Bowers v. Fourth & First National Bank

9 Tenn. App. 76
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedDecember 1, 1928
StatusPublished

This text of 9 Tenn. App. 76 (Bowers v. Fourth & First National Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bowers v. Fourth & First National Bank, 9 Tenn. App. 76 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1928).

Opinion

FAW, P. J.,

This is an action at law begun on October 12, 1927, in the circuit court of Davidson county, by 'Mrs. E. E. Bettie Bowers as .plaintiff against the Fourth & First National Bank, Central Branch, by which action Mrs. Bowers sought to obtain judgment for $1000.69 which, she alleged, had been deposited by her in the defendant bank and had not been withdrawn by her or by her authority.

The bank pleaded that it did not owe the plaintiff as she alleged in her declaration, and, upon the issue thus made, the case went to trial in the circuit court before a jury, and at the close of all the evidence, the trial court, on defendant’s motion, peremptorily directed the jury to return a verdict for the defendant, which was done and the suit was dismissed at the cost of the plaintiff. Plaintiff’s motion for a new trial was overruled and she thereupon prayed an appeal in .the nature.of a writ of error to this court, which was granted by the trial court and perfected by plaintiff, and in this court plaintiff assigns as error the action of the trial court in peremptorily directing a verdict for the defendant.

*78 For convenience, we will refer to Mrs. E. E. Bettie Bowers as plaintiff and to the bank as defendant.

The transactions which gave rise to this litigation were had between the plaintiff and the Central National Bank, a banking corporation with its situs at Nashville, Tennessee, and it is admitted on the record that after these transactions and before this action was begun, the Central National Bank was merged with the Fourth & First National Bank and thereafter conducted as the “Central Branch” of the latter bank, and that “the Fourth & First National Bank assumed all the liabilities of the Central National Bank.” We will, therefore, for convenience of statement in this opinion, state the facts as though the transactions were had with the defendant bank.

In order to dispose of the assignments of error in this ease, we need only state the theory of the complainant, so far as that theory is supported by any material evidence. Conflicts in the evidence were for the determination of the jury, and the court should not have directed the jury to return a verdict for defendant unless there was an entire failure of material evidence tending to' support the cause of action stated in plaintiff’s declaration, or a legally sufficient defense interposed by the defendant was supported by undisputed evidence.

There is evidence which, if true, shows the following facts:

Plaintiff inherited from her parents, or one of them, an undivided interest in a tract of land, which interest she sold to her brother, Joe Sanders, at the price of $1000, and received from the-purchaser, in part payment ($150 having been previously advanced), a cheek, payable to plaintiff and drawn on defendant bank, for $850. Plaintiff endorsed this check in blank and handed it to her then husband, E. E. Bowers, to be by him deposited to plaintiff’s credit in defendant bank. On June 4, 1927, E. E. Bowers carried the cheek to defendant’s banking house and handed it, without further endorsement, to defendant’s receiving teller, and it was then and there entered on the books of the bank as a deposit to the credit of “Mrs. E. E. Bettie Bowers,” and a pass book was prepared by the teller, in the name of “Mrs. E. E. Bettie Bowers”, showing therein the deposit of $850, and this pass book was handed by the teller to E. E. Bowers and was by the latter, on the same day, handed to his wife, the plaintiff.

Subsequently three additional deposits were credited to said account of “E. E. Bettie Bowers,” as follows: On June 8, 1927, $40; on June 22, 1927, $65, and on June 23, 1927, $150. Plaintiff testified that the deposit of $40 was made by her husband; that on the day that deposit was made her husband asked her to give him her pass book in order that he might deposit $40 in the bank for her, and that he took the pass book to the bank and brought it back home to her on the same day; that the deposit of $65 on June 22, 1927, was made by plaintiff in person; that the sum of $65 thus deposited was a gift *79 to plaintiff! from her husband; that the deposit of $150 on June 28, 1927, was made by her husband as a payment to her of that amount which she had loaned him when her brother paid her $150 as an advance on the purchase of the land sold to hiim as aforesaid; that when her husband made the deposit of $150, he did not have the pass book, but brought to her a “duplicate paper” which the bank had given him, and later she carried this “duplicate paper” and her pass book to the bank and the bank put the deposit of $150 on her pass book for her.

Plaintiff “left” her husband, E. E. Bowers, on July 11, 1927, (after nineteen years of married life with him), and has not lived with him since that time. They were divorced, by decree in an un-eontested suit brought by the husband, before the proof was taken in this case.

Plaintiff drew a number of small checks on defendant bank between June 4, 1927, and September 26, 1927, which aggregated $104.31, and which were paid by the defendant. On or about the latter date, plaintiff drew additional small checks to the amount of $12.50 on defendant bank, which were pot paid but dishonored and payment refused. Plaintiff went to the banking house of defendant for the purpose of ascertaining why her checks had been thus dishonored, and was there informed that she had but 25c to her credit. She then learned for the first time that defendant bank had charged to her account checks drawn by her husband, and signed “E. E. Bowers”, aggregating $1000.44, which, together with the checks for $104.31 drawn by plaintiff as aforesaid, reduced the plaintiff’s credit balance appearing on .defendant’s books to the sum of 25c. Defendant bank insisted that it was authorized to charge checks drawn by plaintiff’s husband, E. E. Bowers, to plaintiff’s account. This was denied by plaintiff and this suit was brought by plaintiff to recover of defendant $1000.69 as the balance due on her said deposit account.

Defendant’s contention wras on the trial below, and is here, that at the time the account of plaintiff was “opened” by the deposit of the check for $850 as aforesaid, defendant was instructed by plaintiff’s agent, E. E. Bowers, that the account thus opened in the name of plaintiff would he subject to the checks of either plaintiff or E. E. Bowers. In support of this asserted fact, defendant introduced as a witness J. G. Sanders, who was defendant’s “paying and receiving teller” in June 1927,.and from whose testimony we quote as follows:

“Q. Do you recall a Mr. E. E. Bowers making a deposit in that bank, in June, 1927 ? A. Yes, sir.
“Q. I hand you a pass hook of the Central National Bank, showing deposits made, the book having been issued to Mrs. E. E. Bettie Bowers, I will ask you to examine that and state whether you wrote those deposits in there yourself? A. Yes, I did.
*80 “Q. It is your handwriting? A. Yes, sir.
“Q. Now, the first deposit there is $850? A. That is right, yes, sir.
“Q. Do you recall how that was made, whether in cash, or by check ? A. That deposit was made by a check.
“Q. I hand you a check for $850, made payable to Mrs. E.

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Bluebook (online)
9 Tenn. App. 76, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bowers-v-fourth-first-national-bank-tennctapp-1928.