Morris v. Carroso

11 N.E.2d 816, 292 Ill. App. 620, 1937 Ill. App. LEXIS 449
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedDecember 14, 1937
DocketGen. No. 39,284
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 11 N.E.2d 816 (Morris v. Carroso) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Morris v. Carroso, 11 N.E.2d 816, 292 Ill. App. 620, 1937 Ill. App. LEXIS 449 (Ill. Ct. App. 1937).

Opinion

Mr. Justice John J. Sullivan

delivered the opinion of the court.

On February 20, 1935, a judgment by confession for $4,283 was entered on certain gold bonds in favor of plaintiff, Benjamin B. Morris, and against Vera and G-eorge Carroso. Upon plaintiff’s affidavit garnishee summons was issued and served upon Mercantile Trust and Savings Bank of Chicago, garnishee. In answer to interrogatories filed in the cause the garnishee filed an amended answer April 27, 1936, stating that it had in its possession in a savings account in the name of Vera Carroso $3,999, deposited by her December 6, 1934, that it held $519.98 in a checking account in the name of Vera Carroso, and that it also had in its possession accrued interest amounting to $13.33 on the savings account. Clara Siegel was granted leave to appear and file an intervening petition in which she claimed ownership of the funds held by the garnishee in the name of Vera Carroso. Plaintiff filed ah answer denying the material allegations of the intervening petition. After a hearing judgment for $4,532.31 was entered by the court against the garnishee on its answer for the use of plaintiff. This appeal by the intervening petitioner seeks to reverse that judgment.

The intervening petition filed by Clara Siegel, April 9, 1936, alleged substantially that on November 30, 1934, she delivered to George Carroso a draft for $1,-400 on the Shawmut National Bank of Boston, Mass., and a check for $4,000 drawn by her on the same bank, which- draft and check were indorsed by the said George Carroso and deposited with the Mercantile Trust1 and Savings Bank of Chicago to the account of Vera,'Carroso; .and that at the time said draft and check were delivered by Clara Siegel, it was expressly agreed between her and Vera Carroso “that the moneys so deposited with the Mercantile Trust and Savings Bank, both in connection with the savings account and the checking account ... be held by said Vera Carroso in trust for your petitioner and for no other purpose whatsoever, ’ ’ that said Vera Carroso would “pay your petitioner from the funds so deposited with the Mercantile Trust and Savings Bank, the sum of $125 per month, or such other sums as your petitioner would be in need of from time to time, it being expressly understood that such withdrawals by your petitioner from said deposits with the Mercantile Trust and Savings Bank were to be made exclusively from the checking account, and that the sum of $4,000 deposited in the savings account be kept intact for a period of three years,” and that “the moneys so deposited with the Mercantile Trust and Savings Bank, both in the savings account and the checking account” in the name of Vera Carroso were deposited and held by her in trust for petitioner.

Plaintiff’s answer to the intervening petition averred that “all moneys deposited in the Mercantile Trust and Savings Bank in the name of Vera Carroso is the money of Vera Carroso”; that “any checks or drafts delivered by Clara Siegel to George Carroso was money due to George Carroso”; and that the money deposited by Vera Carroso in said savings and checking accounts was her money and was not held by her in trust for Clara Siegel.

The salient, undisputed facts disclosed by the evidence in the record are that Clara Siegel, the intervening petitioner, lived in Boston, Massachusetts, with her husband and family; that upon the death of her husband in August, 1934, she collected $10,000 life insurance ; that a large part of same was used by her to pay debts; that because many friends who knew she had received the insurance money were importuning her for loans, she decided to conserve most of what she had left by intrusting it to the care of her sister and brother-in-law in Chicago; that during the month of November, 1934, she came to Chicago and brought with her a draft for $1,400 on the Shawmut National Bank of Boston payable to George Carroso, and while here drew a check for $4,000 on the same bank, also payable to George Carroso; that she requested George Carroso “to hold the money for my children and myself,” to be returned to her from time to time as requested; that George Carroso refused to accept the money, stating that it would be better if his wife Vera Carroso, who was Clara Siegel’s older sister, would take charge of the funds for her; and that the draft and check were indorsed by George Carroso and the saving’s account and checking account were opened in the Mercantile Trust and Savings Bank in the name of Vera Carroso, the former by the deposit of the $4,000 check and the latter by the deposit of the $1,400 draft.

The foregoing facts were established by the testimony of Clara Siegel, Vera Carroso and George Carroso, and by the draft for $1,400 and the check for $4,-000 with the indorsements thereon, which were introduced in evidence. The checks drawn on the checking account by Vera Carroso were also presented in evidence. These checks were all drawn in favor of Clara Siegel except one and that was paid at her request to a Chicago merchant for a fur coat shipped to the intervening petitioner in Boston. The checks representing the withdrawals from the checking account for the benefit of Clara Siegel reduced the amount remaining on deposit therein to $519.98, while the savings account remained intact, the balance in same of $4,012.33 representing the original deposit and a small amount of accrued interest. It was these funds that the garnishee answered that it had in its possession.

No evidence was offered by plaintiff.

It is difficult to understand in the face of the uncontroverted facts upon what theory the trial court entered the judgment against the garnishee which appropriated money shown to belong to the intervening petitioner to the payment of a judgment against George and Vera Carroso.

It was conclusively established not only by the testimony of the witnesses but by the draft and check in evidence that the money deposited in the garnishee bank for which it accounted in its answer was the money of the intervening petitioner, brought by her from Boston for the purpose of intrusting it to the care of her sister or brother-in-law or both, and it was just as conclusively established by the testimony of the witnesses and the checks in evidence, which were drawn against the checking account in the garnishee bank by Vera Carroso for the sole benefit of Clara Siegel, that the former was merely the trustee of the funds deposited in said garnishee bank and that such funds constituted a trust fund of which the intervening petitioner was the sole beneficiary.

A judgment creditor has no greater right to the property in the hands of the garnishee than has the judgment debtor and it is only the judgment debtor’s property and credits which can be reached by process of garnishment, not the property and credits which he has in trust for others. (Hair v. North Western Nat. Bank, 50 Ill. App. 211; Dandridge v. Northern Trust Co., 218 Ill. App. 138.) The money in the accounts in the garnishee bank in the name of Vera Carroso, one of the original judgment debtors, was not subject to garnishment for the payment of the obligations of the said Vera Carroso since it was clearly shown to be the money of the intervening petitioner and held in trust for her by her sister.

To reach the conclusion it did, the trial court must have rejected the evidence offered by the intervening petitioner in its entirety.

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Bluebook (online)
11 N.E.2d 816, 292 Ill. App. 620, 1937 Ill. App. LEXIS 449, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/morris-v-carroso-illappct-1937.