Fairfield Savings Bank v. Small

38 A. 551, 90 Me. 546, 1897 Me. LEXIS 118
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedSeptember 15, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 38 A. 551 (Fairfield Savings Bank v. Small) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fairfield Savings Bank v. Small, 38 A. 551, 90 Me. 546, 1897 Me. LEXIS 118 (Me. 1897).

Opinion

Whitehottse, J.

The Fairfield Savings Bank brings this bill in equity asking that Lumber Small, on the one side, and Howard W. Dodge, executor of the will of Olive C. Small, the deceased wife of Lumber Small, on the other side, be required to interplead respecting the ownership of a deposit of $786.76 standing on the books of the bank in the name of Olive C. Small.

It is alleged in the bill that at the time of the decease of Olive C. Small, on the fifteenth day of May, 1896, she had in her possession deposit book No. 2884, issued by the plaintiff bank, showing an account of deposits and withdrawals, kept in her name from 1887 to 1895, with a balance of $786.76 in favor of the depositor; and that this money was claimed by Lumber Small, the surviving husband of Olive C., as his property, on the ground that it was his money when deposited in the bank; and that it was only placed in the name of his wife in trust for himself, for the reason that he already had deposits in the same bank in his own name to the full limit of $2,000 allowed by law.

Thereupon the contending parties filed their respective answers, [548]*548Lumber Small claiming the deposit as his own in accordance with, the representations in the bill, and Howard W. Dodge claiming it as a part of the estate of Olive C. Small.

The existence of all the essential conditions, upon which the equitable remedy of intei'pleader depends, having been satisfactorily established, the bill was properly sustained and a decree of interpleader duly entered. By agreement the answers filed were to be taken as the pleadings of the contending parties. Upon these pleadings, which duly presented the issue between the contending parties, the evidence was taken by the presiding justice and reported for the consideration of this court. The cause is now ripe for a decision upon the merits of the controversy between Lumber Small and the representatives of the estate of his wife, Olive C. Small, upon so much of the evidence as shall be deemed legally admissible. Farley v. Blood, 30 N. H. 354; Atkinson v. Manks, 1 Cowen, 691; Savings Bank v. Fogg, 83 Maine, 374.

In support of his contention the deposition of Lumber Small, who was ninety-two years of age, and unable to attend court, was offered in evidence, and excluded; but by consent of counsel it was subsequently made a part of the report, to be considered if held admissible by this court.

It is the opinion of the court that Lumber Small was not a competent witness under our statutes, and that his deposition cannot be considered in the determination of the question pending between himself and the representative of his wife’s estate. Section 93 of chap. 82, R. S., providing that no person shall be excluded from testifying by reason of his interest in the result of the suit, is expressly declared by section 98 of that chapter to be inapplicable to cases “where, at the time of taking testimony, or at the time of trial,' the party prosecuting, or the party defending, or any one of them, is an executor or an administrator’,” etc. It has been seen that, at the time of the trial, the real contestants for the fund in this case are Lumber Small, on the one side, and the executor of the will of Olive C. Small, on the other. This is the obvious and necessary result of the operations of a bill of inter-pleader. One of the principal elements involved in the remedy is [549]*549that the original plaintiff must occupy the position of a mere stake-holder, neither having nor claiming any interest in the subject matter. He must be entirely indifferent between the conflicting claimants, and be ready and willing to pay the money in dispute to the one found to be rightfully entitled. With the result of their dispute he has no concern. His remedy is exhausted by the decree that the claimants do interplead with each other, and he is then “ wholly without the controversy.” 3 Pom. Eq. § § 1320 — 1325, and cases cited.

But it is contended that the substance of the testimony which Lumber Small might be expected to give in support of his claim, as stated in the interpleading bill and in his answer, fully appears in the direct testimony of other witnesses and in the inferences to be drawn from the circumstances disclosed.

Lumber Small has had three wives, all of whom are deceased. By the first wife he has six children now living, but no children by either the second or third wife. It appears from the evidence that Olive C. Small, the third wife, had no property of her own at the time of her marriage with Lumber Small, and never afterwards acquired any in her own right. In November, 1891, Mr. Small made provision for the support of himself and wife, Olive 0., by conveying to her brother, Geo. F. Howe, a farm with other property in Benton, of the estimated value of $1200 or $1500 in the aggregate, and taking from Rowe a bond secured by a mortgage of the same property, for the maintenance of himself and wife during their lives. Under this arrangement Mr. and Mrs. Small both lived in the family of her brother until November 28, 1895, when Mr. Small became dissatisfied and went to live with his daughter, Mrs. Parkman, in Unity. Mrs. Small remained in her brother’s family and received her support there until her death.

It appears from the copies of the accounts on the books of the Fairfield Savings Bank and from the deposit books in the case, that Lumber Small commenced to make deposits in that bank in his own name December 3, 1873, first receiving deposit book No. 459, and has kept an account there from that time to the present. In January, 1886, the amount of his deposits was $1980.86, and, [550]*550with the dividend added, on the first day of May following, $2020.87. It was in this state of his account that on January 6th a deposit of $200 was made on a separate account, evidenced by deposit book No. 2098, with the caption “ Olive C. Small in account with the Fairfield Savings Bank.” ' On this account three other deposits were made within six months following, aggregating, with the dividend, $411.06, which was all withdrawn on November 5 of the same year, and that account closed. On the same day he closed the account standing in his own name on book 459, by withdrawing the entire balance of $1908.27, and opened a new account in his own name by depositing $1319.33, receiving deposit book No. 2236.

But November 1, 1887, this account again reached a total of deposits and dividends of $1960.88, and on October 6, while this account was thus near the maximum limit for any one depositor, he again opened an account in the name of Olive 0. Small, and deposited $300 oh that account as shown by deposit book No. 2384, which is the one here in question. The amount of this account was increased by two other large deposits, to $2,000 May, 1886, and reduced by subsequent withdrawals to $786.76, the amount now in controversy. In the mean time the account in his own name, under the effect of numerous deposits and withdrawals, fluctuated between $2,000 in May 1888, and $1881 in June 1895, when there was a withdrawal of $800.

It appears from the testimony of Charles Rowell, who was treasurer of the bank from August, 1887, to 1894, comprising the entire period of the deposits and withdrawals on the account in question, that he issued this deposit book in the name of' Olive O. Small and delivered it to her husband; that Lumber Small after-wards brought the book to the bank, and made all the deposits and withdrawals on that account; that he had no acquaintance with Olive C. Small, and that all the business was done with her husband.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Bergen County, Bank v. Sheriff, Bergen
191 A. 560 (New Jersey Court of Chancery, 1937)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
38 A. 551, 90 Me. 546, 1897 Me. LEXIS 118, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fairfield-savings-bank-v-small-me-1897.