Hing v. Lee

174 P. 356, 37 Cal. App. 313, 1918 Cal. App. LEXIS 250
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 20, 1918
DocketCiv. No. 1751.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 174 P. 356 (Hing v. Lee) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hing v. Lee, 174 P. 356, 37 Cal. App. 313, 1918 Cal. App. LEXIS 250 (Cal. Ct. App. 1918).

Opinion

BURNETT, J.

On the 1st of April, 1901, the Equitable Life Assurance Society of the United States issued to respondent an endowment policy of life insurance. Thereafter respondent borrowed from said society the sum of one thousand dollars and assigned to appellant the said policy as *314 security for the payment of said indebtedness, the bank undoubtedly acting as agent of the insurer in the matter.

The policy matured on the 1st of April, 1916, and there became due plaintiff the sum of $1,325.94, being the face value of the policy and the surplus reduced by said one thousand dollar loan. The insurer sent to appellant a check for said amount payable to said bank and to plaintiff, which was received by appellant on the 'fourth day of April, 1916. At this time respondent was indebted to appellant in the sum of $431.45, on certain promissory notes, and, also, to one J. H. Simonson upon a promissory note for the sum of $436, which note was held by the bank, as security for the payment of a loan by it to said Simonson. The annual premium on said policy was less than five hundred dollars, and, therefore, “all moneys, benefits, privileges, or immunities accruing or in any -manner growing out of” said policy were exempt from execution. (Code Civ. Proc., sec. 690, subd. 18; Briggs v. McCullough, 36 Cal. 542; Holmes v. Marshall, 145 Cal. 780, [104 Am. St. Rep. 86, 2 Ann. Cas. 88, 60 L. R. A. 67, 79 Pac. 534].)

On receipt of said ¡check the cashier of the bank sent a clerk with the check to plaintiff’s home, a few blocks distant, with a request that plaintiff sign it, which he did. It was understood and agreed between plaintiff and the bank that out of the proceeds of the policy the said indebtedness of respondent to appellant and to said Simonson should be paid. Plaintiff was credited j with these payments on the fifth day of April, and the balabee of said check for $1,325.94, or the sum of $458.49, was deposited in said bank by the cashier to the credit of plaintiff. The next day the sheriff of the county, under and by virtue of an execution issued out of the superior court of said county upon a judgment recovered in said county by one Joe Lee against said plaintiff and others, previous to the sixth day of April, 1916, for a sum in excess of $458.49, levied upon the money of plaintiff in the hands of said bank, and the said bank, through its president and cashier, delivered to said sheriff upon said execution the said sum of $458.49. Plaintiff knew nothing of the levy until some days after the money had been paid over to the sheriff, and, therefore, had no opportunity to claim any exemption from execution. He ¿fterward made a demand upon the bank for the payment of said -amount but it was denied. *315 The court held that the proceeds of the insurance policy constituted a trust fund in the custody of said bank and that appellant was not legally justified in paying it over to the sheriff, without affording the plaintiff an opportunity to make his claim of exemption. The finding as to the trust relation is supported by the testimony of plaintiff. His testimony was given in somewhat broken English, but, after stating that Mr. Hart, the cashier of the bank, called him up by telephone, he proceeded: “He told me, ‘You know the money "came all right’; he told me to sign the name on the check. I say, ‘You leave the money in there and I go up where I get well with my foot, when I go up there. I will pay Mr. Simonson and the balance I leave in the bank to pay the Chinaman. I owe the Chinaman two or three hundred dollars. I borrow money to pay on that life insurance two or three years ago from two Chinamen; he go home now. I no tell Mr. Hart to deposit the money. ’ I said, ‘ The balance you leave. I want to take that money and pay the Chinamen.’ ”

There can be no doubt that the cheek was the property of plaintiff, and that he directed the said officer of the bank to cash it, pay the claim of the bank and of Simonson, and hold the balance until plaintiff could call for it. The situation is covered by the principle announced in section 313, page 634, 7 C. J., as follows: “The deposit of mortgages and other specific instruments for collection or the drawing of a draft on a debtor and giving it with specific instructions to collect and remit is a trust transaction and the money, if collected, is affected with the trust.”

As to this point several instructive cases are cited by respondent, one of which is Hall v. Beymer, 22 Colo. App. 271, [125 Pac. 561], Therein Beymer placed with Rocky Ford Bank a note for collection. The bank sent the note to a Colorado Springs bank, which collected it and remitted the proceeds in the form of a draft. This was received by the Rocky Ford Bank on December 28th, which, on the same day, sent it to a Pueblo bank to the credit of the former. On December 31st the Rocky Ford Bank placed the amount of the collection to Beymer’s credit on its books and the same day said bank ceased to do business. The testimony showed that Beymer was asked by the president of said bank if lie “wanted to put the proceeds in as a deposit” and he *316 replied, “No, I wanted it for myself. I wanted the collection.” The court held that the Rocky Ford Bank was Beymer’s bailee not his debtor.

The facts of.that case present a similar situation to the one herein involved. There seems to be no essential difference. It is true, as the authorities hold, that, in such cases, “the trust relation might be changed by custom or agreement into that of debtor and creditor after the collection of the proceeds,” but it is equally true that “a bank; cannot divest itself of the trust relation and assume the other at its own convenience.” (7 C. J. 634.)

Of course, it is the duty of the trustee to protect and preserve such property for the benefit of the beneficiary. (39 Cyc. 325.) It was a clear violation of this primary obligation for the trustee to pay over the property to the sheriff without making any effort to preserve it for plaintiff. . The bank sustained to respondent a relation of trust and confidence, and it had no right to withhold from the latter information that was essential to the protection of plaintiff’s interests. Indeed, rather than permit the property to be lost to plaintiff without an opportunity to assert his claim of exemption, the bank 'should have informed the sheriff that the money was exempt from execution and would not be paid over until it could be ascertained whether plaintiff desired to waive his privilege. It is manifest, also, that the bank could have lost nothing by pursuing this course. Within a few minutes plaintiff could have been notified, and, unless he claimed his privilege immediately, he would have been justly deemed to have waived' it. The bank was apparently more-anxious to have the judgment creditor satisfied than to exercise the utmost good faith toward plaintiff. Debts should be paid, but public policy recognizes the exemption of certain property belonging to debtors as even more important than the payment of his debts. Otherwise it would not be protected by the law from execution. But of what avail to the debtor is the privilege, if he have no opportunity of exercising it? He is not Required to claim the privilege until an occasion arises wheréby the property is liable to be taken away from him.

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Bluebook (online)
174 P. 356, 37 Cal. App. 313, 1918 Cal. App. LEXIS 250, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hing-v-lee-calctapp-1918.