Rogers v. Hopkins
Rogers v. Hopkins
Opinion of the Court
Jennie M. Rogers, for herself and as guardian for her three minor children, brought suit against J. T. Pendleton and Hopkins & Glenn, alleging that they had been employed by her as attorneys to bring suit against The Mutual Life Insurance Company of New York, upon a policy of insurance upon the life of her husband, and that they had recovered judgment and had collected the money on-said suit, and had failed to pay it over on demand.
The defendants, besides the general issue, filed three pleas.
First, they admitted the recovery for the plaintiff as charged in the declaration, but set up that they were entitled to one-fourth of the same as their fee, under a special contract.
Secondly, they set up the manner and circumstances of the payment, as follows: That J. T. Pendleton received said amount by a draft drawn by the attorneys of the Insurance Company on their solicitor in New York, payable to him as attorney, and forwarded it for collection the same day it was received, to-wit, March 26,1881, through the Citizens’ Bank of Georgia. That, as soon as returns were received from the draft by the bank, on March 31, 1881, he gave notice to the plaintiff of the fact. That the plaintiff failed to apply for the money, and the bank susjiended payment on the 13th of April, 1881, whereby the money was lost. That the bank was in good standing when the draft was. delivered to it for collection, and that it was forwarded for collection through that bank for the reason that it was the place where plaintiff did her business and kept her deposit account. That none of the defendants kept any deposit account at that bank, but did
Thirdly, they set up an agreement between plaintiff and defendant, Pendleton, and Perino Brown, president of said Citizens’ Bank, by which Brown was to sign the bond of the plaintiff as guardian for her children, as security, and hold the bonds purchased by the children’s portion of said money as collateral security against said suretyship, and Pendleton was to hold the children’s portion of the money, when recovered, until the plaintiff determined what bonds should be purchased with their portion, when the purchase should be made, and the bonds held by Brown, he giving the plaintiff a receipt showing for what purpose the bonds were held, and that this, undertaking on the part of iJen dleton was without compensation, and purely for the purpose of enabling the plaintiff to secure Brown against loss as security on her guardian’s bond.
The verdict of the jury was for the defendants, and the plaintiff moved for a new trial, and the error complained of in this court is the judgment of the court below overruling this motion and refusing a new trial.
The evidence in the record for the defendants, in support of their pleas, was substantially as follows :
J. T. Pendleton testified that Mrs. Rogers came to him to bring the suit for herself and children on her husband’s policy of insurance, and the question came up as to her ability to give bond as guardian for the children, so as to enable her to bring the suit, and the result of it was, with
The estimony in regard to the fee charged, was overwhelming and uncontradicted that it was reasonable and fair, and was even less than was usually charged in such cases.
The plaintiff demurred to the last plea of the defendants, to-wit, the one setting up the contract between the plaintiff and Pendleton and Brown, by which Pendleton was to hold the children’s portion of the money, when collected, until the plaintiff and Brown could arrange about the investment of it in bonds, and which bonds, when secured, were to be placed in Brown’s hands, to hold as an indemnity against loss by reason of his going security on -plaintiff’s bond as guardian for her children. The plaintiff also objected to the introduction of evidence to support this plea, and made a written request for the court to charge the. jury to the effect, that a guardian has no right to pledge or put the funds of her ward in the custody or control of her surety on her guardian’s bond, and any contract to do so is contrary to law and is void, and the attorney of the guardian who participates in such arrangement will not be protected or saved from personal responsibility for acts or omissions for which he would otherwise be responsible.
The court overruled the demurrer, admitted the evidence, and refused the written request to charge; and these rulings are assigned as error.
The principle of law requested to be given in charge by counsel for plaintiff is a sound one, but is not applicable to the facts of this case. A brief reference to the cases.
The ease of White vs. Baugh, 3 Clark & Finnelly, 44, was where a receiver made an agreement with his sureties, in order to get them to go on his bond, that the money should be deposited in bank in the name of the sureties, thereby giving them control over the fund. The court held that this was an illegal contract, and that upon failure of the bank the receiver was liable for the loss.
The case of Salway vs. Salway, 2 Rus. and Mylne, 215, announces the same principle in the following words: “ A receiver appointed by the court is answerable for the loss of moneys consequent on the failure of a banker with whom they have been deposited for security, if the deposit be made in such a way that the receiver parts with the absolute control over the fund.”
In the case of Forsyth vs. Woods, 11 Wall., 484, the court held that an arrangement by which an administrator was to bring into a partnership, of which he was a ■member, the assets of the intestate, and make the administration of the estate a partnership business, and by which they were to share as partners the gains and losses resulting from the administration, was against the policy of the law.
