220 Miss. 127 | Miss. | 1954
This is a suit in equity brought by the appellee, First National Bank at Jackson successor of the Jackson State National Bank and Capital National Bank, against the appellants Dr. H. Van Zandt and the First Federal Savings & Loan Association at Jackson, to have the latter declared to be the holder in trust of the principal sum of $5,000 and $298.31 of accrued interest, upon the theory that the $5,000 had been erroneously credited on March 11, 1943, by the Jackson-State National Bank to the savings account of Dr. H. Van Zandt instead of to that of his brother J. C. Van Zandt, the actual depositor thereof, and which total sum of $5,298.31 was later withdrawn by Dr. H. Van Zandt on January 24, 1949, and placed on deposit to his credit with the First Federal Savings & Loan Association, where the same still remains. The relief prayed for was granted on the basis of the facts hereinafter stated.
The appellant Dr. H. Van Zandt and his brother J. C. Van Zandt, both of the Town of Braxton in Simpson County, came to the Jacks on-State National Bank on March 11, 1943, when and where there were deposited by Dr. H. Van Zandt several checks drawn on a bank at Ellisville, Mississippi, aggregating the sum of $25,000 and representing most of the proceeds of the sale of certain timber which a few days prior thereto had been sold by the Van Zandts at and for the sum of $31,000. The $25,000, less the exchange charged in the sum of $48 on these cheeks, was thereupon deposited to the checking account of the appellant Dr. H. Van Zandt. On that occasion he drew one check against this checking account payable to the Savings Department of the Jackson-State National Bank for the sum of $10,000 and was given credit therefor on his previously established savings account at the said Bank. At the same time he drew another check against his checking account payable to his brother J. C. Van Zandt for the sum of $10,000. It
The undisputed proof further shows that thereupon J. C. Van Zandt was given a passbook containing an entry of $5,000 as having been deposited to his savings account. The page of this original passbook was introduced in evidence showing such entry on that date. The original deposit slip of the Savings Department showing this fact was also introduced in evidence upon the trial of this suit, but in posting the bank ledger for that day there was a failure on the part of some employee of the bank to enter on the books of the Savings Department of the bank this deposit of $5,000 in favor of J. C. Van Zandt. The ledger shows for that day one deposit of $10,000 and another deposit of $5,000 to the credit of the appellant Dr. H. Van Zandt in his savings account. No original deposit slip was shown io have been issued in his favor except for the item of $10,000, the one for $5,000 liaving been issued in favor of J. C. Van Zandt a-' aforesaid, and as shown by the testimony on behalf of the appellee Bank and the original deposit slip introduced in evidence at the trial, and as shown by the entry in the passbook of the latter as hereinbefore stated. Dr.
On January 24, 1949, the appellant being desirous of obtaining a higher rate of interest than the bank was paying on the savings account, asked the Bank to advise him as to the balance that he then had on hand in his savings account, including accrued interest, and also the balance then remaining to his checking account. Upon receiving that information he withdrew all the funds then to his credit in both accounts and thereupon deposited the same in the First Federal Savings & Loan Association, in Jackson, where the fund began to earn a rate of 2% per cent interest per annum instead of the 1 per cent theretofore paid by the savings department of the Jackson-State National Bank. The savings account of Dr. H. Van Zandt had been inactive from March 11, 1943, until that time.
