Bundy v. Town of Monticello

84 Ind. 119
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 15, 1881
DocketNo. 9790
StatusPublished
Cited by40 cases

This text of 84 Ind. 119 (Bundy v. Town of Monticello) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bundy v. Town of Monticello, 84 Ind. 119 (Ind. 1881).

Opinion

Best, C.

The following abstract of this ease has been furnished by the parties:

“ This was a suit by the appellee against the appellants to recover certain moneys claimed to belong to the former, deposited in the First National Bank of Montieello. The complaint charges that on, etc., one Joseph C. Wilson, who was then one of the board of trustees of said town, and a duly authorized agent of said town, deposited in said National Bank of Montieello, Indiana, for and on behalf of said plaintiff (the appellee), the sum of $11,000, which said sum of money was the property of the said town, and was so deposited by said Wilson as 'trustee, as aforesaid, and afterward, to wit, on, etc., the said First National Bank of Montieello, Indiana, suspended payment, and refused to pay said sum of money, or any part thereof, to the appellee; that at the time of said suspension of payment by said bank there remained in said bank of said sum of $11,000 belonging to said plaintiff (the appellee), the sum of $9,500, which was yet due and remained unpaid; that on, etc., the defendant Martin L. Bundy (one of the appellants) was duly and legally appointed the receiver for said bank, and qualified as such receiver, and took possession of the assets of said bank, with all the books, moneys, rights, credits and effects thereof, and proceeded to the settlement and discharge of all liabilities of said bank except the liability of said bank to the appellee for said sum of $9,500 due the appellee by said bank, as aforesaid; that the defendant Bundy (one of the appellants), as such receiver, has declared a dividend of thirty per centum in favor of the creditors of said bank, and has proceeded to pay said dividend to all of said creditors except the appellee, to whom he has failed and refused to pay said dividend, or any part thereof. [121]*121and has failed and refused to recognize the appellee as one of the creditors of said bank. Wherefore appellee prays that she may be recognized as one of the creditors of said bank, and that she have judgment for $10,000 against the defendant Bundy, as such receiver, and said First National Bank, to be paid out of the assets of said bank in his hands as such receiver, and that she share equally with the other creditors of said bank in the distribution of its assets, and for all proper relief.

“ The appellants answered:

“ 1. General denial.
“ 2. That whilst said money mentioned in the complaint was on deposit in said bank, and under the control of the said Joseph C. Wilson, and when no trust attached to said money in favor of the appellee, to wit, on, etc., the said Joseph C. Wilson was liable to said bank in a sum much larger than the sum mentioned in the complaint, for money which had before that time' come into the hands of said Joseph C. Wilson, as the president of said bank, which had been by him converted to his own use, and for which he was liable to account to said bank, having received the same in his relation to said bank as its president, said money so converted having belonged to said bank; the said Joseph C. Wilson appropriated and ordered said money in the complaint mentioned to be applied to, and in discharge of, so much of his said liability to said bank for the money so converted by him as aforesaid, and" on said day last aforesaid, executed a paper writing, of which the following is a copy, to wit:
“ To A. D. Lynch, Receiver First National Bank, Monticello, Indiana :
“ ‘ There is in the First National Bank of Monticello, 'Indiana, a deposit to my credit as J. C. Wilson, trustee/ $9,013. Should there be any legal demands against me as president of said bank, which have'been omitted from the books of the bank, I direct the application of this sum, so far as is necessary, to their payment, next to the payment of any balance due the [122]*122bank from me as appears by its books at the time it passed into the hands of a receiver.
“ ‘August 5th, 1879. Jos. C. Wilson.’
“And delivered said paper writing to A. D. Lynch, who was then and there the receiver of said bank, who recognized the same as valid; and the appellant Bundy, the successor of said Lynch, claims and asserts his right to appropriate said money in the complaint mentioned in discharge of said liability of said Joseph C. Wilson to the said bank.
“ 3. As to $4,800 mentioned in the complaint, the defendants (the appellants) say, that of the money for which the appellee seeks recovery, the said sum of $4,800 was the proceeds of a note executed by A. W. Eeynolds to said bank, and by said Joseph C. Wilson deposited in said bank as a part and parcel of the sum sought to be recovered by the appellee; that after said deposit in said bank, to wit, on, etc., the said Joseph C. Wilson directed and ordered said money to be applied to, and in discharge of, a liability to said bank for money wrong- ' fully converted by him as president of said bank.
“To the second and third paragraphs of the answer the appellee filed reply — the general denial.”

The case was submitted to the court on the following agreed statement of facts, to wit:

“The defendant Martin L. Bundy was at the commencement of this action, and still is, the receiver of the said First National Bank of Monticello, and as such has refused to recognize the validity of the claim set up in the complaint herein, but claims that the plaintiff has no right, either at law or in equity, to the money for which its action is brought.
“ It is admitted that Joseph C. Wilson had been the president of said bank up to the first day of April, 1879, at which time he ceased to be such president; that said Joseph C. Wilson was one of the trustees of the town of Monticello, and a duly authorized agent thereof, and as such agent he did, in April,- 1879, sell to Claypool & Stoddard, of Indianapolis, Indiana, $14,300 of the bonds of said town, bearing seven [123]*123per cent, semi-annual interest, for the su.m of $12,918.47; that said $12,918.47 was paid to said Wilson by said Clay-pool & Stoddard in the following manner,.and at the several times named, to wit: On or about the 14th of April, 1879, said Claypool <fe Stoddard, by the direction of said Wilson, paid a draft drawn by G. A. Ives, of Chicago, Illinois, for $6,000; on the 14th day.of April, 1879, said Claypool & Stoddard paid said Wilson, by their check on the First National Bank of Indianapolis, Indiana, the further sum of $5,000; on the 13th day of May, 1879, the said Claypool & Stoddard paid said Wilson, by their check on .the First National Bank of Indianapolis, Indiana, the further sum of $1,840.30, and in a few days thereafter said Claypool & Stoddard made a settlement with said Wilson for the balance.of said $12,918.47, amounting to $78.17.
“ On the 27th day of May, 1879, there was standing on the books of the First National Bank of Monticello, Indiana, to the credit of Joseph C. Wilson, the sum of six thousand, six hundred and eighteen dollars and ten cents ($6,618.10), and on that day said Wilson checked on said bank for six thousand, two hundred dollars ($6,200), which was at the time placed to the credit of J. C. Wilson, trustee,’ on the books of said bank, by his order. On the same day he borrowed $4,800 from A. W.

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84 Ind. 119, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bundy-v-town-of-monticello-ind-1881.