Wilbur v. Mortgage Loan Co.

149 S.E. 262, 153 S.C. 14, 1929 S.C. LEXIS 2
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedAugust 14, 1929
Docket12719
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 149 S.E. 262 (Wilbur v. Mortgage Loan Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wilbur v. Mortgage Loan Co., 149 S.E. 262, 153 S.C. 14, 1929 S.C. LEXIS 2 (S.C. 1929).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Justice Cothran.

This is a petition by T. S. Wilbur, a .debtor of the South Carolina Loan & Trust Company, upon certain notes transferred to the Mortgage Loan Company (under the arrangement referred to in Ex Parte Fant, Receiver, 147 S. C, 167, 145 S. E, 34), asking that the Mortgage Loan Company be required to cancel said notes and return the collateral thereto pledged by him.

The South Carolina Loan & Trust Company closed its doors on December 16, 1926, and was taken over by the *16 State Bank Examiner, who was later appointed receiver. In the proceeding referred to in 147 S. C., 167, 145 S. E., 34, certain assets of the bank were transferred to the Mortgage Loan Company for the purpose of liquidating the affairs of the bank. This proceeding is fully explained in the appeal reported in 147 S. C.

At the time of the collapse of the bank, it held two notes of T. S. Wilbur: (1) A note dated December 13, 1926, due 90 days, for $1,400, secured by a pledge of certain stock of the People’s National Bank and 10 shares of the Port City Bank; (2) A note dated December 13, 1926, due 90 days, for $500, without collateral, but indorsed by W. C. Wilbur.

Both of these notes were delivered to the Mortgage Loan Company under the arrangement referred to; and between the date of delivery and March 23, 1928, T. S. Wilbur by sundry payments upon the $1,400 note reduced the amount thereof, so that there remained due the sum of $261 on that date; nothing having been paid by him upon the $500 note. The collateral stock in the People’s Bank was surrendered to T. S. Wilbur; the other collateral being retained.

The petitioner alleged, and offered testimony tending to show, that the $500 note was originally the joint obligation of T. S. Wilbur and W. C. Wilbur, but that in a subsequent settlement between them, the note was assumed by W. C. Wilbur- as his personal obligation. This fact was put in issue by the respondent, but does not appear to have been passed upon by his Honor in his decree.

At the time of the closing of the bank, there were certain funds therein deposited by W. C. Wilbur as follows:

W. C. Wilbur, for W. C. Wilbur, Jr.$ 126.11
W. C. Wilbur, for Mary Summer Wilbur. 130.73
W. C. Wilbur and Martha M. Wilbur. 56.07
W. C. -Wilbur . 32.78
$ 345.69

*17 ■The persons named were the minor children of W. C. Wilbur.

Shortly after the closing of said bank, on the 24th day of January, 1927, the said W. C. Wilbur drew separate checks against each of said accounts, payable to South Carolina Loan & Trust Company, aggregating $345.69 and supplemented the same by his personal check upon People’s First National Bank of Charleston, dated 24th of January, 1927, in the sum of $154.31, payable to South Carolina Loan & Trust Company, aggregating $500, which he transmitted to the bank in settlement of the $500 note; in other words, he claimed the right to set off the bank’s liability to him personally upon these deposits against his liability to the bank upon the $500 note.

The Mortgage Company accepted the check of $154.31 on the People’s Bank and applied it to the $500 note, but refused to’ accept the other checks, denying W. C. Wilbur’s right of set-off. The appeal turns upon the validity of W. C. Wilbur’s claim of set-off; if it should be allowed, the $500 note will have been paid, and the petitioner, upon the payment of the balance due upon the $1,400 note, $261, which has been tendered and refused, will be entitled to a cancellation of both notes and a return of the pledged collateral; otherwise not.

The matter was heard by his Honor, Judge Townsend, upon .the petition, the return, the traverse to the return, the reply to the traverse, and testimony taken before him. Pie filed a decree, dated April 25, 1928, denying the claim of set-off and rendering judgment against T. S. Wilbur for the balance of the $1,400 note, $261.09, with interest from March 22, 1926, and for the balance of the $500 note, $337-50 with interest from March 14, 1927, each at the rate of 8 per cent, per annum and with 10 per cent, attorney’s fees. From this decree, T. S. Wilbur has appealed.

■ There was no testimony to the contrary, and we assume it to be true, that the $500 note became the personal obliga *18 tion of W. C. Wilbur; that the funds on deposit were the personal funds of W. C. Wilbur, and were carried in the manner indicated for his convenience, and for the purpose of simplifying the handling of the same by separate designations; that this was money he deposited from time to' time of his own accord for the purpose of utilizing it for the children’s education, or any necessity that might ¿rise; that he put it in the names of the children because he wanted to build the accounts up for them, and that he had entire control over the money; that the money could be withdrawn upon checks signed by him alone; that, as indicated by the withdrawals against each account, these deposits were not in the nature of a permanent fund which was to be allowed to accumulate, but were more in the nature of checking accounts for current uses.

His Honor Judge Townsend held that the deposits of W. C. Wilbur (indicated to have been made for the benefit of his children, respectively) constituted trust funds of which they were the beneficiaries, and that that which was due to them could not be used as a set-off by W. C. Wilbur against his liability upon the $500 note. If his Honor’s premises are correct as to the deposits constituting trust funds, his conclusion very probably is inevitable; otherwise not.

The deposits were recognized as subject to the checks of W. C. Wilbur; the accounts were made up of deposits made and checks drawn by him; in one case the deposits were $437.24 and the withdrawals $381.17; in another, $1,046-11 and $938; in another, $1,040.73 and $910 — showing that the deposits were not intended to be permanent or accumulating, but subject to the individual checks of W. C. Wilbur, recognized by the bank as the depositor. We are satisfied that the arrangement was merely one of convenience, and not intended as the establishment of a trust fund.

Probably the leading case on the subject is Cunningham v. Davenport, decided by the New York Court of Appeals *19 in 1895, reported in 147 N. Y. at page 43, 41 N. E., 412, 32 L. R. A. at page 373, 49 Am. St. Rep., 641. In that case it appears that one John Cunningham, having had, prior to 1881, certain funds on deposit tO' his credit in the Bowery Savings Bank of New York, in that year transferred said funds from his own account to a new account, entered on the books of the bank to- the credit of “John Cunningham, in trust for Patríele Cunningham, his brother.” Patrick Cunningham, the alleged beneficiary, died on April 14, 1890.

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Bluebook (online)
149 S.E. 262, 153 S.C. 14, 1929 S.C. LEXIS 2, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilbur-v-mortgage-loan-co-sc-1929.