Likewise there had been no further withdrawals or deposits made on the savings account of J. C. Van Zandt. On the 7th day of March, 1951, J. C. Van Zandt carried to the Bank his passbook to have the accrued interest on his savings account noted or posted therein. It was then discovered that he had never been credited on the Bank ledger of the savings department with the $5,000-deposit made on March 11, 1943, although the entry thereof was contained in his passbook and the Bank was able to find the original deposit slip in his name-
The alleged erro7' was called to the attention of Dr. H. Van Zandt, and with the request that he rectify the same. Soon thereafter some of the employees of the Bank went to see him at his home at Braxton to discuss the fact that the error had been discovered and how it had occurred. One of them testified that he agreed to check his records and then come to Jackson during the
It was shown that thereafter the Bank wrote him two- or three letters, to which it received no reply. However,, he testified that he did not receive either of those letters. It is urged on behalf of the appellant Dr. H. Van Zandt that the extra $5,000 credited to his savings account on March 11, 1943, was either the proceeds of the sale of' 75 bales of cotton at 15c per pound which he had sold to Zeke Odom, a merchant and cotton buyer at Star, a short-distance from Braxton, or that the proceeds of this cotton were erroneously credited to the checking account of his brother, J. C. Van Zandt, and that the $5,000 that was intended by J. O. Van Zandt to be deposited to his savings account was credited to the savings account of' the appellant Dr. H. Van Zandt, since according to his testimony he did not otherwise get credit át the Bank-for the proceeds of the sale of the cotton. The trouble-with this contention is that, if true, then there would remain no explanation as to what became of one-half of the proceeds of the $10,000 check deposited by J. C. Van Zandt on March 11, 1943, which the vice president of' the Bank, Marvin E. Collum, testified was deposited on that day to the checking account of J. C. Van Zandt according to a duplicate deposit slip made out in the handwriting of Mr. John Taylor and signed by him on the checking-account deposit, and which recited that it- was;
The trial court therefore rejected this contention evidently upon the theory, first, that one of the $10,000 checks drawn by the appellant Dr. H. Van Zandt, on March 11, 1943, was in favor of J. C. Van Zandt, as aforesaid, and because the testimony of Mr. Collum was undisputed in regard to the duplicate deposit slip in the handwriting of Mr. John Taylor showing that the $5,000 deposited to the checking account of J. C. Van Zandt was a part of this $10,000, leaving the $5,000 that was intended by J. C. Van Zandt to be placed to his savings account as shown by his passbook and the original deposit slip issued by that department, which showed conclusively that this amount had been so deposited; and second, because of the unsatisfactory explanation given by Dr. H. Van Zandt as a witness at the trial as to when he sold the 75 bales of cotton in question.
As to the proceeds of the cotton sale, he testified while on the witness stand on the first occasion that this cotton was sold to Mr. Zeke Odom in the Spring of 1948, and then while on the witness stand on another occasion he testified the cotton was sold in March 1948 and that it was from the 1947 cotton crop; and then on the third occasion he testified at a subsequent hearing, after the case had been remanded to Rules for further testimony, and after the complainant Bank had introduced a certified copy of a death certificate showing that Mr. Zeke Odom had died on August 17, 1944, the witness frankly admitted that his memory was poor as to dates and that he would not undertake to give either the month or the year when he sold the cotton and could not place the date otherwise than at sometime within the last ten years prior to the trial. As hereinbefore stated, he did
It is true that the chancellor who finally decided the case did not see and hear the witnesses testify, but reached his conclusion on a reading of the transcript of the testimony and documentary evidence taken before the former chancellor; and it is also true that the testimony of the appellant Dr. H. Van Zandt, and that of his brother, J. B. Van Zandt, is not contradicted by the oral testimony of any witness for the Appellee-Bank in regard to the proceeds of the sale of the cotton having been deposited in the Bank, but the court is of the opinion that in the absence of any bank record of this particular deposit, and under the state of the testimony as a whole, we would not be justified in reversing the decree on that specific ground.
