Guaranty State Bank v. Shirey

258 S.W. 1109
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 26, 1924
DocketNo. 10483.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 258 S.W. 1109 (Guaranty State Bank v. Shirey) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Guaranty State Bank v. Shirey, 258 S.W. 1109 (Tex. Ct. App. 1924).

Opinion

BUCK, J.

This cause was instituted by Mrs. Eouise Ball Shirey, joined pro forma by her husband, Dr. Guy O. Shirey, against the Guaranty State Bank of Fort Worth. The plaintiff alleged that she had on deposit in the defendant bank in her name and as her sole and separate estate certain funds, but that the bank unlawfully converted and appropriated to its own use $700 out of said funds. She sued for this sum, and interest, from tire date of the alleged conversion, and for $400 attorney’s fee, and for exemplary damages.

The bank answered that the plaintiff had no income from any separate estate, but that the funds deposited in the bank in her name were placed there by her husband out of his earnings as a physician; that the husband owed the bank a note for $700, being a community debt; that he had theretofore, for the purpose of defrauding his creditors and the bank, changed his account in said bank from the name of Guy O. Shirey to Louise Ball Shirey. But after learning of the acts and dealings of Guy O. Shirey, and that he was insolvent and in imminent danger of insolvency, the bank felt insecure, and, believing its debt was' in jeopardy, and knowing that the funds on deposit in the name of Louise Ball Shirey were the community funds of said husband and wife, it charged the amount of such note and community- debt to said account.

The cause was tried before a jury on special issues, and the jury found in answer to one issue submitted in the main charge that, at the time the defendant bank, through its employees, appropriated $700 in payment of a note executed by Dr. Guy O. Shirey, said $700 so appropriated was the separate property of the plaintiff. The jury further found that it was not the understanding or agreement between the plaintiff and her husband that the money deposited in the defendant bank in the name of the plaintiff should be and remain the community property of plaintiff and her husband. The jury failed to answer issue No. 1,- reguested by defendant, to wit:

“Did the plaintiff, Guy O. Shirey, on or about December 20, 1921, change the deposit in the Guaranty State Bank from that of Guy O. Shirey to that of his wife, Louise Ball Shirey, for the purpose of colluding with her and conspiring with his wife to place his funds and moneys beyond the reach of his creditors and the defendant or either of them?”

Upon the answers of the jury, the trial court entered judgment for plaintiff and against defendant for $700, with, interest at 0 per cent, per annum from February 28, 1922, the date of the alleged appropriation. From this judgment, the defendant has appealed. Dr. Sam C. Ball, the father of plaintiff below, testified that some time in August, 1919, he gave his daughter $2,700 to pay on a home, which she needed and was desirous of purchasing; that the witness lived at New Boston, and his daughter with her husband lived at Fort Worth; that he gave his daughter this money for her sole and separate estate; and that he knew that she used the $2,700 as the first payment on a home.

Mrs. Shirey testified that with the money received from her father she made the first payment on‘a home in Fort Worth; that she lived in this home about two years, and then sold it, moving to the Texas Hotel; that for her equity in the home she got only a Doris automobile, value at $5,000; that previous to the sale of her home a Cadillac car belonging to her husband had been stolen. The Cadillac was insured for $3,000, but the insurance company only paid $2,090 in settlement of the claim, claiming a deterioration in value after the time the car was insured; that at the time of the.sale of the home and the acceptance of the Doris car for her equity, and her agreement to allow her husband to use the car in his practice, her husband promised to pay to her the $2,700 she had invested in the home, and represented by the Doris car, and agreed to deposit to her credit the $2,000 when collected from the insurance company for the Cadillac car.

H. W. Orgain testified that he was the cashier of the defendant bank, and that he knew Dr. Guy O. Shirey; that prior to December 20, 1921, Dr. Shirey was a customer at the defendant bank, and on or about that date the witness had a conversation with Dr. Shirey, in which he said: “Shirey, somebody is going to garnishee your account”; that Dr. Shirey replied: “Well, I guess I will close it and put it in my wife’s account-change it to her name.” He did this at once; that Mrs. Shirey was not present at the time, although she may have been in the bank in the afternoon; (hat her signature was left in the bank for identification later, probably the same day; that on December 20th, when the account was changed from Dr. Shirey's name to his wife’s name, Dr. Shirey made two deposits, one for $108.37, and one for $140; that several deposits were made up to January 23, 1922, when $2,000 was deposited, and that this was a check or voucher from “Hand in Hand,” an insurance company; that subsequent deposits were made up to February 21, 1922, when $S3 was deposited in Dr. Shirey’s handwriting; that all but one of the deposits were made in Dr. Shirey’s handwriting; that, after they had charged the $700 note, executed by Dr. Shir-ey to the bank, to the account kept in the name of Mrs. Shirey, Dr. Shirey came into the bank and wanted to know if we had charged the note to him, and that he was told that the bank had; that he made a remark about it being a funny way to do busi *1111 ness, that they told him that they had charged the note to him because he was leaving Fort Worth; that he said that he was not going to be gone long and would pay the note; that Mr. Rhome, of the bank said, “Well, that’s what we would like for you to do”; that Dr. Shirey then walked out.

As to why the bank did not take the $145 Dr. Shirey had on deposit in his own name at the time he opened up an account in the name of his wife and apply it on the $700 note, the witness said:

“I will state that I don’t think the note was due at that time; this $700 note was his renewal of the other one; I don’t know when the other note was due, but I could look it up; I haven’t my records covering that with me; I couldn’t say whether it was not due until the 1st of March or not, because I haven’t looked it up. The $700 note was due April 1, 1922.”

Mrs. Shirey testified that probably on or about February 2S, 1922, she drew a check for the total amount of her deposit in the defendant bank, for $2,355.76; that after the bank told her that $700 had been charged to hor husband’s account, she checked out the remaining $1,655.76 and demanded the $700 balance, which the bank refused to pay.

We will cite other testimony as may be further necessary' in the course of the opinion.

Appellant’s first assignment of error is as follows:

“The court erred in sustaining the plaintiff’s special exception to that part of paragraph 4 of defendant’s original answer.”

In parenthesis reference is made to paragraph 1, motion for new trial, and there we find the same allegation of error as contained in the assignment. We are not able, from the assignment or that portion of the transcript to which reference was made, to determine the ruling of the court of which appellant complains, and we would be justified in overruling the assignment'for vagueness.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
258 S.W. 1109, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/guaranty-state-bank-v-shirey-texapp-1924.