Waterman v. Buckingham

64 A. 212, 79 Conn. 286, 1906 Conn. LEXIS 46
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedJuly 30, 1906
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 64 A. 212 (Waterman v. Buckingham) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Waterman v. Buckingham, 64 A. 212, 79 Conn. 286, 1906 Conn. LEXIS 46 (Colo. 1906).

Opinion

Hall, J.

The plaintiff has resided during the past ten years in Nashville, Tennessee. In 1899 he placed in the hands of the defendant Oliver T. Sherwood, then cashier of the defendant Southport National Bank, for investment according to Sherwood’s best judgment, the sum of $4,500, with which, and $500 of his own money, Sherwood purchased certain real estate, taking the title in his own name. In April, 1901, he exchanged said real estate for the property in question, the title to which he also took in his own name, and received in addition $1,250 in money. Of this sum he expended $250 upon said property, and the remaining $1,000 he paid to the plaintiff. The plaintiff had no knowledge that his money was invested in real estate in the name of Sherwood, until after May 16th, 1908.

Said Sherwood having misapplied the funds of said bank and become a defaulter in a large sum, on the 12th of May, 1903, being apprehensive of exposure and arrest, left South-port, leaving his wife and children in the house owned by him in Southport where he had resided with them, since which time he has not communicated with his wife or provided her with assistance or support. From Southport he went to New York. On May 13th he went to Toronto; *288 from Toronto to San Francisco, and from San Francisco to Panama, where he was arrested in July and brought back to this State, where he remained in custody until he was sentenced to the State prison where he now is. When Sherwood left this State he had no fixed intention of residing at any particular place outside of Connecticut. On May 16th, 1903, he was in Toronto, and had not acquired a residence at any place outside of Connecticut. He had then only considered his present emergency, and had formed no intent as to his future, or as to when he would return to his family in Southport, or to this State.

On the 15th of May, 1903, the defendant Buckingham caused the premises in question, which were then occupied by a tenant and were in charge of one Bulkley, to be attached in an action against Sherwood, and on the 18th of December, 1903, took judgment by default‘in said action for $1,927.94 damages, and $33.07 costs, and on the 2d of January, 1904, filed a certificate of judgment-lien for said sum upon said property. An action to foreclose that lien, in which one Pepper, the receiver of said bank, the present plaintiff, and said Sherwood, are the defendants, is still pending.

On the 16th of May, 1903, the defendant bank caused said premises to be attached in an action against Sherwood, and on the 30th of October, 1903, with the consent of Sherwood, took judgment for $21,649.23 damages, and $37.78 costs, and has since filed a certificate of judgment-lien for said sum based upon such attachment.

Both the claimed attachments in said original actions by the defendants Buckingham and the bank were made in accordance with the requirements of the law providing for the attachment of real estate of residents of this State, copies in each case having been left at the house in South-port where Sherwood had lived, and copies and certificates of attachment with the town clerk; no copies having been left with the person in charge of, or the person in possession of, the attached property.

Neither said Buckingham nor the bank had any knowl *289 edge, when they caused said attachments to he made, that the plaintiff had any interest in the attached property.

On the 14th of August, 1903, the plaintiff filed a claim with the receiver of the bank in which he set out his claimed interest in said attached property.

In the original transactions by which Sherwood incurred the indebtedness described in each of said attachment suits, neither Buckingham nor the bank gave any credit to him in consequence of his apparent ownership of the real estate in question, nor did either of them know of his apparent ownership of said property prior to the 12th of May, 1903.

During the trial the plaintiff offered evidence to prove that in a conversation between the plaintiff and Sherwood in 1902, it was orally agreed that the bank should take the investment of -$3,500, which Sherwood had made for the plaintiff, in payment of the plaintiff’s note to the bank for an overdraft which the plaintiff had made upon his bank account with the defendant bank; and that this conversation was followed by such conduct on the part of the hank in not thereafter demanding payment of the principal or interest upon the note given for the overdraft, and of Sherwood in not thereafter paying the interest or principal upon the investment, as estopped the bank from denying, as against this plaintiff, that it did not become the owner of the investment and that Sherwood did not thereafter hold the property in question in trust for the bank. This evidence was also offered for the purpose of proving, by means of such conversation and by the knowledge of Sherwood, knowledge of the bank of the plaintiff’s interest in the real estate in question. The evidence was rejected for both purposes.

Among the reasons of appeal assigned, stated in substance, are the rejection of said evidence; the overruling of the plaintiff’s claim that, upon the facts found, Sherwood was a nonresident at the time of the attachments, and that they were therefore void, because copies of the writs of attachment were only left at Sherwood’s last usual place of abode within this State, and not with Sherwood’s agent *290 in this State, or with the person in possession of the property attached, as required by § 828 of the General Statutes in the attachment of the property of nonresidents ; and in overruling the plaintiff’s claim that upon the facts the defendants Buckingham and the bank were not, as against the plaintiff, in the position of bona fide purchasers for value, but took by their attachment only Sherwood’s interest in the attached property.

We shall consider only the last stated reason of appeal, as our conclusion upon the question raised by that is decisive of the case.

The trial court sustained the claim of the plaintiff that he became the equitable owner of the attached property to the extent that his money was invested in it. In taking the title to the entire property in his own name, Sherwood, as between himself and the plaintiff, became the trustee of a resulting trust for the benefit of the plaintiff, as to that portion of the property purchased with the plaintiff’s money.

Upon general principles, Buckingham and the bank, by their attachment suits against Sherwood, acquired only the rights which Sherwood himself had in the property attached, and equity will protect the present plaintiff’s interest in the property unless there is some special rule of law or of equity, or some statutory provision, which prevents the plaintiff from asserting his equitable title against these attaching creditors of Sherwood.

The plaintiff is not estopped from asserting his ownership against these defendants upon the ground that by his own negligence he has misled them to their injury. If it could properly be said that the plaintiff is chargeable with any negligence in permitting Sherwood to take the title to the property in his own name and to so place it upon the records, the court has expressly found that neither Buckingham nor the bank was in any way misled by the fact that the title was so taken and recorded.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
64 A. 212, 79 Conn. 286, 1906 Conn. LEXIS 46, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/waterman-v-buckingham-conn-1906.