However, it is further urged by the appellant Dr. H. Van Zandt, that the Appellee-Bank cannot recover in this suit in equity for the reason, first, that if the Bank is entitled to recover at all it has a complete and adequate remedy at law; second, that if a mistake was made in the transactions on March 11, 1943, which the appellant Dr. H. Van Zandt denied, the same was due to the negligence of the Bank in crediting his savings account with the $5,000 which should have been credited to his brother J. C. Van Zandt, according to the entry in the
In answer to the first contention above stated, the Court is of the opinion that the same is not maintainable for the reason that Section 147 of the Mississippi Constitution of 1890 provides, among other things, that: “No judgment or decree in any chancery or circuit court rendered in a civil cause shall be reversed or annulled on the ground of want of jurisdiction to render said judgment or decree, from any error or mistake as to whether the cause in which it was rendered was of equity or common-law jurisdiction; * *
In response to the second contention above stated, the Court is of the opinion that the appellant Dr. H. Van Zandt cannot invoke against the Bank its alleged negligence in crediting his savings account with the sum of $5,000 instead of crediting the same to the savings account of his brother, J. C. Van Zandt, since he was in no manner injured by the negligence, oversight or mis
The Court is therefore of the opinion that unless this $5,000 had been deposited by Dr. H. Van Zandt, the authorities relied upon by him in his brief would not be applicable' as to the deposit in question, since the Bank owed him no duty in regard thereto.
Moreover, the Court is of the opinion that under the text and decisions cited in the brief of the AppelleeBank, it would not be precluded from recovering from the appellant Dr. H. Van Zandt the funds in question, even though it may have been guilty of negligence in not making the proper entry on its ledger in conformity with the passbook entry and the deposit slip issued to his brother, J. C. Van Zandt, for the $5,000 deposit in question.
In response to the third contention of the appellant hereinbefore stated, the Court is of the opinion that the doctrine of estoppel that may apply in favor of a depositor is not applicable in favor of one in whose
In response to the fourth contention of the appellant hereinbefore stated, the Court is of the opinion that the Bank met its burden of proof by showing that the Appellant Dr. H. Van Zandt did not deposit the $5,000 which it claims was credited to his savings account through oversight or error, when the Bank proved beyond question that the deposit was made by his brother, J. C. Van Zandt, and the burden of proof was not upon the Appellee-Bank to show that it was not guilty of negligence in crediting the said appellant with the deposit,, since he was not injured by any negligence of which the Bank may have been guilty.
In response to the fifth contention of the appellant to the effect that the Bank is barred by laches from claiming and recovering the $5,000 and interest thereon, the Court is of the opinion that inasmuch as the savings accounts of Dr. H. Van Zandt and his brother J. C. Van Zandt, respectively, had remained inactive from March 11, 1943, until the appellant Dr. H. Van Zandt withdrew his entire credit balance from the savings account on January 24, 1949; and in view of the fact that the Bank did not discover that he had withdrawn on that date $5,298.31 of funds that should have been to the credit of his brother, J. C. Van Zandt, until two-days after the latter had presented his passbook on March 5, 1951, showing the entry of the $5,000 item therein, and until it had found the original deposit slip showing that this sum had been deposited by J. C. Van Zandt on March 11, 1943, the Appellee-Bank is not barred by laches from seeking restitution of these funds from the Appellant Dr. H. Van Zandt, since the same remained the Bank’s money and in its possession under the relation of debtor and creditor until January 24,1949. Moreover, the application of the doctrine of laches is largely within the discretion of the trial court. Sample v. Romine, 193 Miss. 706, 9 So. 2d 643.
Since the savings account of the depositor, J. C. Van Zandt, had remained wholly inactive until he presented his passbook in 1951 for the purpose of having the accrued interest posted therein, the Appellee-Bank did not discover until that date that the appellant Dr. H. Van Zandt had withdrawn more funds from his savings account than should have been credited thereto.
From the foregoing views, it follows that the Court is of the opinion that the decree of the trial court which held that the appellant First Federal Savings & Loan Association should be deemed a trustee of the $5,298.31 withdrawn from the Appellee-Bank by the appellant Dr. H. Van Zandt, and deposited with the said First Federal Savings & Loan Association where the same still remained at the time of the trial, and should therefore be paid over by the said Association to the Appellee-Bank, and that the appellants be jointly and severally required to pay over to the Appellee-Bank the said sum, together with the proper interest since the rendition of the decree appealed from, and pay all of the costs of this suit, should be affirmed. The decree appealed from is therefore affirmed.
Affirmed.