Home Savings Bank v. Rolando

14 A.2d 822, 65 R.I. 380, 1940 R.I. LEXIS 131
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedJuly 25, 1940
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 14 A.2d 822 (Home Savings Bank v. Rolando) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Home Savings Bank v. Rolando, 14 A.2d 822, 65 R.I. 380, 1940 R.I. LEXIS 131 (R.I. 1940).

Opinion

*382 Moss, J.

This is a,suit in equity in which the complainant, a Massachusetts corporation carrying on a savings bank business in the city of Boston, seeks to obtain, as being its equitable property, a certain savings deposit of $1630, plus some interest, in the bank in the city of Providence owned and operated by the respondent Lincoln Trust Company. This deposit was made and still stands on the books of that trust company in the names of two of the respondents, Linda J. Aymo and Domenico G. Paolino; and it is undisputed that when the deposit was made, the money represented a part of a sum which had previously been paid by the complainant to the respondent Rolando, in his capacity as executor of the will of Francisco Marsicano, late of the city of Providence, deceased.

Out of this deposit, Frank D. McKendall, the only other respondent, claims to be entitled to the sum of $1400, plus interest, as collateral security for the repayment to him, by *383 said Linda J. Aymo and the respondent Rolando of that sum, which he claims to have loaned to her in part and to Rolando in part and which is represented by her promissory note to McKendall for that sum, payable on demand. This claim he bases on a written order by her to the trust company to pay to his order that sum out of the deposit. That order was accomplished by the delivery by her to him of the bankbook evidencing this deposit. He also denies that when he loaned the money and received the security for it, he had any knowledge or notice of the complainant’s claim to the deposit.

The complainant, in its bill of complaint, mainly bases its claim to the disputed fund on the facts, which were clearly . proved and are not now in question, that the money which was paid by it to the defendant Rolando as executor of the will of Francisco Marsicano, and of which the disputed fund represents a part, was paid in the belief that this Marsicano was the owner of a savings bank deposit in its bank in Boston, whereas in fact that deposit, as the complainant learned after it had paid the amount of the deposit to the respondent Rolando, as executor as aforesaid, belonged to another man by the name of Francisco Marsicano; that it demanded of that respondent the repayment of this money so paid, but he refused to repay it or any part of it. It is not in dispute that the deposit did belong to the other Marsicano, to whose account an equal amount was later credited by the complainant.

Neither of the respondents Rolando and Aymo filed any appearance in the cause; and a decree pro confesso was entered against them. The respondent Paolino admitted that he had no interest of any kind in the fund in dispute. The respondent Lincoln Trust Company filed an answer setting forth the facts with regard to the depositing of the fund and disclaiming any interest therein other than its interest in being protected by the court from any liability by virtue of its capacity as holder thereof.

*384 The respondent McKendall, after filing a demurrer, which was overruled, filed an answer asserting that, because of negligence on its part in paying the money to the respondent Rolando, the complainant was not equitably entitled to get any of it back, and setting up his own claim, on the grounds above stated, to most of the fund above described, on deposit in the bank of the Lincoln Trust Company.

The cause was heard on bill, answers and evidence, before a justice of the superior court, who afterwards filed a decision in favor of the complainant, in which he made findings of fact substantially in accordance with the allegations in the bill of complaint and as above stated. In particular he found, expressly or in substance and effect, that the disputed fund was a part of the money which the complainant by mistake had paid to the respondent Rolando; that the depositing of this fund in the trust company’s bank was a part of a fraudulent scheme by him and others to hinder and defraud the complainant; and that the defendant McKendall was the only respondent contesting the claim of the complainant.

He also, in his decision, found in substance and effect that it was one of the provisions of the deposit of this fund in that bank that no payment should be made from the fund, unless the order for such payment was signed by both of the respondents Aymo and Paolino; that this provision was not only in the bank records but was also on the bankbook evidencing the deposit; that although McKendall was informed of this provision, when he received the above-mentioned order, signed by the respondent Aymo alone, he never procured the signature of the respondent Paolino or tried to procure it, and the latter’s consent to the order was never given; and that the respondent McKendall had not proved that he had made loans to the respondents Rolando and Aymo in reliance upon any such order or orders.

*385 Since it is clear that the respondents Aymo and Paolino had no beneficial interest in the fund in dispute, it is necessary for the respondent McKendall, in order to be entitled to a decree awarding a part of the fund to him, to prove affirmatively that he has the legal title thereto as a bona fide purchaser for a valuable consideration. And even if it be conceded that he actually made the above loans in good faith, and in the expectation that he would have a completed and valid order for a payment to him out of the fund, yet the fact remains that he never received such an order, because Paolino never signed one.

Whatever equitable title the complainant had in the fund at the time when McKendall made his first loan, if he made any, was clearly prior to any equitable title which he obtained and, therefore, in order to have the final decree reversed, he must base his attack on it upon the weakness of the complainant’s title to the fund, and not on the strength of his own claim of title thereto.

The trial justice found, in his decision, that the complainant had proved, by a fair preponderance of the evidence, all of the allegations of its bill of complaint, except the allegation that the respondent Rolando had by fraud procured the payment to him by the complainant of the money which it paid him; and he found further that the complainant had made this payment by mistake and without negligence.

Thereafter, in accordance with this decision, a decree was entered in the superior court in favor of the complainant, substantially repeating the findings of fact which were in the decision, and determining that none of the respondents had any interest in the fund of $1630, plus accumulated interest, held by the respondent trust company, and finding this to be in equity the property of the complainant, and ordering that this fund be paid out as directed by the complainant for its benefit, and providing for certain supplemental and incidental relief to the complainant.

*386

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Bluebook (online)
14 A.2d 822, 65 R.I. 380, 1940 R.I. LEXIS 131, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/home-savings-bank-v-rolando-ri-1940.