Glidden v. Rines

128 A. 4, 124 Me. 286, 1925 Me. LEXIS 18
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedMarch 9, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 128 A. 4 (Glidden v. Rines) 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
Glidden v. Rines, 128 A. 4, 124 Me. 286, 1925 Me. LEXIS 18 (Me. 1925).

Opinion

Philbrook, J.

This is an action of assumpsit in which the plaintiffs, as receivers, seek to recover from the defendant the sum of four hundred eighty-seven dollars and seventy-four cents -($487.74) upon the common count for money had and received, with a specification of claim “that the defendant was indebted to said Lincoln County Trust Company in the sum of $800.00 upon his promissory note for said amount, dated October 29, 1915, payable in one year from the date thereof, with interest at the rate of six per cent, per annum, which note was then secured by a mortgage of certain real estate, given by the defendant to said Lincoln County Trust Company on the same day. Interest on said note was paid by the defendant from time to time up to April 29, 1923. On May 3, 1923, the defendant being then indebted to said Lincoln County Trust Company in the sum of $800.00, being the face of said note, effected a settlement of his liability to said bank on said note with one Wesley C. Day, who was then and there one of the receivers of said Lincoln County [288]*288Trust Company. The defendant on said May 3, 1923, was a depositor in said Lincoln County Trust Company, and had standing to his credit on his checking account as a demand deposit in the commercial branch of department of said Trust Company, a balance of $487.74; and the said Wesley C. Day, as receiver aforesaid, then and there allowed and permitted the defendant to take credit by way of off-set against the amount due from him to said bank for said sum of $487.74, and then and there cancelled said note and discharged said mortgage, whereby, and by reason whereof the said defendant received the sum of $487.74, to which by law he had no right or title, and has never repaid the same, but now holds the same for the plaintiffs’ use.” '

Prior to the institution of this action the receivers made application to this court for instructions as to claims of set-off made by depositors, and it was held that the loans secured by mortgages of real estate had been legally segregated as security for the savings depositors and denied the right of set-off as previously allowed by the receivers to the defendant. Lawrence v. Lincoln County Trust Company, 123 Maine, 273. The suit at bar was then begun.

The case was opened to a jury but at the conclusion of the testimony, by agreement, it was withdrawn from those arbiters- and was taken under advisement by the presiding Justice who rendered his decision in vacation pursuant to the provisions of it. S., Chap. 87, Sec. 37. The magistrate found that the receivers and the defendant had acted in good faith when they settled the question of set-off, as already stated, but ordered a nonsuit, and the plaintiffs bring the case to this court on exceptions to that order. This is the- only issue technically raised by the bill of exceptions. In their brief plaintiffs say ‘ ‘we will also discuss all the issues in the case with a hope that the court will so decide the whole question as to give the plaintiffs, who are its officers, proper- guidance for their proceedings.” This we must decline to do since an opinion expressed by a court upon an issue not necessarily involved in the case lacks the force of an adjudication, it is merely obiter dictum. American Surety Company v. United States, 239 Fed., 680. Words & Phrases, Vol. 3, Page 2051.

The facts are not in dispute. The issue raised is a legal one. The reasons upon which the sitting Justice based his order of nonsuit are found in the following language.

“It is undoubtedly true that in the equitable distribution of the assets all creditors of the same class are to be treated alike and are [289]*289entitled to payment proportionately, and that the transaction in question was in effect a payment in full of Mr. Riñes’ commercial deposit. But the defendant is entitled to the same dividend which other creditors receive, and the plaintiffs at most can only be entitled to recover the difference between the amount paid and the percentage or dividend which Mr. Rines would have received if his account had been proved and dividends paid thereon in due course of liquidation. What the difference is does not appear and cannot be shown until the liquidation is completed. The segregated assets are held as security for the savings deposits; they are supposed to be earned on the books of the bank at their true value. R. S., Chap. 52, Sec. 90. Any excess above the amount required to pay the savings depositors will be available for payment of other creditors; in addition there will be the non-segregated assets and the stockholder’s liability so available.....The case presents a matter for accounting by the receivers. They cannot recover back the whole amount so paid and received in good faith but only the overpayment. The burden is upon the receivers to show what the difference is; it is incumbent upon them, at their peril, to have the dividend upon the creditor’s claim determined. This is no great hardship upon the receivers who seek to be relieved from their own mistake. The receivers paying may prove any claim so paid in their own names, being subrogated to the rights of the creditor whose claim has been fully paid. The authorities in the analogous ca.ses of overpayments made by administrators of insolvent estates are in point. Morris v. Porter, 87 Maine, 510, 516; Gillen v. Sawyer, 93 Maine, 151, 166. Inasmuch as plaintiffs have not shown the amount of the overpayment this action cannot be maintained.”

Briefly stated, without deciding other questions of law as a reason for ordering a nonsuit, if any such exist, the sole reason for the order is that the action was prematurely brought. This, therefore, as we have already suggested, is the only issue of law to be determined in the instant case. As counsel have addressed their arguments to legal points other than the one thus prevailing in the order of nonsuit, we receive slight assistance from their briefs.

In view of the fact that the learned Justice in the court below referred to certain cases, as analogous to this, wherein the rights, duties and liabilities of executors and administrators are concerned, [290]*290we deem it-important to call attention to the wide differences existing between the character, powers, duties and liabilities of such trust officers and those of receivers appointed as in this case.

In a somewhat early case, Hathorn v. Eaton, 70 Maine, 219, our court held that an executor derives all his title from the will, his interest being completely vested at the instant of the testator’s death, and he may, therefore, before probate, perform almost any act belonging to his office. In a later case, Chadwick v. Stilphen, 105 Maine, 242, the rule is given in more restricted language, holding it to be á well-settled rule in this State that the power of an executor to act in the settlement of the estate of a testator is not derived solely from his nomination in the will; that his authority is not complete until there has been a compliance with all the prerequisites of R. S., Chap. 68, Sec. 8. It should not be overlooked that in some jurisdictions, contrary to the doctrine of the common law the executor derives his power and authority over the property of his decedent from the laws of the state, and not from the will itself. Baker v. Cauthorn, 23 Indiana Appeals, 611; 77 A. S. R., 443; Calloway v. Doe, 1 Blackf., 371; Lucas v. Tucker, 17 Ind., 41.

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Related

Perkins v. Warren
247 A.2d 97 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 1968)
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
128 A. 4, 124 Me. 286, 1925 Me. LEXIS 18, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/glidden-v-rines-me-1925.