Powell v. Third National Bank & Trust Co.

19 A.2d 741, 144 Pa. Super. 480, 1941 Pa. Super. LEXIS 150
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMarch 6, 1941
DocketAppeal, 37
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 19 A.2d 741 (Powell v. Third National Bank & Trust Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Powell v. Third National Bank & Trust Co., 19 A.2d 741, 144 Pa. Super. 480, 1941 Pa. Super. LEXIS 150 (Pa. Ct. App. 1941).

Opinion

Opinion by

Keller, P. J.,

This was an action of assumpsit brought by “James J. Powell and T. A. Donahoe, Trustees” against Third National Bank and Trust Company of Scranton, Pa., to recover $2041.71, alleged to be on deposit to their credit in the defendant bank, but which it refused to pay on their order. The bank’s defense was that it had applied $2015.27 of said amount to the payment of a demand note for $1900 held by it, signed by M. J. Dempsey, as a joint and several maker with W. W. Walsh and Keystone Brewing Company, DempSey and Walsh being the president and secretary respectively of said Brewing Company and virtually in control of it; the said money so deposited by said plaintiffs as trustees being the money of said M. J. Dempsey and subject to appropriation by the bank to his debt to it. The plaintiffs replied that the said M. J. Dempsey had assigned his interest in said deposit to his wife, Anna G. Dempsey.

By agreement, trial by jury was waived under the *482 Act of 1874, P. L. 109, and the case was submitted to the decision of President Judge Leach. Judge Leach duly filed his decision, stating his findings of fact and conclusions of law and holding that plaintiffs were entitled to judgment for $26.44; and after disposing of exceptions filed by the plaintiffs he entered judgment in their favor for that amount. Plaintiffs appealed. The judgment will be affirmed.

No specific exceptions were filed in the court below to the findings of fact of the trial judge; nor were any specifications of error assigned to such findings of fact in this court. Appellants contented themselves by filing exceptions to the refusal of the trial judge to find certain facts as requested by them, which we agree were properly refused by him.

We have carefully read the evidence and in our opinion it supports the findings of fact of the trial judge, which were as follows:

“1. The plaintiffs deposited a fund of twenty-five thousand dollars ($25,000) in their name as trustees.
“2. The said fund arose through various transactions in the sale of a property known as the Keystone Brewing Company.
“3. Ten thousand dollars ($10,000) of the fund was to be used towards reconditioning the plant, and fifteen thousand dollars ($15,000) was to be held for M. J. Dempsey.
“4. During the operations of the Keystone Brewing Company an indebtedness of nineteen hundred dollars ($1900) arose on a note to the defendant bank.
“5. During the course of the procedure which resulted in obtaining the trust fund, the bank was in position to enforce its lien but was persuaded to accept in lieu of the legal proceedings a note signed by the said M. J. Dempsey and W. W. Walsh.
“6. After the said trust fund became deposited in the bank, the said M. J. Dempsey assigned his right in the said fund to his wife.
*483 “7. When the defendant charged the note against the trust fund .which had been the property of M. J. Dempsey, trustees refused to accept the charge and instituted this suit.
“8. There is no evidence that the feaid Anna G. Dempsey, wife of M. J. Dempsey, ever paid any sum of money for the said assignment, or that she had any funds that she did not derive from her husband, M. J. Dempsey.
“9. The said M. J. Dempsey admitted his insolvency at the time of the transaction except for the funds in the hands of the trustees.”

We are also of opinion that these findings support and sustain the conclusions of law and judgment of the court.

The agreement under which $25,000 was paid to plaintiffs as trustees, in the settlement of the sale of the brewing company’s property, was signed by M. J. Dempsey and L. G. Smith Co., Inc., — the purchaser of the property — and provided, inter alia, that Dempsey was to direct and bring about the conveyance of an undivided one-half interest in the brewing company property, and Smith, Inc. agreed to purchase the same. As a part consideration of said purchase, Smith, Inc. was to pay Dempsey $5000 cash, receipt of which was acknowledged, and $15,000 additional was to be paid him within ten days from the approval of a proposed bond issue covering the plant, (of which $25,000 in bonds were to be given Dempsey), in manner following: The conveyance of Dempsey’s undivided half interest was to be made for the purpose of the contract by T. A. Dona-hoe, Attorney, and the $15,000, plus $10,000 which might be used by Smith, Inc. for the improvement of the plant, was to be deposited by Smith, Inc. in the defendant bank in the name of James J. Powell and T. A. Donahoe, in escrow for the fulfillment of the contract; $15,000 was to be deposited at once, of which $10,000 might be used by Smith, Inc. for the improvement of the plant, equip *484 ment, etc.; “the balance of said escrow fund intact at the time of the approval of the papers may be paid to the said M. J. Dempsey as part of the $15,000 payment, and the said L. G-. Smith Co., Inc. agrees to pay the balance necessary to complete the $15,000 payment,” which it did by depositing the remaining $10,000 in the defendant bank on June 4, 1936 in the name of the plaintiffs as trustees.

It thus clearly appears that M. J. Dempsey was the owner of, and had the sole beneficial interest in $15,000 of the fund deposited to the credit of the plaintiffs in the defendant bank pursuant to said agreement, to be paid him at the approval of the papers. Whatever may have been the purpose for the circuity of action adopted, once the deposit was made in the defendant bank of Dempsey’s money, the bank was entitled to defalcate and set off 1 against it his demand pote for $1900 that it held against him, which with interest then due amounted to $2015.27.

We do not deem it necessary to quote at length from the discussion of the learned trial judge leading up to his first and principal conclusion of law: “In a contest between the wife and her husband’s Creditors a voluntary conveyance is presumed to be fraudulent and the burden of proof is upon the wife to show by clear and satisfactory proof that the conveyance is fair and that the husband’s liabilities were not out of proportion to his then remaining assets”; nor to incorporate herein the opinion of the court below dismissing the plaintiffs’ exceptions and entering judgment on the findings and decision. They fully sustain the judgment appealed from, and may be referred to if deemed advisable. The position of the court below was that the burden rested on the plaintiffs of proving by clear and satisfactory *485 evidence that the voluntary assignment or conveyance by Dempsey to his wife of the proceeds of sale of his property was fair and not fraudulent as respects his creditors, and that this burden had not been met; and that no sufficient proof of the wife’s ownership of the interest in the property conveyed by him, free of attack by his creditors, had been established.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

In Re Cabrillo
101 B.R. 443 (E.D. Pennsylvania, 1989)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
19 A.2d 741, 144 Pa. Super. 480, 1941 Pa. Super. LEXIS 150, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/powell-v-third-national-bank-trust-co-pasuperct-1941.