Dixon v. Commercial National Bank

127 So. 428, 13 La. App. 204, 1930 La. App. LEXIS 563
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 10, 1930
DocketNo. 2824
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 127 So. 428 (Dixon v. Commercial National Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dixon v. Commercial National Bank, 127 So. 428, 13 La. App. 204, 1930 La. App. LEXIS 563 (La. Ct. App. 1930).

Opinion

ODOM, J.

Plaintiffs are the sole heirs of Henry Dixon, deceased, and prosecute the present suit against the Commercial National Bank of Shreveport to recover the sum of $1,876.16, which the said Henry Dixon had on deposit to his credit in the bank when he died in December, 1917. Their demands were rejected by the district court, and they appealed.

When Henry Dixon died in December, 1917, he had on deposit to his credit in the defendant bank the above-stated sum. In the early part of 1918, one Maria Dixon Mayfield made application to the district court of Bossier parish, asking that she be recognized as the sole heir of deceased and to be placed in possession of his es[205]*205tate. On March 1, 1918, the court rendered judgment ex parte ordering that “Maria Dixon Mayfield be and she is hereby put into the actual, immediate and absolute possession and control of any and áll of the property, rights and credits of Henry Dixon, deceased, and especially (describing certain real estate), also any and all moneys deposited in the. Commercial National Bank of Shreveport, Louisiana.”

Three days later,- on March 4th, said Mayfield presented to the bank a certified copy of this judgment and asked that the funds on deposit to the credit of the deceased be transferred to her account, which was done forthwith. These plaintiffs were not parties to the proceeding in which Mayfield was recognized as sole heir of the deceased and ordered placed in possession of his estate and knew nothing of it until some time later. When apprised of the proceeding, they appealed devolutively from the judgment, and on January 31, 1921, the judgment was annulled by the Supreme Court (see Succession of Dickson, 148 La. 501, 87 So. 251).

Some time later, after this judgment became final, the exact date not being shown by the record in the present suit, these plaintiffs filed suit alleging that they were the sole heirs of Henry Dixon, deceased, and entitled to his estate, and alleging that, notwithstanding they were the sole heirs of the deceased, one Maria Dixon Mayfield had illegally caused herself to be sent into possession of his estate. They asked that they be allowed to recover the estate, and that the said Mayfield be enjoined from disposing of it pending the litigation. The injunction issued, but the defendant bank was not made a party. Plaintiffs’ demands were rejected by the district court, and on appeal, the judgment was reversed, the plaintiffs recognized as heirs of the deceased, and the injunction was perpetuated. See Van Dickson et als. vs. Mayfield, 158 La. 529, 104 So. 315.

It being finally settled that plaintiffs, and not Maria Dixon Mayfield, were entitled to the estate of Henry Dixon, deceased, they now seek to recover of the defendant bank the amount which deceased had on deposit to his credit at the time of his death.

As already stated, the amount in the defendant bank to the credit of deceased was transferred by the bank to the credit of Mayfield on March 4, 1918. That was done prior to the date on which plaintiffs appealed devolutively from the said ex parte judgment sending Mayfield into possession. The transfer of the funds was made by the bank upon the faith and authority of the judgment of the district court recognizing her as heir and sending her into possession, a certified copy of which judgment being presented to the bank by May-field prior to the transfer.

The present suit seems to be predicated upon the theory that the transfer of the funds to Mayfield’s account was illegal, null, and void, although there is no allegation in plaintiffs’ petition to that effect. At any rate, plaintiffs proceed against defendant as though the funds were still in the bank to the credit of deceased, which is not true. The amount was transferred from deceased’s to Mayfield’s account— nearly eight years before this suit was filed —and there has never been any proceeding against the bank to set the transfer aside. Plaintiffs have apparently ignored the transfer altogether, and there seems to be no objection to this proceeding on the part of the defendant.

[206]*206As. the case is presented here, the only question for our consideration is whether the transfer of the funds to Mayfield’s account by the bank, under the circumstances, was legal, and whether the bank is protected by the ex parte order of the district court recognizing Mayfield as heir and sending her into possession. Act No. 112 of 1894 is an act “Relative to the transfer by national banks, State banks or banking associations, of any balance of deposit account of any deceased person to the heirs, executor or administrator of the same.” Section 1 of that Act reads as follows:

“That it shall be lawful for any national bank, State bank, or banking association, to transfer any balance of deposit on account of any deceased person, to the heirs, executor or administrator of the said deceased person; and the judgment of any court of competent jurisdiction, recognizing and putting the said heirs in possession, or the letters of such executor or administrator, issued by any court of competent jurisdiction, of this State, or of any other State, of the United States, shall be full and sufficient authority for the making of the said transfer which, when so made, shall be a full protection, to any such national bank, State bank, or banking association making the same; and a copy of such judgment recognizing and putting said heirs in possession, or of the said letters of executorship or administration, rendered or issued by any court of this State, duly certified, or any other State of the United States, certified according to the existing acts of Congress, shall be full and conclusive proof of the jurisdiction of the court rendering or issuing the same.”

(This act was amended by Act No. 140 of 1918, p. 239, and again by Act No. 64 of the Extra Session of 1921, p. 90. The amending acts retain the substance, but enlarge the scope, of the original act which was in force at the time this transfer was made.)

The language of this act is plain and unambiguous, and provides that a judgment of any court of competent jurisdiction recognizing and putting heirs in possession “shall be full and sufficient authority for the making of the said transfer which, when so made, shall be a full protection to any such national bank, State bank, or banking association making the same.”

It is not denied, but conceded, that a court of competent jurisdiction did send Mayfield into possession of all the estate of deceased, and especially of this deposit, and that the bank, before making the transfer, had presented to it a certified copy of said judgment. The bank therefore, under the plain letter of the law, had “full and sufficient authority for making said transfer,” which transfer, having been made, that is, upon the faith and authority of the judgment, is “full .protection” to the bank. It is therefore manifest that the transfer of these funds from the account of deceased to that of Mayfield was legal, and, even though it be true that plaintiffs, and not Mayfield, are the legal heirs of deceased, the bank is fully protected.

Counsel for appellant cite a long list of decisions holding, in substance, that an ex parte order of court, recognizing and putting heirs in possession of the estate of deceased persons, lacks the elements and essentials of the thing adjudged, and cannot be pleaded as res adjudicata. But those cases have no application here.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
127 So. 428, 13 La. App. 204, 1930 La. App. LEXIS 563, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dixon-v-commercial-national-bank-lactapp-1930.