Stone River National Bank v. Lerman Milling Co.

63 So. 776, 9 Ala. App. 322, 1913 Ala. App. LEXIS 313
CourtAlabama Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 27, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 63 So. 776 (Stone River National Bank v. Lerman Milling Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alabama Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stone River National Bank v. Lerman Milling Co., 63 So. 776, 9 Ala. App. 322, 1913 Ala. App. LEXIS 313 (Ala. Ct. App. 1913).

Opinion

PELHAM, J. —

When this case was first considered on the original submission, we were of the opinion that the holding of the Supreme Court in the case of Tishomingo Sav. Inst. v. Johnson, Nesbitt & Co., 40 South. 503, was conclusive of the question that the trial court was in error in sustaining the plaintiff’s demurrers to the claim propounded by the claimant,,, in the instant case, and we reversed the judgment of the lower court on that authority. Upon consideration of the case on application for rehearing, we have reached a different conclusion, and have set out the reasons governing us in this determination, in stating what we deem to be correct principles of law applicable to the case at bar, and have distinguished this case from the case of Tishomingo Sav. Inst. v. Johnson, Nesbitt & Co., supra, and have withdrawn our former opinion. The case presented on the record before us shows that an attachment suit was brought in the trial court by Lerman Milling Company against J. R. Hale & Sons, to recover a debt alleged to be due by the latter to the former. The attachment was executed by serving a writ of garnishment upon the Farmers’ & Merchants’ Bank of Athens, who were supposed to be indebted to the defendants, J. R. Hale & [325]*325Sons. The garnishee answered, admitting an indebtedness of $197.99, setting out the facts as to how it originated substantially as follows: That on April 26, 1910, it received for collection, through the Stones River National Bank of Murfreesboro, Tenn., a bill of lading for a car of corn, with a draft attached, for $197.99, drawn April 25, 1910, on R. B. Wynne, Athens, Ala., by J. R. Hale & Sons, said defendants, payable to themselves, and bearing the following indorsement, to wit: “Pay to the order of Stones River National Bank, Murfreesboro, Tenn., for credit of account of J. R. Hale & Sons,” which indorsement was signed by the drawers. That upon notice by the garnishee, the said R. B. Wynne, the person upon whom the draft was drawn, paid the amount of same to the garnishee, whereupon it delivered to him the said draft and the bill of lading for the car of corn, attached thereto; that while it, the garnishee, was still in possession of the money, and before it had remitted same to the Stones River National Bank of Murfreesboro, the said indorsee of the draft, from whom garnishee had received it for collection, the writ of garnishment in this case was served, and that it, the garnishee bank, had since been notified that the said Stones River National Bank claimed the said proceeds of the draft. Under the provisions of the statute (Code, § 4328 et seq.), the garnishee thereupon paid said proceeds into court, and the said Stones River National Bank was cited to propound in writing, under oath, its claim to said proceeds, as required by the statute, which was done. The facts set up therein as a basis for the claim are the same as those contained in the answer of the garnishee, which were hereinbefore detailed, with these additional, to wit: “That it, the claimant, was the purchaser of said draft, with bill of lading attached, for value and before maturity, and in the regular course [326]*326of business without notice of any claim to said draft, by the said plaintiff, the Lerman Milling Company, or any other party, and before the attachment was sued out in this cause. That it deducted 10 cents from the face value of said draft for exchange at the time it was negotiated to it, and paid the defendants, the drawers, J. R. Hale & Sons, the balance of said draft 'by giving the account of J. R. Hale & Sons with claimant credit for said balance.’ That at the time it purchased said draft, the following indorsement appeared.on it: 'Pay to the order of Stones River National Bank, Murfreesboro, Tenn., for credit of J. R. Hale & Sons.’ That it thereupon sent the draft, with the bill of lading attached, to the garnishee for collection, indorsing thereon the following words: 'For collection and return to the Stones River National Bank of Murfreesboro.’ ” The statute (Code, § 4329) provides that the plaintiff must take issue upon the claim', either in law or fact. — Diamond Rubber Co. v. Fourth Nat. Bank, 171 Ala. 420, 55 South. 100. Here the plaintiff filed a demurrer to the claim as propounded, assigning numerous grounds. This demurrer was sustained, and claimant appeals.

As we view the case, it is entirely immaterial whether or not the bill of lading, attached to the draft, was indorsed by defendants, J. R. Hale & Sons, to the claimants, since there is no litigation or dispute either about the title to the bill of lading or about the property represented by it. In fact, the plaintiff by the very act of suing out the writ of garnishment and endeavoring to reach the proceeds of the sale of the car of corn by defendants, J. R. Hale & Sons, to R. B. Wynne, the purchaser, upon whom the draft was drawn, and who paid it, admits a complete sale to Wynne and the validity and effectuality of the means employed to accomplish and perfect it. What the plaintiff is endeavoring to do [327]*327by the process of garnishment is to seize, before it reaches the hands of the defendant debtors, who were the sellers, the purchase price, or proceeds of the sale, of the car of corn, and subject it to the payment of its ■debt. As to whether it can do so or not depends upon whether or not the defendants, J. R. Hale & Sons, could maintain debt or indebitatus assumpsit against the garnishee for the funds here sought to be reached and subjected to defendants’ debt. — Cunningham v. Baker, 104 Ala. 160, 16 South. 68, 53 Am. St. Rep. 27; Roman v. Dimmick, 123 Ala. 366, 26 South. 214. Plaintiff contends, in effect, that the garnishee would so be liable to defendants, upon the theory of fact that garnishee is but the agent of defendants in holding the funds. In the case of Eufaula Grocery Co. v. Missouri National Bank, 118 Ala. 412, 24 South. 390, our Supreme Court uses the following language, which is applicable to the question here under consideration as to whether or not the garnishee bank is the agent of the defendants, J. R. Hale & Sons, to wit: “It is a principle maintained by many of the courts [adopted in that case] that when the ■owner of a security deposits it, for collection, in a bank located remotely from the place of payment, he thereby gives the bank authority to employ another reputable bank, located at or near the place of payment, to make the collection; and, in such case, the collecting bank [as the garnishee bank is in this case] becomes the agent of the owner, and the receiving bank [as the claimant bank is in the present case] rests under no liability to the owner, unless and until the money comes actually to its hands.”

Is this legal status of the respective parties to the transaction, with respect to each other, in any wise altered by reason of the fact that the owners of the security (the defendants in this case), at the time they de[328]*328posited it for collection with the receiving bank, the claimant, had passed to their credit on the bank’s books the amount of the draft, less the exchange? This is the sole question, as we view the case, presented for review here, since the other questions are settled in Eufaula Gro. Co. v. Missouri Nat. Bank, supra.

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63 So. 776, 9 Ala. App. 322, 1913 Ala. App. LEXIS 313, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stone-river-national-bank-v-lerman-milling-co-alactapp-1913.