New England Acceptance Corp. v. Nichols

8 A.2d 665, 110 Vt. 478, 1939 Vt. LEXIS 168
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedOctober 3, 1939
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 8 A.2d 665 (New England Acceptance Corp. v. Nichols) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
New England Acceptance Corp. v. Nichols, 8 A.2d 665, 110 Vt. 478, 1939 Vt. LEXIS 168 (Vt. 1939).

Opinion

Jeffords, J.

In October, 1935, the plaintiff, a New Hampshire corporation, and defendant entered into an agreement by the terms of which the plaintiff was to finance loans placed by the defendant. The defendant was to investigate the borrowers, 'make out the necessary papers including the notes and mortgages securing the loans, attend to collections, report weekly on same, and remit weekly such collections as he had received less his commission which was agreed to be 5%. The defendant at the time this agreement was made was operating a finance business in Rutland under the name of the Eastern Finance Company. The defendant was to pay all the ordinary operating expense of the Rutland office. The checks were drawn by the plaintiff to the order of the borrowers and sent to the defendant to be delivered by him to them. The notes and mortgages were made out to the Eastern Finance Company and by it endorsed and turned over to the plaintiff.

In February, 1936, the defendant and others formed a corporation, Eastern Finance Company, Inc., hereinafter called the corporation, of which defendant was elected treasurer and continued as such during all times here material. This corporation took over the business of the Eastern Finance Company and *483 the plaintiff continued to do business with the corporation under the same arrangement as with Nichols.

It would seem from the transcript that some short time prior to April, 1937, the plaintiff became licensed to do business in Vermont. It then wrote the defendant that in the matter of financing insurance premiums it would do business in its own name and that all money collected on same should go into a separate account but that the arrangement previously entered into as far as collateral loans were concerned would not be disturbed.

The plaintiff and defendant and later the corporation each kept a set of cards showing the status of the various loans as regards the amounts due from the borrowers, etc. Discrepancies began to appear between the amounts shown due on the cards of the plaintiff and on those of the corporation. Some remittances were made late and some checks were received by the plaintiff from the corporation which were protested when presented for payment.

In April, 1937, the plaintiff received a check which was protested and Newcombe, treasurer of the plaintiff, wrote defendant concerning it. Nichols came to the home office of plaintiff and there told Newcombe that he wouldn’t be able to make the check good for a few days because he was short of funds. He also said that some of the records were not in balance because he had not remitted the money which he had collected. He said he did not know how much the difference was and that he had used it for business and living expenses and anything that might come up. This was the first time that the plaintiff knew that money collected had not been remitted but used for some other purpose.

Later in the same month a check up was made in Rutland between the cards of plaintiff and the corporation showing $2,731.76 collected and not remitted, all from the collateral loan account. This difference was agreed to by the plaintiff through its treasurer and by the corporation through its treasurer, the defendant. It was also agreed that from this amount there were certain credits to be applied as commissions to the corporation and the accounting date was set as of April 19, 1937.

The plaintiff brought this action of tort alleging in its complaint the arrangement it had with the defendant and later with the corporation substantially as hereinbefore set forth. It also *484 alleged that the money collected was the money of the plaintiff and that the only interest Nichols or the corporation had was a commission.

The two final allegations were as follows:

“That it was at all times the duty of said defendant, Lee Page Nichols, while doing business as Eastern Finance Company and while acting as agent and collecting monies for the Eastern Finance Company, Inc. on notes re-financed by the New England Acceptance Corporation to turn over to the plaintiff all sums of money collected after deduction of commissions.
‘ ‘ That nevertheless the defendant, Lee Page Nichols, violated his- said duty in that he did wilfully and fraudulently convert to his own use the sum of $2,455.76, which said money he held in trust for said plaintiff; and though often requested by the plaintiff to deliver said sum so owing, has refused and neglected so to do.”

At the close of the plaintiff’s case the defendant’s motion for a directed verdict was granted. The case comes here on exceptions of the plaintiff to the granting of this motion.

There were several grounds to the motion but they may be properly grouped under two heads and have been so treated by both parties in their briefs. The first was in effect that the complaint only set forth a contract action and inasmuch as the writ issued as a capias with the arrest of the body of the defendant thereon the court had no jurisdiction of the person of the defendant. The second ground in effect was that the evidence failed to show a conversion of the money by the defendant as the evidence disclosed that the money when collected was held by the corporation only under a contractual obligation to remit to the plaintiff a certain portion of the same.

Passing over the question of whether the first ground was properly one for a motion for a directed verdict, inasmuch as it raises a jurisdictional question, we will consider it, for if the complaint was, in fact, in contract, the writ having issued as a capias with the arrest of the defendant thereon, the court was without jurisdiction of the process. Howard v. Chapman, 101 Vt. 152, 141 Atl. 686; Roy v. Phelps, 83 Vt. 174, 75 Atl. 13.

The defendant argues that the allegations in the complaint merely set forth an action in contract. That if the plaintiff had any right to arrest the defendant on the writ in this case, such *485 right, because of the Provisions of P. L. see. 2170 prohibiting the arrest of a person on mesne process issuing on a contract, could only be exercised under P. L. sec. 2178. This latter section provides in substance that when a plaintiff files with the magistrate issuing the writ in the case an affidavit stating that the defendant is the receiver of money of the plaintiff in a fiduciary capacity, which he has not paid on demand, and that the action is instituted to recover the same, the writ may issue against and be served upon the body of the defendant. The defendant claims that the allegations in the complaint only go to the length of showing money held by the deféndant under a contract and in such fiduciary capacity, and as no such required affidavit was filed the process was void.

But the allegations go beyond the scope claimed by the defendant. Taken as a whole they plainly charge the defendant with collecting money belonging to the plaintiff which when collected the defendant held in trust for the plaintiff with the duty of turning over the same to it.' That in violation of this duty the defendant fraudulently converted said trust funds to his own use.

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Bluebook (online)
8 A.2d 665, 110 Vt. 478, 1939 Vt. LEXIS 168, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/new-england-acceptance-corp-v-nichols-vt-1939.