Hilke v. Bank of Washington
This text of 251 S.W.2d 963 (Hilke v. Bank of Washington) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
HILKE et ux.
v.
BANK OF WASHINGTON.
St. Louis Court of Appeals, Missouri.
Leo A. Politte, Theodore P. Hukriede, Washington, Frank W. Jenny, Union, for appellant.
George B. Calvin, Washington, Wm. Waye, Jr., St. Charles, Robert N. Jones, St. Louis, for respondents.
WOLFE, Commissioner.
In this action Hilke and his wife alleged that they were partners doing business under the name of Hilke Painting and Decorating Company. They alleged that they had a checking account at the Bank of Washington, which was carried on the bank records under the name of Hilke Painting and Decorating Company and either of the plaintiffs had a right to draw checks upon the account. There were some judgments against Hilke and several of the judgment creditors had garnishments in aid of execution *964 issued and the bank was served as garnishee. After the bank was served with a summons to garnishee on each of five judgments against Edward J. Hilke, it turned over to the sheriff the sum of $1916.93 and debited the account of Hilke Painting and Decorating Company for that amount. The plaintiffs sought recovery of the $1916.93 so deducted from the account by the bank. Upon the close of all the evidence the court directed a verdict for the plaintiffs in the sum sued for and from the judgment entered the defendant prosecutes this appeal.
Certain of the facts are without dispute. The records of the bank disclosed that it had an account which it carried on its books as "Hilke Painting and Decorating Co." Below this were written the words "Edward J. or Helena Hilke". There was deposited to the account a total of $9913.68 and withdrawals were made by the plaintiffs in the total sum of $7,996.74.
On November 29, 1948, the bank was served with a summons to garnishee which attached in its hands any money of Edward J. Hilke or a sufficient sum to satisfy a judgment for $520.37 in favor of Graybar Electric Company. This required the garnishee to appear on the 24th day of January, 1949, to answer any interrogatories that might be filed. Two days later, on December 1, four other garnishments wherein Hilke was the judgment debtor were served on the bank. The date for answer to these summonses was some time in January or February, 1949. When the last four were served, the sheriff was given a cashier's check for $1916.93, which was the total amount of all judgments on which the five garnishments had been run. Two debit entries were made against the account of "Hilke Painting and Decorating Co.", totaling the amount of the cashier's check. After this payment was made the bank notified Hilke.
Plaintiff Edward J. Hilke testified that he had been a resident of Washington, Missouri, for about fifteen years and was engaged prior to 1948 in the electrical appliance business with a partner named Triplett. They also did some painting. In March of 1948, that partnership was dissolved and there were a number of judgments against Hilke and Triplett. After the dissolution mentioned Hilke said that he went into partnership with his wife under the name of Hilke Painting and Decorating Company. He bought painting equipment with funds from the account of Hilke Painting and Decorating Company which he opened. He had no place of business but operated from his home and he said that his wife kept the books of the partnership.
On cross-examination it was shown that a number of checks that had been deposited to the account were payable to Edward J. Hilke and bore his endorsement. He stated that they represented money due the partnership and were for that reason deposited in the partnership account.
The assistant cashier of the bank testified that he had a conversation with Hilke concerning the opening of the account in question. He related that Hilke came to the bank and said that he wanted some checks printed and asked the cashier to order some for him with the name of Hilke Painting and Decorating Company printed on them. He said, according to the cashier, that he wanted to open an account in that name and that he would sign checks on it, but requested that it be arranged so that his wife could sign checks when he was out of town.
The president of the bank testified that when the first summons to garnishee was served on the bank he directed that the account be debited for the amount of the judgment. When the others were served, he added up the amounts of the judgments and ordered another debit entered for the total of the four. It was then that he gave the sheriff a check for the combined total. He said that he considered the account that of Edward J. Hilke alone and that the words "Edward J. or Helena Hilke" following the name of Hilke Painting and Decorating Company upon the books of the bank were there to indicate that checks signed by either were to be honored. He did not know Mrs. Hilke and all of the business he had done had been with her husband. It was upon this evidence that the court sustained plaintiffs' *965 motion for a directed verdict which was followed by the resulting judgment and appeal.
The point before us, of course, is the question of whether or not the court erred in directing a verdict for the plaintiffs.
The petition alleges that plaintiffs were partners in the business known as the Hilke Painting and Decorating Company. The answer of the defendant avers that Hilke opened the account in question and that the partnership was a fictitious arrangement devised for the purpose of defrauding the creditors of Hilke. The court below held, and the respondents here urge, that the alleged partnership was not sufficiently denied by the defendant's answer to put in question its existence, and it was therefore not an issue in the case. We are cited to Section 509.150 RSMo 1949, V.A.M.S., which provides:
"When parties sue or are sued as a partnership, and the names of the partners are set forth in the petition or counterclaim, the existence of the partnership shall be deemed confessed unless it be denied by specific negative averment, which shall include such supporting particulars as are peculiarly within the pleader's knowledge."
It is obvious that an answer seeking to deny the existence of a partnership properly alleged in the petition must do more than generally deny the alleged partnership, under the above statute. Dimick v. Noonan, Mo.App., 242 S.W.2d 599; Marquis v. Pettyjohn, Mo.App., 212 S.W. 2d 100. However, here the answer asserted that the alleged partnership was nothing more than a fictitious arrangement entered into by Hilke to avoid payment of numerous judgments against him. This means that the partnership is false and pretended, and that is a specific denial of its existence. The particular averments relating to Hilke's debts and the reason for the alleged pretense coupled with the statements that the partnership is fictitious adequately comply with the statutory requirements, and it follows that the court erred in holding that the partnership was admitted by answer.
The next question for consideration is the relationship between the bank and the plaintiffs. Regardless of whether or not the account debited was an individual or partnership account the relation between the bank and the depositor, whoever it may have been, was that of debtor and creditor. This is ordinarily true where, as here, the deposit is made to the general credit of the depositor. 9 C.J.S., Banks and Banking, § 273, page 556; American Sash & Door Co. v. Commerce Trust Co., 332 Mo.
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251 S.W.2d 963, 1952 Mo. App. LEXIS 359, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hilke-v-bank-of-washington-moctapp-1952.