Bell v. Farmers D. N. Bank
Bell v. Farmers D. N. Bank
Opinion of the Court
Opinion,
This case has been so well considered by the learned master and the court below that an elaborate discussion of it here is unnecessary. The master finds the pivotal fact in the case as follows: “ From this testimony the master has found as a fact that Thompson Bell, at the time he made the loan of $20,000, and took as security the stock in controversy, knew that the money loaned was to be used for the purposes of James Marshall & Co.” It needs neither argument nor authority to show, that if Mr. Bell knew when he loaned this money that it was for the use of the firm of which James Marshall, Jr., was a member, he had no right to receive and hold the assets of an estate of which the said James Marshall, Jr., was an executor as collateral security for such loan. He knew that it was a misapplication of trust funds ; that it was a pledge of securities belonging to the estate for the personal debt or liability of the executor’s firm.
Upon this point we are not in any doubt. The answer sets up no new contract. On the contrary, it admits the contract as set forth in plaintiff’s bill, and denies a matter outside of the contract itself. This subject was thoroughly discussed by our late brother Sharswood, in Eaton’s App., 66 Pa. 483, and the authorities collected with his usual care. He there adopts the rule laid down by Chief Justice Parker, in Bellows v. Stone, 48 N. H. 475, as follows: “If the whole subject matter of the statement or allegation in the answer might have been left out, then the allegation in the answer upon that subject is in no sense responsive to the bill; the bill requiring no statement upon that point. But, if the omission of some statement upon that subject would furnish just ground of exception to the answer, then the statement to the extent to which it is required, and whatever its character, whether affirmative or negative, is but a response to the requisition of. the plaintiff.” In Allen v. Mower, 17 Vt. 61, it was said: “It is readily perceived that everything in the answer responsive to the bill, as to the creation of the original liability charged, must be taken together,
The decree is affirmed, and the appeal dismissed, at the costs of the appellants.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- J. M. BELL v. FARMERS D. N. BANK
- Cited By
- 2 cases
- Status
- Published
- Syllabus
- [To be reported.] 1. In a proceeding in equity to compel a transfer of stock in pursuance .of a pledge thereof by an executor, one of defendants, for a loan, the executor who made the pledge is not a competent witness, after the death of the pledgee, to testify that the latter made the loan with knowledge that the money was to be used for purposes other than the business of the estate: Duffield v. Hue, 129 Pa. 94. 2. To a bill averring a loan to an executor, one of defendants, for the purposes of his testator’s estate, upon a pledge of estate assets, an answer by the defendant executor alleging the true character of the transaction to be that the respondent borrowed and used the money for private purposes with the knowledge of the pledgee, is responsive, and must stand until overthrown by the plaintiff’s proofs. 3. One who loans money to an executor upon a pledge of assets of the estate, with knowledge that the money is to be used for the private business of the executor, and not for the purposes of the estate, and that the pledge is thus a misapplication of trust funds, cannot hold the assets, so pledged, as against the legatees under the will of the pledgor’s testator.