District Township of Eureka v. Farmers' Bank

88 Iowa 194
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedMay 17, 1893
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 88 Iowa 194 (District Township of Eureka v. Farmers' Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
District Township of Eureka v. Farmers' Bank, 88 Iowa 194 (iowa 1893).

Opinion

Robinson, C. J.

For several years the defendants, W. Taylor and A. E. Jackson, as partners, owned and carried on a banking business under the name of the Farmers’ Bank of Fontanelle. From the fifteenth day of September, 1884, until the tenth day of December, 1890, Abner Rood, as treasurer of the plaintiff, deposited in the bank money which belonged to the plaintiff. The deposits were made in his name, but the owners of the bank knew that the money so deposited belonged to the plaintiff. In November, 1890, Jackson sold his interest in the bank to Taylor. On the tenth day of the next month Taylor made an assignment for the benefit of his creditors to the defendant James H. Hulburt. The liabilities of the bank are about eighty thousand dollars, while the assets will not yield one-half of that amount. The balance due the plaintiff at the time of the assignment was two thousand, three hundred and three dollars and twenty-three cents, no part of which has been paid. Before the assignment was made, Taylor conveyed certain real estate and other property to James H. Hulburt, to H. Gross, and to others who had become sureties for him, to secure them against loss by reason of such suretyship. This action was commenced on the eighteenth day of December, 1890, after the deed of assignment had been recorded, and after the inventory of the property conveyed to the assignee had been filed.

[197]*197The petition of the plaintiff stated, in substance, the facts showing the depositing of the money, that it belonged to the plaintiff, and was taken by the bank with knowledge of that fact. It also stated that the defendants had disposed of their property with intent to defraud their creditors. It asked that Hulburt, as assignee, be required to pay to the plaintiff the sum which should be found to be due it, and that such sum be adjudged a preferred claim against the property in the hands of the assignee. An attachment against the property was also asked. A writ whs issued and levied upon various lots and tracts qf land, and Hulburt and Gross were garnished. In an amendment to its petition, filed after the writ of attachment had been served, the plaintiff alleges that a large number of persons have commenced suit against Taylor and his assignee, and that other persons will commence suit against them for the recovery of trust funds, and that the funds in the hands of the assignee will not be sufficient to pay all claims of that character in full. The prayer of the petition is therefore renewed, and judgment against Taylor and Jackson is demanded for any balance remaining unpaid after the funds in- the hands of the assignee are exhausted. An order for-the sale of the attached property is asked, and gen eral equitable relief is demanded.

1. Trusts: conversion: remedy: estoppel. I". It is contended by the appellants that the plaintiff can not seek a judgment against the bank and its owners for the amount of the deposit, and at the same time demand that it be treated as a trust fund, and established as a preferred claim against the property in the hands of the assignee; that it is estopped by the attachment proceedings to assert that the property attached is in the hands of the assignee, subject to be taken to satisfy a trust, for the reason that the attachment proceedings are inconsistent with a claim of that kind. The cases [198]*198of Citizens’ Bank v. Dows, 68 Iowa, 460, and Crawford v. Nolan, 70 Iowa, 98, are relied upon by the appellants as supporting their theory of the law.

The facts in the case first cited were substantially' as follows: The plaintiff had possession of certain' corn, by an agent, to ‘secure advances of money which’ it had made, and for which it was entitled to a lien. While holding such possession it sued out an attachment against the owners of the corn on account of the-debt for which the lien was given, directed the sheriff' to levy upon the corn, and received from him the-money realized from the sale of a portion of it. This court held that the lien of the plaintiff in that case-depended upon its possession of the corn, and that when the sheriff seized it under its direction the lien-was waived by the act of the plaintiff. In Crawford v. Nolan the plaintiff held a chattel mortgage on a stock' of merchandise. The mortgagor had previously sold and delivered the property which was mortgaged to Lederer, Strauss & Company, but after the execution of' the mortgage they caused the property to be attached as the property of the mortgagor. It was held that they could not thereafter defeat the mortgage by claiming to-be the owners of the property attached, for the reason that their act in attaching it was inconsistent with their-claim of ownership. The decision in both cases, was that a person can not claim property under two inconsistent rights at the same time. In this case the plaintiff was not in possession, and did not claim to be the., owner, of any of the property in controversy. The claim that- the bank and its owners were indebted to the plaintiff was not inconsistent with its right to have-the indebtedness established as a preferred claim against the property in the hands of the assignee. The plain-' tiff did not insist upon a right to any specific portion of that property, but claimed that the deposit was a trust fund which had been wrongfully used to increase the-[199]*199property of the debtor, which had passed into the possession of his assignee, and that by reason of those facts the plaintiff had an equitable claim against such property. , No attempt to take it from the assignee by the process of attachment was made. It seems to have been the theory of the plaintiff that the assignee acquired no property of Taylor by virtue of the assignment, excepting that which was set out in the inventory. When the writ of attachment was placed in the hands of the sheriff for service, he was directed not to levy it on any property which had passed into the hands of the assignee, nor upon any which was described in the inventory. He was instructed to serve garnishment process upon Hulburt, and at the same time to tell him that it was not intended to hold him for any property which he had received under the assignment. Thus it appears that the plaintiff did not attempt to seize by attachment any of the property against which he sought to have the indebtedness of Taylor established as a preferred claim. The attachment proceedings were intended to be auxiliary to the attempt to establish a trust as against the assignee, and were resorted to for the purpose of reaching property which the plaintiff believed had been conveyed to defraud the creditors of Taylor, and which he also believed the assignee did not claim. That property which passed to the assignee may have been levied upon under the circumstances stated will not defeat the right of the plaintiff to have so much of the property in the hands of the assignee as may be needed, and as is liable for the purpose, treated as held in trust for the payment of its claims. No lien was created by levying the writ, and the elements necessary to constitute an estoppel are lacking.

[200]*2002. ___-ftmd ' assignee °or creditors preferred claim, [199]*199II. The decree of the district court provided for the payment of the amount due the plaintiff out of any [200]*200funds which should come into the hands the assignee.

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Bluebook (online)
88 Iowa 194, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/district-township-of-eureka-v-farmers-bank-iowa-1893.