Pennsylvania Railroad v. Stevenson

54 A. 696, 63 N.J. Eq. 634, 18 Dickinson 634, 1902 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 80
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedJuly 29, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 54 A. 696 (Pennsylvania Railroad v. Stevenson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Court of Chancery primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pennsylvania Railroad v. Stevenson, 54 A. 696, 63 N.J. Eq. 634, 18 Dickinson 634, 1902 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 80 (N.J. Ct. App. 1902).

Opinion

Grey, Y. 0.

(orally).

Tbe bill of complaint is filed to obtain a decree that tbe defendants may interplead respecting their conflicting claims upon a fund which the complainant bolds, but in which it has no interest.

The fund in question is a balance of money deposited with the complainant company’s "Employes’ Saving Fund” by Walter Earl, Jr., who died in February, 1901, testate. The defendant Stevenson is the executor of his will. The defendant Mrs. Ellen Y. Earl is his widow. Each defendant claims to be the owner of the balance of the fund in the hands of the complainant company. The latter is a mere "custodian, indifferent between the claimants, and, by this suit, brings the money and the claimants into court, asking that they interplead.

The counsel for the defendant Stevenson, executor of Earl, [636]*636while insisting on his right to the fund, admits that the complainant company has a status to ask for an interpleader decree.

The counsel for the defendant Mrs. Earl resists the complainant’s claim to an-interpleader, insisting that, on the face of the transaction, as exhibited by the pleadings, the complainant, by its own acknowledgment, is bound to pay the fund to Mrs. Earl; that there is no possible question of her right on which the complainant can ask the protection of this court, and that its bill should be dismissed.

The undisputed facts exhibited are these: The decedent, Earl, was -an engineer in the complainant company’s employ. The complainant inaugurated a saving fund depositary, whereby its employes might, subject to certain regulations, deposit moneys with the Pennsylvania Railroad Employes’ Saving Fund, and receive a book in which the deposits were entered. By the regulations, withdrawals might be made, in a prescribed mode, by the depositor, the book being balanced with each withdrawal, so that it always showed the residue on deposit. Earl became a depositor by signing and delivering to the complainant company an application in these words:

“The Pennsylvania Railroad Employes’ Saving Fund Depositary, at Camden, N. J. Station............March 16th, 1888.
“To the Superintendent of the Pennsylvania Railroad Employes’ Saving Fund:
“I, Walter Earl, Jr., of 204 York St., Camden, N. J., county of Camden, State of N. J., at present employed as...................Engineman on .........................Division or Dept., C. & A. Railroad, hereby express my desire to avail myself of the Pennsylvania Railroad Employes’ Saving Fund, upon the' terms and conditions set forth in its Regulations, as printed in the regular deposit book of the Fund.
“I agree that in the event of my death all deposits standing to my credit in said Saving Fund and all interest due thereon, shall be paid to my wife who resides at 204 York St., Camden, county of Camden, in the State of N. J., or, it not living, to my legal representatives.
“Walter Earl, Jr.
“Witness:
“J. W. Callaiian,
“Agent, Camden.”

He received a book, which contained the printed regulations' referred to in his application. At the end of these regulations, in the deposit-book, Earl signed this additional agreement:

[637]*637“Camden, N. J., Station. ' March 20th, 188S.
“I, Walter Earl, Jr., of Camden, county of Camden, State of N. J., at present employed as Engineman, C. & A. Division, Penna. Railroad, having made application to become a depositor in The Pennsylvania Railroad Employes’ Saving Eund, do hereby agree to be bound by the foregoing regulations, which I have read, or have had read to me.
“Walter Earl, Jr.
“Witness:
“J. W. Callahan, ■
“Agent at Camden, N. J.”

The first book was “No. E. 28,” and was continued over into a second one, “No. E. 215.” The first entry, in .the latter book being “189?, Jany. 1. Balance from book No. E. 28, $201.61.” The balance in hand in the later book, at the date of the last item, is $1,5?8.08. This sum, amounting with interest thereon to $1,600.3?, is the fund presently in dispute, which, the complainant holds and fears to pay to either claimant.

Neither party defendant challenges the complainant’s good faith and impartiality in its attitude of a stakeholder. Each party defendant claims a right to be paid the whole of the fund— Mrs. Earl by the effect of Mr. Earl’s deposit of the fund for her benefit, and Mr. Stevenson by bequest under Mr. Earl’s will, which he claims destroys any right Mrs. Earl might have had. The complainant'stands ready to pay the fund to either, but cannot justly be required to pay it twice, and invokes the aid of this court to protect it from two hostile suits, in separate rights, to recover one fund.

The complainant, under such conditions, has an equity that it shall not be sued twice when it can have but one liability.

The counsel for the defendant Mrs. Earl advances, as his one objection to the protection of the complainant, the argument that the complainant’s" receipt of the money, accompanied by instructions to pay it to Mrs. Earl in case of Mr. Earl’s death, makes the complainant’s course so plain that it would be entirely safe in paying the fund to Mrs. Earl. But if it be admitted that Mrs. Earl probably has the better claim, and that she may ultimately show it, this does not relieve the complainant from its embarrassment meanwhile. The claim of Mr. Stevenson, as executor of Mr. Earl’s will, that the will has de[638]*638stroyéd the deposit agreement, is admitted to be advanced and maintained in good faith. It will not be settled by any payment of the fund to Mrs. Earl. If that were done, the complainant would be certainly left to stand the expense of defending a suit brought by Mr. Stevenson, about a matter in which the complainant admittedly has no interest, with quite a possibility that a novel question may be decided against justifiability of its payment of the fund to Mrs. Earl. In which case the complainant would be obliged to pay the money over again to Mr. Stevenson as executor.

The complainant has no duty to decide between the respective contentions of these claimants upon the fund in its hands. It is entitled to be protected from both.

I will advise a decree that the complaint be dismissed, with its costs, and a fee allowed, according to the statute, upon depositing the fund in court.

The vice-chancellor then heard testimony as to the respective claims of the defendants upon the fund.

It was proven, on the part of Mrs. Earl, that Mr. Earl, in his lifetime, had delivered both the deposit-books to Mrs. Earl, telling her that here was the money, and that if he died it should go to her, and she could get it in ten days, by giving notice to the company. Both books contained agreements, signed by Mr. Earl, to the effect that the deposits made were subject to the printed regulations. The balance on the first deposit-book was carried over into the second one, and the first book was delivered up to the complainant company. Mrs. Earl retained possession of the second book until after Mr. EarPs death, and then gave it to the executor, Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
54 A. 696, 63 N.J. Eq. 634, 18 Dickinson 634, 1902 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 80, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pennsylvania-railroad-v-stevenson-njch-1902.