Roberts v. First National Bank

6 S.E.2d 88, 61 Ga. App. 284, 1939 Ga. App. LEXIS 279
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedNovember 8, 1939
Docket27760.
StatusPublished

This text of 6 S.E.2d 88 (Roberts v. First National Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Roberts v. First National Bank, 6 S.E.2d 88, 61 Ga. App. 284, 1939 Ga. App. LEXIS 279 (Ga. Ct. App. 1939).

Opinions

Sutton, J.

The sole question involved in the present case is whether or not, under the agreed statement of facts, a set-off was permissible, and whether or not the court erred in directing a verdict for the defendants.

In October, 1907, Roberts & Maxwell, a partnership composed of W. W. Roberts and H. R. Maxwell, had a deposit in the Bank of Cartersville, Cartersville, Georgia, in the sum of $744.60, representing three separate prior deposits from an undisclosed source. Maxwell was also a member of another partnership, Maxwell Brothers, and it was agreed between the members thereof that such partnership should be entitled to the profits and income from any other business received by any member of the partnership of Maxwell Brothers. II. R. Maxwell died on August 27, 1924, and W. W. Roberts died on April 27, 1927, both dying without having distributed or in any way interfered with the fund credited in the' name of Roberts & Maxwell. In 1929 the Bank of Cartersville was consolidated with the First National Bank of Cartersville. At the time of the death of Roberts the Bank of Cartersville, the predecessor bank, held a judgment fi. fa. against Roberts individually, issued on July 2, 1920, basejl on a judgment obtained in the city court of Cartersville for the principal sum of $392.16, with interest to date of judgment, $188.62, and bearing interest from the date of judgment at the rate of 8% per annum, together with costs of court. This judgment had been kept In life, and was an outstanding obligation against Roberts at the time of .his death in 1927. In May, 1936, the estate of Maxwell Brothers was being wound up by Mrs. Alma Maxwell and Murray Upshaw, as receivers, and on May 7, 1936, the First National Bank paid to said receivers the sum of $372.30, representing one half of the deposit admitted to be due H. R. Maxwell. An entry was then made on the journal of the bank, applying the other half of the deposit, $372.30, against the amount of the fi. fa. held by the bank.

On May 28, 1936, a year’s support was regularly set aside in the court of ordinary to the plaintiff in the present case, the widow of W. W. Roberts, in the sum of $372.30, the judgment *286 being based on the award of the appraisers as follows: “The sum of $373.30 in cash deposited in the First National Bank of Carters-ville, Georgia, to the credit of Roberts & Maxwell, a partnership composed of W. W. Roberts Sr. and H. R. Maxwell, the said $373.30 being a one-half interest belonging to the said W. W. Roberts Sr., there having been on deposit in said account the sum of $744.60, the said $373.30 hereby set apart being all of the estate of said W. W. Roberts at the time of his death.” At the time of the death of Maxwell and Roberts there was no outstanding indebtedness against the partnership of Roberts & Maxwell, and there were then no assets belonging to the partnership other than the amount standing upon the books of the bank to its credit. On October 13, 1937, Mrs. W. W. Roberts, the widow, brought this action, naming the First National Bank and the receivers of Maxwell Brothers defendants. She alleged that the bank held the partnership deposit under a claim of ownership and refused to pay her demand, and prayed that the bank be required to pay the deposit into court, that an accounting be had between her and the receivers of Maxwell Brothers, and that her year’s support be paid to her out of the fund. On the hearing the court directed a verdict in favor of the defendants, and the exception here is to the judgment of the court overruling the plaintiff’s motion for new trial.

“The surviving partner, in case of death, may control the assets of the firm to the exclusion of the legal representatives of a deceased partner, and he shall be primarily liable to the creditors of the firm for their debts. Where partnerships have been, or shall be, dissolved by the death of one or more partners, and all the debts of the firm are paid, the assets of the firm, as far as possible, may be divided in kind between surviving partners and the representatives of the dead partners by three disinterested appraisers, chosen by the parties as arbitrators or appointed by the ordinary of the county where the survivors reside, either in term or vacation, on application of either party, said appraisers to be sworn to make a.fair appraisement and division to the best of their ability; and after such division, the representatives of the dead partners may sue in their own names upon all dioses in action assigned to them in the division.” Code, § 75-308. “Title to personal property shall vest in the surviving partners, who have the right to dispose thereof for paying the debts and making distribution.” Code, *287 § 75-309. “Between the parties themselves any mutual demands, existing at the time of the commencement of the suit, may be set off.” Code, § 30-1303. “Set-off must be between the same parties and in their own right. If originally otherwise, but at the commencement of suit equitably within this rule, they may be set off. Thus, a claim against a partnership may be set off against a surviving partner in a suit brought in his own right; and a debt due to a principal may be set off in a suit against principal and surety.” Code, § 30-1303. In Backer v. City Bank & Trust Co., 180 Ga. 672 (180 S. E. 604, 108 A. L. R. 769), cited and relied on by the defendants in error as conclusive of the question here presented it was ruled: “1. Where a depositor in a bank, who also is indebted to the bank on a matured promissory note for a sum in excess of such deposit, dies, the deposit does not become an asset of the estate left by -him, so as to be subject to be set apart as a year’s support for his widow and minor child. 3. In such a case it is not necessary for the bank to affirmatively exercise its right to set off the matured debt due by the depositor as against his general deposit, but upon the death of the depositor such deposit account becomes extinguished in so far as any creditor of the deceased depositor is concerned. The bank’s failure to affirmatively exercise this right would not render the deposit account subject to the claim of the wife and minor child of the deceased depositor for a year’s support.”

The plaintiff in error contends, however, that these rulings should not be applied in a case where the deposit is due to a surviving partner, in that in the Backer case the deposit was owned by the depositor individually and the debt to the bank was owed by him individually, whereas in the present case the surviving partner, while holding the title to partnership assets, holds it only for the limited purpose of controlling the assets and making distribution, that in winding up the partnership affairs he is not acting in his own right but in the capacity of trustee, that he could not claim any part of the assets in his own right until a distribution had taken place or, the firm debts having been paid, when the assets had been divided in kind as authorized under Code, § 75-308, that, consequently, not acting in his own right there were no mutual demands that could be set off as between the bank and W. W. Roberts, the surviving partner. It is further contended that a set-off does not *288

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

Related

Skrine v. Simmons
36 Ga. 402 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 1867)
Boone v. Sirrine
38 Ga. 121 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 1868)
Sellers v. Shore
15 S.E. 494 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 1892)
Backer v. City Bank & Trust Co.
180 S.E. 604 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 1935)
Kinney v. Robinson
184 S.E. 616 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 1936)
Taylor v. Jordan
195 S.E. 215 (Court of Appeals of Georgia, 1938)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
6 S.E.2d 88, 61 Ga. App. 284, 1939 Ga. App. LEXIS 279, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/roberts-v-first-national-bank-gactapp-1939.