M'Cain v. Hill

3 Shan. Cas. 654
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 15, 1875
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 3 Shan. Cas. 654 (M'Cain v. Hill) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
M'Cain v. Hill, 3 Shan. Cas. 654 (Tenn. 1875).

Opinions

Nicholson, C. J.,

delivered’the opinion of the court:

On the 6th of January, 1868, J. H. McCain deposited in the Gayoso Savings Bank $1,851.04-, to the credit of J. H. & E. J. McCain, the latter being tire wife of the former. On the 11th of January, 1868, J. Ii. McCain checked out $50.00, leaving in bank to his credit -and that of his wife $1,801.04.

On the 16th of January, 1868, Hill, Cossitt & Talmage, creditors of J. TI. McCain, sued out an attachment in the law court of Memphis against him as ¡a nonresident of Tennessee, and procured a garnishment to be served on the Gayoso Savings Bank, whereby all the credits and effects of J. H. McCain in that bank were attached in the bank as garnishee. Under this garnishment the money deposited in the name of J. TI. & E. J. McCain remained in the bank until the 5th of February, 1868, when the bank failed and the deposit became worthless. When the attachment was served the bank officer made an entry on tbe books, “No more checks to be paid.”

On tbe ,12th of January, 1869, E. J. McCain, by ber next friend, J. TI. McCain, filed ber bill in the chancery court at Memphis, to make Hill, Cossitt & Talmage liable for the loss of the deposit aforesaid, upon the ground that the money belonged to her, and not to J. TI. McCain; and that it was lost- in consequence of its being illegally attached, and thereby detained in the bank by tbe procurement of TIill, Cossitt & Talmage until it was finally lost by tbe failure of tbe bank. She alleges that before defendants attached the money they knew it was the property of complainant, and if they did not then know it, they were [657]*657afterwards so informed, but persisted in claiming tbe right to appropriate it as the property of J. H. McCain.

Defendants seek to avoid responsibility by denying that they knew the deposit in question belonged to complainant, and insisting that they only sought to attach whatever credits or effects J. H. McCain had in the bank; without procuring this specific deposit to be attached, and insisting, also, that when this deposit was attached as the property of J. H. McCain, the responsibility devolved upon the bank, as garnishee, to decide the ownership of the money, and that as the bank continued to hold it until its failure, without deciding its ownership, the bank alone, was responsible, and not defendants.

It is true that the garnishment process sought in general terms to reach whatever credits or effects J. H. McCain had in the bank, but it is equally truq that J. H. McCain had no other deposit in the bank, and that the proceeding was instituted and prosecuted to reach the deposit in the name of J. II. & E. J. McCain, under the assumption that it belonged to J. II. McCain, and the object of the garnishment was to test the ownership of this deposit. On this question the answer is evasive, although the bill charges that the garnishment was instituted to reach this specific deposit; but the proof is satisfactory that this deposit was attached in the hands of the bank, that it was attached as the property of J. II. McCain, and that in so attaching it the sheriff acted under the direction of defendants.

It is clear, therefore, that if the deposit belonged to E. J. McCain, its attachment as the property of J. II. McCain was illegal, and being attached at the instance of defendants, they are equally responsible with the sheriff for the conversion by means of a misapplication of legal process. 1 Chitty Pl., 185; Wilkins v. Gilmore, 2 Hum., 140; Stiles v. Davis, 1 Black, 101.

It is no answer that the sheriff’s return shows only that he attached all the effects of I. H. McCain in the hands of [658]*658tbe bank. Tbe proof shows only that be attached all tbe effects of J. H. McCain, or that bis return was false, and that in so doing be was controlled by tbe directions of Hill, Cossitt & Talmage.

Tbe trespass ivas in tbe misapplication of tbe process, and this misapplication cannot be evaded by a false or equivocal and ambiguous return. His return is conclusive only as between the parties and privies to tbe suit, but merely prima facie as to all others (Hillard on Remedies for Torts, 393), and in equity may be shown to be false. Ridgeway v. Bank of Tennessee, 13 Hum., 523.

This raises a question as to tbe ownership of tbe deposit. Without looking to tbe deposition of J. H. McCain, tbe husband of complainant, who was incompetent h> testify, we think tbe evidence of josiah Slack shows a prima facie case of ownership of $1,500 of tbe deposit. Slack’s wife bought land in Mississippi, which E. J. McCain claimed, and paid her $1,500 thereon, which he saw J. IT. McCain deposit in tbe bank in the name of J. H. & E. J. McCain. His understanding from the parties was that J. H. McCain had tbe money as agent of E. J. McCain, and it was to go towards paying for the homestead on which they, then lived, and tbe manner of making the deposit shows that he was not depositing the money exclusively on his own account. As this money was. the proceeds of land claimed by E. J. McCain, and was in possession of J. H. McCain as her agent, the presumption is that she was the owner of the money, and it devolved upon defendants to rebut this presumption, by showing that the land belonged to J. IT. McClain, and not to his wife. No such proof is made or attempted, and we are authorized to conclude, that $1,500 of the money deposited belonged to E. J. McCain.

As to the balance of the deposit of $301, there is no 'evidence showing that it was the property of E. J. McCain, except that of J. H. McCain, which is incompetent, and the fact that the deposit is in the name of J". IT. &• E. J. [659]*659McCain, although complainant alleges (and the fact is-probably so) that it was her money. We must conclude therefore that of the deposit $1,500 belonged to> E. J".. McCain and $301 to J. H. McCain, not as partners, but as joint owners or tenants in common of the deposit.

As J. EL & E. J. McCain did not own the deposit as partners, it was competent for Hill, Cossitt & Talmage, as creditors of J. EL McCain, to subject his share of the deposit by attachment and garnishment of the bank. Drake on Attachments, sec. 572, citing Theuenlike v. DeWolf, 9 Pick., 120. See Waddell v. Cook, 2 Hill (N. Y.), 47.

But instead of seeking satisfaction of this debt against E. El. McCain, by attaching only his share of the deposit, they attached the whole deposit as the property of J. El. McCain, denying the right of E. J. McCain to any part thereof, and insisting’ that J.. H. McCain was the sole owner, although the deposit was in their joint names.

In his testimony, General Chalmers, after stating the unsuccessful efforts made by him as solicitor of E. J. McCain to have the deposit released from the attachment, says: “Soon after the bank failed, I then called bn J. M. Elill, one of the plaintiffs, and told him that the money he had stopped in the Gayoso Bank belonged to Mrs. E. J. McCain, but that if he would give her up the judgment plaintiffs held against her husband (for about $1,400), she would not sue them for the loss of the money. Mr. Elill refused, and said that he was requested to attach the money by Mr. Burford, who was security for McCain, and that Burford was responsible to him; that Burford told him if he did not attach the money, and test the right -of Mr. McCain to it, he would claim a release as McCain’s security.” This evidence shows conclusively that when ETUI, Cossitt

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Bluebook (online)
3 Shan. Cas. 654, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcain-v-hill-tenn-1875.