Baker v. Bank of Milton

200 S.E. 346, 120 W. Va. 788
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 8, 1938
Docket8792
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 200 S.E. 346 (Baker v. Bank of Milton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Baker v. Bank of Milton, 200 S.E. 346, 120 W. Va. 788 (W. Va. 1938).

Opinions

Fox, Judge :

R. V. Baker, administrator of the estate of C. A. Johnson, deceased, instituted an action of detinue in the circuit court of Cabell County against the Bank of Milton, *789 to recover the possession of a negotiable promissory note for $4,000.00, dated the 9th day of April, 1924, executed by (Mrs.) G. A. Rogers and payable to bearer' on October 1, 1927. The defendant bank filed an affidavit in which it disclaimed title to the note and stated that the same was claimed by G. A. Rogers. Thereupon the said G. A. Rogers was required by the court to appear and state the nature of her claim, which she did by filing her petition, setting up a claim to ownership, and her right to the possession of the note, and was by the court made a party defendant in said action. To a judgment based upon a jury verdict, awarding possession of the note to the plaintiff, the said G. A. Rogers prosecutes this writ of error.

On April 9, 1924, G. A. Rogers executed to M. P. Wis-well, trustee, a deed of trust on thirty-four acres of land located in Cabell County, to secure payment of the $4,-000.00 note in controversy. On the same day, she executed another deed of trust on the same tract of land, and to the same trustee, to secure payment of five notes aggregating $4500.00, executed by her and payable to the order of her father, R. S. Chambers. Both of these deeds of trust were recorded in the office of the clerk of the county court of Cabell County on April 15, 1924, and the deed of trust securing the $4,000.00 note was mailed by the clerk to C. A. Johnson at Milton, West Virginia.

Prior to these transactions, and in the year 1921, C. A. Johnson moved from Huntington to a farm near Milton, where he resided in the same house with G. A. Rogers until 1933, when he returned to Huntington. In 1926, on three separate occasions, he borrowed from the Milton National Bank, whose assets were later taken over by the Bank of Milton, $700.00, $1500.00 and $200.00, for which amounts he- gave separate notes. These notes, representing this indebtedness, were consolidated into one note of $2400.00 on April 27, 1927. Some time in 1927, Johnson was required to sepure his indebtedness to the bank and did so by depositing therewith the $4,-000.00 G. A. Rogers note which he endorsed, and filed with the note the deed of trust securing the same. On August *790 27, 1937, Johnson paid $100.00 on the principal of this indebtedness. Later G. A. Rogers, at the instance of her father, R. S. Chambers, conveyed the land securing said note to Hattie Wheeler, and Chambers, as part of the consideration for said conveyance, assumed the payment of the $2300.00 balance due on the Johnson indebtedness, which balance was afterwards, in 1935, paid by Chambers’ administrator. In the meantime, to carry the indebtedness, G. A. Rogers was, on September 25, 1932, substituted as the maker on a note for said balance, in the place of Johnson, and R. S. Chambers became endorser thereon. Some time afterwards, Chambers released the deed of trust which had been given to him to secure the indebtedness of $4500.00. Notwithstanding the payment of the $2300.00 note, to secure which Johnson had deposited the $4,000.00 note, the defendant bank retained possession thereof. On April 6, 1937, Johnson asked that the note be delivered to him, but the same was not delivered as requested by reason of the claim of G. A. Rogers thereto. Thereafter, during the same year, Johnson died.

We are of the opinion that notwithstanding the verdict of the jury, the claim of the plaintiff to the note in question is not sustained by the record. In the first place, while it is a general rule that prior possession of property by a plaintiff in a detinue action is sufficient to sustain the action against one who cannot show a higher right of possession, (Justice v. Moore, 69 W. Va. 51, 71 S. E. 204; 16 Am. Juris., subject Detinue, section 3; Maxler v. Hoch, 233 Pa. 316, 82 Atl. 251, Ann. Cas. 1913B, 559) this rule should not be extended to give to a personal representative the right to the possession of a note or other property, merely because his decedent may have had prior possession thereof, in the absence of a showing that the same is an asset of the estate. A personal representative is entitled to administer only the estate of his decedent. The evidence tending to show that Johnson was acting as the agent of G. A. Rogers in hy-pothecating the note in question with the Milton National *791 Bank is uncontradicted, and the same is true with respect to the testimony that Johnson, in his life-time, said that the note belonged to G. A. Rogers. In addition to these positive statements, the circumstances strongly support the theory that Johnson was acting as the agent of Rogers in these transactions. There is evidence tending to show that the money which Johnson borrowed was used to improve the thirty-four acres of land owned by Rogers, and it is clear that Rogers paid the Johnson indebtedness by the conveyance of the thirty-four acres of land to Hattie Wheeler, at the instance of her father, R. S. Chambers. No reasonable explanation appears in the record as to why G. A. Rogers paid this indebtedness, unless it be the assumption of a relationship of principal and agent between these parties.

Detinue is a possessory action. It lies for the recovery of any personal property capable of specific identification. 16 Am. Juris., subject Detinue, section 2. Hefner et al. v. Fidler, 58 W. Va. 159, 52 S. E. 513, 3 L. R. A. (N. S.) 138, 112 Am. St. Rep. 961, is authority for the proposition that an action of detinue will lie to recover a promissory note, but that case holds that a plaintiff must have property in the thing sought to be recovered, the right of its immediate possession, and it must have some value. That action was to recover the possession of a note which the plaintiff contended grew out of a transaction which he was entitled to rescind, and it is therein argued that such a note in the hands of a maker would have no value and could not therefore be recovered by him. Under this holding, it may be contended that there can be no recovery in detinue by the maker of a note which has been paid. The record in the case at bar does not show payment of the note in question, unless the payment of Johnson’s $2300.00 obligation, under the circumstances, amounted to a payment thereof. The claim of Rogers is based upon the theory that Johnson was her agent, and never at any time had any individual property right in the $4,000.00 note, other than to protect himself on the notes he executed with said note as collateral. It *792 is clear that a promissory note, to be recoverable, must have some value, but to hold that the possession of such a note, even though paid, does not have an element of value, accruing to the maker thereof, sufficient on which to base an action of detinue, in our opinion carries the doctrine too far. So long as such a note is outstanding, the holder may institute suit thereon, and compel the maker to defend; possession of the note, as some assurance against claims based thereon, is certainly an element of value. In Savery v. Hays, 20 Iowa 25, 89 Am. Dec.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

MacPherson v. Green
87 S.E.2d 785 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1955)
Baker v. Bank of Milton
6 S.E.2d 7 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1939)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
200 S.E. 346, 120 W. Va. 788, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baker-v-bank-of-milton-wva-1938.