Abilene State Bank v. United States Fidelity & Guaranty Co.

37 S.W.2d 815, 1931 Tex. App. LEXIS 327
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 3, 1931
DocketNo. 818.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 37 S.W.2d 815 (Abilene State Bank v. United States Fidelity & Guaranty Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Abilene State Bank v. United States Fidelity & Guaranty Co., 37 S.W.2d 815, 1931 Tex. App. LEXIS 327 (Tex. Ct. App. 1931).

Opinion

LESLIE, J.

The plaintiff, United States Fidelity & Guaranty Company, sued the defendant, Abilene State Bank, in the justice court of Taylor county, Tex., to recover damages in the sum of $178.51 alleged to have been paid by said bank from the funds of Doyal Garrison, contrary to an agreement between the plaintiff, one S. R. Stanage, a purported guardian of the person and estate of Garrison, and the bank. An appeal was had to the county-court, and there the trial .was before the court without, a jury and judgment rendered in favor of the plaintiff. The defendant appeals. The- record ’ contains an agreed statement of facts, as well as findings of fact and conclusions of law. In the county court the plaintiff filed written pleadings, but there is no showing that they were exclusively so. The defendant answered by general demurrer, general denial, specially pleaded failure of consideration, and further that the plaintiff, without being compelled to do so, voluntarily paid its money to one who had no legal authority to demand it.

By four propositions of law the appellant challenges the correctness of the judgment of the trial court. In each proposition much empliasis is laid on the fact that the guardianship proceedings hereafter to be noticed were null and void. The facts out of which -the litigation arose are substantially these:

On July 15, 1927, S. R. Stanage was appointed guardian of the person and estate of U. D. Garrison, also known as Doyal Garrison, a non compos mentis. The plaintiff, bonding company, became surety on the bond of said Stanage, who agreed with the surety company that the* Abilene State Bank, defendant, should be used as a depository of the funds coming into his hands as guardian, and that the same should be paid out only on checks signed by himself as guardian, and countersigned by P. S. Kauffman, Jr., the agent of plaintiff. By a written communication to the defendant bank, said Stanage acquainted it with the agreement thus entered" into between himself and said surety. The bank acknowledged receipt of said notice by a communication as follows:

“To the United States Fidelity & Guaranty Company:
“Gentlemen:
“We have received and filed notice dated July 16th, 1927, from S. R. Stanage as Guardian in the matter of U. D. Garrison, that all checks on any deposits in the bank in his name as such Guardian must, if honored by us, first be countersigned by P. S. Kauffman, Jr.'
“There is-now on deposit in this bank in the name of Doyal Garrison as such $369.75.
“Yours very truly,
“Abilene State Bank.”

Pursuant to the above notice and arrangement, the $369.75 was deposited to the a&count of S. R. Stanage, guardian of the estate of Garrison. Vendor’s lien notes amounting to about $2,800 left in the custody of the bank were delivered into the custody of said guardian, who was thereafter by order of the probate court authorized to collect two of said $500 vendor’s lien notes. After the opening of said guardian’s account, the bank paid out $178.51 of said first-named funds on the guardian’s checks, which had not been countersigned by plaintiff’s agent. Subsequently, the court disapproved a report which the said Stanage, guardian, attempted to make of the condition of the estate, and Stanage was himself later removed as guardian of the estate. The action of the court was based upon a finding that said guardian had misappropriated $779.86 of the ward’s funds. Upon the removal of Stanage as guardian, one James P. Stinson was appointed guardian of the person and estate of said Garrison, and he soon *817 thereafter filed in the court a petition in which ho alleged that the guardianship proceedings of said Stanage, as well as that of himself, were void. Various reasons were assigned why they were null and void, chiefly perhaps because Garrison had been adjudged a lunatic without .any notice, hearing, or trial by jury. In any event, the trial court found that both guardianship proceedings were void, and since no issue arises on this record as to the correctness of that conclusion, the various questions will be disposed of upon the theory adopted in the trial court.

In his petition said Stinson alleged that his predecessor, Stanage, during his purported guardianship, had misappropriated various snips belonging to said Garrison, and that he had demanded the return of the same to said ward by the bonding company, the surety on Stanage’s bond. It was ascertained that the amount of the shortage was $681.91, and in his petition said Stinson sought and obtainéd permission from the court to settle with the surety company for that amount and receipt it in full for all claims against it arising out of Stanage’s misapplication of funds belonging to Garrison. Upon such conditions the surety company paid the above- sum to Stin-son, who, upon further permission and authority of the court, paid the same directly to said Garrison. Upon this state of facts the surety company’s right to recover the $178.51 is challenged by four propositions, which are, in substance, as follows:

(1) That the judgment is erroneous, in that the plaintiff failed to show the existence of a contract between the surety company and the bank, binding the latter to pay to the plaintiff the sum sued for; (2) that the guardianship proceedings of Garrison being null and void, and the funds being already on deposit in the defendant bank in the name of Garrison, there was no consideration for any contract between the plaintiff and the defendant with reference to said funds; (3) that such guardianship proceedings being null and void as aforesaid, and the evidence showing that the plaintiff surety company was not compelled to pay any sum of money to Stin-son or any other person legally authorized to. collect same, the court erred in rendering a judgment for plaintiff; and (4) the evidence showing that the money on deposit with the' bank belonged to Garrison and was deposited by him, and that the guardianship proceedings were void, the defendant bank was liable to Garrison only for said funds and no one else.

As above observed, each of appellant's propositions rests essentially upon the fact that the two purported guardianships were null apd void. Under the appellant’s first proposition, and in fact under- each of them, it is contended that said Stanage and Stinson having never been appointed guardian of the estate of Garrison, neither of them had the right to control such funds and had no capacity whatever to contract with reference to how the bank should pay out such funds, and that the bank had no authority itself to pay out the funds, except upon an order from Garrison himself, the party to whom the money belonged, and who placed it on deposit in the bank. The gist of the propositions is that the foregoing notice to the bank of the agreement between Stanage and the surety company, plaintiff in this case, is wholly insufficient to bind the Abilene State Bank to pay the plaintiff in this case for having paid out a part of the funds of Doyal Garrison without the signature of the plaintiff’s agent, and that the mere fact that the bank signed the notice of filing of such a contract did not bind the bank to dispose of the proceeds as agreed upon between said Stanage and the plaintiff; the arrangement or purported contract being a nullity because the parties to the same had no legal right or capacity to carry it out.

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Related

United States Fidelity & Guaranty Co. v. San Diego State Bank
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Bluebook (online)
37 S.W.2d 815, 1931 Tex. App. LEXIS 327, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/abilene-state-bank-v-united-states-fidelity-guaranty-co-texapp-1931.