Downey, Rec. v. Mayr, Secretary of State

182 N.E. 872, 95 Ind. App. 179, 1932 Ind. App. LEXIS 93
CourtIndiana Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 27, 1932
DocketNo. 14,474.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 182 N.E. 872 (Downey, Rec. v. Mayr, Secretary of State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Downey, Rec. v. Mayr, Secretary of State, 182 N.E. 872, 95 Ind. App. 179, 1932 Ind. App. LEXIS 93 (Ind. Ct. App. 1932).

Opinion

Kime, P. J.

— This action arose by reason of the filing of an intervening petition by Frank Mayr Jr., the Secretary of State of Indiana, with leave of court, in Cause No. 45291 pending in the Marion Circuit Court and entitled “State of Indiana on the relation of Luther F. Symons, Bank Commissioner of the State of Indiana, v. Washington Bank and Trust Company, wherein the said Mayr, intervening petitioner, alleged the deposit of certain moneys in the sum of $7,565.00 with Washington Bank and Trust Company by his predecessor, Otto G. Fifield, Secretary of State of Indiana, to be held as trust deposits by the trust department of said bank, pursuant to a certain letter dated October 6, 1930, addressed to Indiana Bureau of Motor Vehicles, and signed by Francis W. Payne, Vice-President; the subsequent insolvency of said bank and trust company; the transfer to the said Mayr by the said Fifield of all rights which he (Fifield) might have “under and in accordance with that certain instrument signed Francis W. Payne, Vice-President of Washington Bank and Trust Company, dated October 6, 1930, in consideration of Frank Mayr’s duties as Secretary of State”; praying that said claim be allowed for $7,565.00 as a preferred claim, and that said receiver be ordered and directed to pay over to said *181 intervener the full sum of $7,565.00 out of moneys in his hands.

The issues arose upon the intervening petition of appellee and the answer of the appellant in two paragraphs to said intervening petition. The first of the paragraphs of answer was a general denial of the allegations of the petition, and the second paragraph was a special answer.

In order to fully understand the issues raised by these two paragraphs of answer we will set out some of the allegations of the intervening petition. Said intervening petition alleged in substance that on and prior to October 4, 1930, there was paid to appellee’s predecessor in office by persons desiring motor vehicle licenses for the calendar year 1931 the aggregate sum of $2,200.00, which, on October 4, Otto G. Fifield, then Secretary of State, as Secretary of State, delivered to the Washington Bank and Trust Company to be held by it pursuant to agreement as a trust fund.

Said petition further alleged that the agreement was afterwards reduced to writing and evidenced by a letter addressed to Indiana Bureau of Motor Vehicles, as follows (omitting formal parts) :

“Relative to our conversation of recent date covering the deposit of funds by your department in the trust department of the Washington Bank and Trust Company to be held as trust deposits, for the specific purpose for which they are intended and not to occupy the same position as the general deposits, you are hereby advised that such deposits will be accepted by us and held subject to withdrawal by your department on the signature of Mr. Otto G. Fifield, Secretary of State of Indiana, and in accepting these funds it is understood that these funds shall be subject to withdrawal by said party, who shall sign this letter for the purpose of signature identification.
“Proper receipts will be given for the total of deposits made as the same are made, but no individual record of receipts will be kept.”

*182 This document was signed by Francis W. Payne, Vice-President of Washington Bank and Trust Company.

The intervening petition further alleges that additional sums were deposited with Washington Bank and Trust Company by Otto G. Fifield, as Secretary of State of Indiana, up to and including October 24, 1930, and that the total of all funds thus deposited amounted to $7,565.00.

The intervening petition further alleges that all of the above sums were paid to the Secretary of State as such by persons desiring automobile registration and license plates for the year 1931, and that with each separate check or currency in payment for said license fees was an application for a license properly executed.

The first paragraph of answer was a general denial of the allegations of this petition, and the second paragraph was a special answer in which it was alleged, in substance, that said moneys were not received by Otto G. Fifield as Secretary of State, and that said moneys so deposited with the Washington Bank and Trust Company were not held by said Fifield as Secretary of State of Indiana, and that the assignment of said Secretary of State’s interest in said funds to the appellee, as alleged in the petition, was not a legal assignment of said moneys to the appellee as Secretary of State.

There was thus raised an issue of fact as well as issues of law, the appellee claiming that under the facts the deposit of said moneys constituted a trust fund and a special deposit which entitled the appellee to a preference, and further that said funds were state funds, and, because of their character as state funds, that the appellee was entitled to have his claim allowed as a preferred claim.

The legal questions presented by the pleadings were: (1) Was the intervening petitioner the real party in interest and entitled to prosecute the action? (2) Was the *183 deposit of the moneys a general or special deposit? (3) Was the intervening petitioner entitled to preference over general creditors in- the payment of his alleged claim?

The issues were decided in favor of the intervening petitioner. The error assigned is the overruling of the receiver’s motion for a new trial, which alleged as the reasons therefor: (1) That the decision of the court is not sustained by sufficient evidence; (2) that the decision of the court is contrary to law.

Both parties are agreed that, reduced to a final analysis, two points, and two only, are presented by appellant in support of his propositions that the decision of the court is contrary to law and that the decision of the court is not sustained by sufficient evidence.- They are: (a) That the intervening petitioner, appellee herein, is not the real party in interest, and (b) that if it be conceded that the funds whose status is in controversy are public funds, there is, nevertheless, no right to a preference.

The principal contention of appellant is that the appellee is not the real party in interest in that he has no interest in the controversy and therefore not entitled to prosecute the intervening petition. First, because no record of the receipt of these fees were made in the books of the Secretary of State, nor were the fees deposited daily with the State Treasurer. Second, because the Depository Act requires interest to be paid on state funds, while it was specifically contracted that none was to be paid here. And, therefore, Fifield, Secretary of State, was only a bailee until the licenses were actually' issued.

The appellant further contends that if these are public funds there is no right of preference over other funds held by him as receiver.

The appellee contends that these moneys came into *184 his predecessor’s hands as Secretary of State, that they are state funds, and that, by virtue of the special contract, they constituted a trust fund in the hands of the bank.

Sec. 10085 Burns’ Ann. Stat. 1926, Acts 1925, p.

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Bluebook (online)
182 N.E. 872, 95 Ind. App. 179, 1932 Ind. App. LEXIS 93, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/downey-rec-v-mayr-secretary-of-state-indctapp-1932.