Couture, Jr. v. Industrial Trust Co.

19 A.2d 772, 66 R.I. 395, 1941 R.I. LEXIS 47
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedApril 28, 1941
StatusPublished

This text of 19 A.2d 772 (Couture, Jr. v. Industrial Trust Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Couture, Jr. v. Industrial Trust Co., 19 A.2d 772, 66 R.I. 395, 1941 R.I. LEXIS 47 (R.I. 1941).

Opinion

*396 Baker, J.

This is an action of the case in assumpsit. It was tried in the superior court to a jury which returned a verdict for the defendant. The trial justice thereafter denied the plaintiff’s motion for a new trial, and the case is now before this court on the latter’s bill of exceptions, the only exception now pressed being to the denial of said motion. His other exceptions, therefore, are considered as waived.

The action is brought by the plaintiff, in his capacity as executor of the will of his father, to recover from the defendant the sum of $3908.28 with interest, on the ground that said sum is part of his father’s estate. The plaintiff alleges that on certain dates, as executor as aforesaid, he made, in the defendant bank, deposits which in the aggregate totaled the above sum, and that said bank now wrongfully refuses to repay him after he made a demand upon it for such repayment.

It appears from the evidence that when the plaintiff’s father died on January 26, 1936 in Warren he owned ten tenement houses and a garage with a large number of stalls situated in that town. The plaintiff qualified as executor of his father’s will on April 21, 1936. In this will the plaintiff, his mother, who died July 8, 1938, and his sister were the sole beneficiaries. On the above real estate the defend *397 ant held four mortgages securing separate loans which had been made to the plaintiff’s father and which originally aggregated the sum of $41,000. These loans and mortgages .were made on dates between October 16, 1925 and March 31, 1930. In October 1933 the plaintiff’s father was in financial difficulties and thé town of Warren was apparently about to sell the above-mentioned real estate for overdue taxes. At that time he also owed the defendant bank money on account of interest on the mortgages and for insurance premiums which it had paid on his account. .

According to the uncontradicted testimony of the manager of the Warren branch of the defendant bank, he and the plaintiff’s father on October 16, 1933 made an agreement orally which, in substance, was that the plaintiff’s father should pay to the bank all income and rents derived from the property covered by the above mortgages. These moneys the bank was authorized to apply at once, as they were deposited, to payménts which it had already made on the account of the plaintiff’s father in connection with the property in question, and to such advances as it might have to make in the future. In return the bank was to advance money to pay all overdue taxes and insurance on the property, to make similar payments thereafter as they became due, and to apply any balance as it saw fit on the interest due on such mortgages. This arrangement was' carried out by the bank and by the plaintiff’s father up to the time of his death. The latter paid into the defendant bank in pursuance to said understanding $5800.11. At the time of his death, however, he still owed the bank $5615.69 for advances which it had made on his behalf.

On February 4, 1936 the plaintiff consulted the assistant manager of the Warren branch of the defendant bank, the manager being away, and delivered $200 from rents collected from his father’s property. On February 18, 1936 the plaintiff also conferred with said manager upon his re *398 turn. Following these conferences the plaintiff turned over from time to time to the said bank the income and rents of his late father’s real estate. This procedure continued until January 19, 1937 when the plaintiff was informed by the defendant, in substance, that it would make no further advances in connection with the mortgaged property, and would be obliged to foreclose its mortgages because the overdue indebtedness on the property was not being sufficiently reduced.

During the latter part of 1936 and in January 1937 the defendant had informed the plaintiff that, if foreclosure was to be avoided, he must make additional payments to the defendant on account of such mortgages, and suggested that he make,such payments out of his own funds. This the plaintiff .declined to do. Eventually the mortgages in question were foreclosed in .May 1937 and the property sold. Immediately thereafter the plaintiff demanded from the defendant the money which he had allegedly deposited since February 4, 1936. This demand was refused by the defendant.

As tried in the superior court, the controlling question in the case was the nature of the understanding between the plaintiff and the defendant, acting through its manager and its ássistant manager in Warren, concerning the purpose and character of the so-called deposits which the plaintiff made to the bank after his father’s death.

To support his contention that he was entitled to recover these deposits the plaintiff testified, in substance, that immediately after his father’s funeral his mother, his sister, and he himself agreed that the rents of the real estate in question be thereafter collected and deposited by him in the defendant bank in Warren as an estate account, so that the debts of and the claims against said estate might be paid. Plaintiff’s sister testified that he was to collect and use the rents “for the interest of the-estate and the debts.” Plain *399 tiff further testified that, in accordance with the above agreement, on February 4, 1936 he consulted defendant’s assistant manager in Warren in regard to opening a new account with the rents in order to pay such debts and claims, and showed him his father’s “bankbook”, which was headed’ “Mortgage Int. a/c Adelard Couture”, and the will in which plaintiff was named as executor; that the assistant manager wrote in the book under his father’s name the following: “Estate (2/4/36)”; and that the plaintiff then made a deposit of $200 which was noted in such book, as were subsequent payments made by him.

The defendant, on the other hand, maintained that no new or estate account was opened by the plaintiff on February 4, 1936 or thereafter, but that the plaintiff made payments of rent under the same conditions and arrangement which the defendant had with his father. The assistant manager of defendant’s Warren branch testified that on February 4, 1936 plaintiff came to the bank, asked for the manager, who was away, and then handed the witness a sum of money, stating that he wished to continue the arrangement which his father had with the bank in regard to the real estate; that the plaintiff had 'the book his father had used; that the witness made out the deposit slip in plaintiff’s presence; that witness did not remember seeing any will, but that he was told by the plaintiff that he expected to be appointed executor or administrator; that nothing was said about opening a new account for the estate; that the witness wrote the word “Estate” on the book,-and the date; that the rent money then and later paid into the bank was credited by it directly on the mortgages; and that there was no account in the bank in the name of the Adelard Couture estate.

The manager of the defendant bank in Warren gave evidence that he made the original agreement with the plaintiff’s father in 1933 concerning the rents from the latter’s *400

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19 A.2d 772, 66 R.I. 395, 1941 R.I. LEXIS 47, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/couture-jr-v-industrial-trust-co-ri-1941.