The casfe at bar is totally different in principle from all these. Here the scheme did not contemplate that the funds of the guardian were to pass into the hands of the surety, so as to give him the use and control of them, or so as to deprive the guardian of her right to exercise a proper contad over them, but simply that they were to be invested in bonds — presumably state bonds, as they are ■.the only kind that guardians are allowed to invest in— and that these bonds were to be deposited with the surety, not to be used by him, but simply as a guaranty that they would not be misused by the guardian. Such a plan was laudable, and would, had it not been defeated by a failure i of .the bank, have afforded double protection to the wards.
It appears from the evidence that as soon as Pendleton got notice that there had been a return from the draft, which had been deposited for collection in the bank of which Brown, the surety, was president, he gave notice immediately to the plaintiff that she could get her share on application, and that Brown wished to see her about the children’s share. This was fourteen days before the failure of the bank, and had the plaintiff used proper diligence in carrying out her part of the contract, the investment would doubtless have been made in bonds long before the catastrophe came, and the trust fund would have been safe even in the vaults of the broken bank. But she used no diligence; and because she did not, the money was lost. Therefore, it was not error to permit the defendants to plead and prove these facts, and it would have been error to have given in charge the written request of counsel for plaintiff in error, because it was not applicable to the facts of this case.
It was earnestly claimed by counsel for plaintiff in error that the application of this general principle of law to the facts of this case, would show a liability to the plaintiff by
We will first examine the law as cited by couxisel for plaintiff ixx error, axxd endeavor to ascertain its true meaning, and then apply it to the facts of this case, with a view to determining the question of the liability or noix-liability of the defendants to the plaintiff.
The principle laid down in Weeks on Attorneys, §272, is, that if an attorney mix up xnoney belongixxg to his client with his own, he thereby renders himself the client’s debtor. Norris vs. Hero et al., 22 La., 605; McAllister vs. The Commonwealth, 30 Penn., 536, and Robinson vs. Ward, 2 C. & P. 59, were all cases where the agexxt, attorney or trustee, collected moxiey for his principal axid mingled it with his own by depositing it to his own credit, ixx his own bank, and on his own private account; axxd the courts hold, in each of those cases, that by so doixxg he xnade himself the debtor of his principal, and consequently was liable to him upon a loss of the fund.
Ixx Story on Agexxcy, sectioxx 202, it is laid down that if the xnoxiey of the principal is deposited in his name in the hands of a banker of good credit, and such a deposit is accordixig to the common usage of the place, the agexit will not be responsible for axiy loss arising from the failure of the banker. In the same book, section 218, it is said, that if an agent should improperly deposit the money of his principal in his own name in the hands of a baxxker, who should afterwards become insolvent, the loss must be ultimately borne by the agexxt. See also 1 Perry on Trusts, section 443. In 2 Story’s Eq. Jur., section 1270, it is laid down that a trustee, who places moxiey in the hands of a
The case of Sargent vs. Downey, 49 Wis., 524, lays down the same principle, and it will be seen, by reading the facts of that case, on page 527, that while the agent did make a separate deposit of the fund, yet it was done without the consent of the principal, either express or implied, and without giving him any notice of it, and the court lay stress on these facts in delivering the opinion.
The case of Ansley & Co. vs. Anderson, Adair & Co., 35 Ga., 8, was where the agent had in hand money belonging to his principal, and upon his principal’s refusal to receive it, made a deposit of it in bank in his own name, giving the principal notice that it was there subject to his order, and the court held that, upon a subsequent depreciation and loss of the money, the principal could not recover from the agent.
The case of Phillips, ex'r, vs. Lamar, sh'ff, 27 Ga., 228, was one in which the court held the sheriff liable where he collected money and deposited it in a bank which failed. The court, however, drew a distinction between that case and the ordinary case where a party selects his own agent, and based their judgment on this distinction, as will be seen by reference to the last two paragraphs of the opinion, on pages 231 and 232.
Let us, then, test this case in the light of the law, as thus revealed to us from the books.
It appears from the evidence that Pendleton collected the money for the plaintiff by receiving a draft payable to his order as attorney, drawn by the attorney of the Insurance Company here, on the New York solicitor, and that he deposited this draft in the Citizens’ Bank for collection, indorsing it as attorney, and without giving any instructions as to how the money, when received, was to be credited on the books of the bank. When a return was had from the draft by the bank, he drew a check in his own name covering the fees and costs, leaving the net balance due the
Such being the view of this case taken by this court, it is unnecessary to consider the numerous other assignments .of error in the motion for a new trial. The verdict is required by the evidence, and the judgment is therefore affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.
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