First National Bank v. Conner

278 P. 143, 85 Mont. 229, 1929 Mont. LEXIS 60
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedJune 11, 1929
DocketNo. 6,454.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 278 P. 143 (First National Bank v. Conner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
First National Bank v. Conner, 278 P. 143, 85 Mont. 229, 1929 Mont. LEXIS 60 (Mo. 1929).

Opinion

MR. JUSTICE MATTHEWS

delivered the opinion of the court.

Appeal from a judgment in favor of Merchants’ National Bank of Glendive, defendant and cross-complainant, and against defendant and cross-complainant Chloa Conner.

In January, 1927, the plaintiff, First National Bank of Glendive, commenced an action by the filing of a complaint, *232 wherein it is alleged that the plaintiff has in its possession the sum of $1,146.01 to which it makes no claim; that the money was deposited in the bank in February, 1926, pursuant to an order of court, made in an action wherein one Frank A. Johnson was plaintiff, and defendant Jesse Conner was defendant; that defendant Chloa Conner claims to be the owner of the money and has made demand upon the bank for its payment to her; that defendant A. H. Helland, as sheriff of Dawson county, has made demand upon the bank for the money by virtue of the service upon the bank of a writ of execution in an action in which the defendant Merchants’ National Bank of Glendive is judgment creditor, and defendant Jesse Conner is a judgment debtor; and that the latter bank claims the money under and by virtue of the judgment and execution. It prays that each of the defendants be required to interplead concerning such claims to the money; that some person be authorized to receive the-money and the plaintiff be relieved from all liability; and that, pending a determination of the rights of the parties, they each be enjoined from bringing action against this plaintiff on their respective claims.

Bach of the defendants answered the complaint. The defendant bank appended to its answer a cross-complaint, setting forth its claim to the money as against the plaintiff, merely claiming that the money belonged to its judgment debtor, Jesse Conner, and had been legally garnished in the hands of the bank, and that the bank had refused to deliver the money to the sheriff in accordance with its return made to that officer.

Chloa Conner filed a cross-complaint against the plaintiff bank, the defendant bank, and the sheriff, in which she alleged that at the time the money was deposited in the plaintiff bank, and at all times since, it belonged to her as the proceeds of the sale of certain hogs owned by her; that at the time of the shipment of the hogs by her an action was pending wherein Frank A. Johnson, as plaintiff, claimed that the hogs were owned by the partnership of plaintiff and Jesse Conner, defendant; and that therein the court had issued a restraining *233 order preventing defendant Jesse Conner from disposing of them, which order was thereafter modified to permit the sale on deposit of the proceeds in the plaintiff bank in the name of the defendant Jesse Conner, but without prejudice to the rights of defendant Chloa Conner to assert her claim to the hogs or the proceeds; and that the money was so deposited, but the title thereto has always been, and now is, in this cross-complainant.

Answering this cross-complaint, the defendant bank denied that the defendant Chloa Conner had any interest in or claim to the hogs or the proceeds thereof, and alleged that Jesse Conner was the sole owner of the hogs at the time of sale and of the proceeds at the time they were deposited in the plaintiff bank, and further alleged that “prior to the commencement of this action and at the time when the said Jesse Conner was indebted to * * * ” this defendant bank upon an indebtedness represented by the judgment obtained in January, 1926, “and at a time when the said Jesse Conner was insolvent, and for the sole purpose of hindering, delaying, cheating, and defrauding the creditors of the said Jesse Conner and particularly this answering defendant, * * * and without any legal consideration whatsoever, the said Jesse Conner attempted to convey certain personal property to the said Chloa Conner, * * * wife of * # ° Jesse Conner, * * * by means of bills of sales * * * accepted by the said Chola Conner for the purpose [above described], and that no title to said personal property passed by virtue of said pretended conveyances and bills of sale; that Jesse Conner was still the solo owner of the property at the time of the sales of a part thereof and of the proceeds of such sales, levied upon, and that said bills of sale and conveyances so made by the said Jesse Conner * * and accepted by the said Chloa Conner for the sole purpose of cheating, hindering, delaying and defrauding creditors and particularly this answering defendant, are wholly fraudulent and void and of no effect whatsoever.”

*234 The issues tendered by this answer were denied by reply filed by cross-complainant Chloa Conner. The case was tried to the court, a jury trial being expressly waived. On the pleadings and the evidence adduced in support thereof the court made findings to the effect that the cross-complainant had no right, title, or interest in the moneys on deposit in the plaintiff bank, and that her claims thereto are invalid and untenable; that the transfer of the property sold, and from which the money on deposit was acquired, was fraudulent and void as against creditors whom it was sought thereby to cheat and defraud. As conclusions of law the court declared that Chloa Conner was entitled to take nothing under her cross-complaint and it should be dismissed; and that the defendant bank was entitled to recover the amount on deposit, less the plaintiff bank’s costs. Judgment was entered accordingly.

From this judgment, defendant Chloa Conner has appealed, specifying error upon the making of the findings of fact and conclusions of law above outlined and the entry of judgment. Under these specifications of error the cross-complainant Chloa Conner contends, first, that the pleadings on behalf of the defendant bank are insufficient to entitle it to any relief as against her; and, second, that the undisputed and uneontradicted evidence shows that it is not entitled to the money in question, as against her.

Counsel for Chloa Conner asserts that the answer to her cross-complaint does not seek to set aside any sale or conveyance, nor seek to invoke the aid of the equity side of the court; that it does not bring the answering defendant in privity with the property in question by showing that the defendant had a lien upon it, nor does it allege that Jesse Conner had no other property out of which that defendant’s judgment could be satisfied.

Conceding that the answer is open to criticism in certain respects and might not have withstood an attack by demurrer or objection to the introduction of testimony, it must be noted that no such attack was made upon it, and the force of counsel’s argument is greatly lessened by this fact. While *235 the objection that such a pleading as filed by the bank is insufficient may be raised for the first time on appeal (Hand v. Heslet, 81 Mont. 68, 261 Pac. 609), such objection is regarded with disfavor, as an attempt to put a trial court in error on a matter not submitted to it; when made for the first time in this court, every reasonable deduction will be drawn from the pleading in order to uphold it (Gilna v. Barker, 78 Mont. 357, 254 Pac. 174), and whatever is necessarily implied in, or is reasonably to be inferred from, an allegation will be taken as directly averred.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
278 P. 143, 85 Mont. 229, 1929 Mont. LEXIS 60, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/first-national-bank-v-conner-mont-1929.