failed to notify the relator of his exemption rights, and that he refused to pay the money when the claim was made by him. There was evidence tending to show that, at the time the garnishment was served, there was deposited in the La Fayette Bank, to the joint credit of the relator and Gazena Toebben his wife, the sum of $550.50. The cashier of the bank was not positive whether a cashier’s check was issued for the amount of the deposit, or whether the deposit was evidenced by an ordinary pass book given to depositors. But in either event the money was to the joint credit of Toebben and wife.
The contention of the defendants’ counsel is that,, notwithstanding that the deposit was made in the joint names of the relator and wife, the money was the sole property of the husband, and hence the amount of the deposit in excess of $300 was subject to the garnishment. If counsel be correct in his premise, his conclusion must follow. What title or interest, if any, did Mrs. Toebben have in the deposit? In Polk’s Adm’r v. Allen, 19 Mo. 467, it was decided that husband and wife could not be the joint owners of a slave which had been bequeathed to them jointly. It was held that possession of the slave vested the entire title in the husband. But in Shields v. Stillman, 48 Mo. 82, it was held that a promissory note made payable to husband and wife created a joint ownership of the note, and that the surviving joint payee took the note by survivorship. It is difficult to distinguish these cases upon principle. One seems to deny, and the other to recognize, that
We conclude that under the evidence the relator ■and his wife were joint owners of the deposit in equal shares, and that, as the relator’s interest was less than the statutory exemption, he was entitled to a judgment for the entire amount paid to Brady by the bank.
There are onp or two minor matters which it may be best to notice. The claim is made that the evidence failed to show that Toebben was the head of a family. While no witness said that he was, all of them spoke of him and his wife, and stated that they lived together at a •certain place in the city. The fact that the relator was
It is also claimed that the evidence shows that all "the money: belonged to Mrs. Toebben. The cashier of the bank testified that, after the garnishment was served, he issued his check for the amount of the deposit in favor of the relator and wife, and that Toebben afterwards told him that the money belonged to his wife. This only presented a case of conflicting evidence as to the ownership of the money, and, as the circuit court found the issue against the defendants, we •cannot interfere. The fact, that the deposit was made in .joint names of Toebben and his wife, made them prima facie joint owners of the fund.
The judgment will be affirmed.