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Scottish Court of Session Decisions


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Ireland (Ireland's Executrix) and Fleming v. The North of Scotland Banking Co. [1880] ScotLR 18_167 (1 December 1880)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1880/18SLR0167.html
Cite as: [1880] ScotLR 18_167, [1880] SLR 18_167

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SCOTTISH_SLR_Court_of_Session

Page: 167

Court of Session Inner House First Division.

Wednesday, December 1. 1880.

18 SLR 167

Ireland (Ireland's Executrix) and Fleming

v.

The North of Scotland Banking Company.

Subject_1Deposit
Subject_2Account-Current
Subject_3Title to Sue.
Facts:

A bank having funds in its possession on account-current belonging to an executry estate, sufficient to meet the sum contained in a cheque signed by the executrix and her agent, in whose name the funds were lodged for behoof of the estate, and who was also her cautioner, held bound to honour the cheque, although the agent and cautioner had executed a trust-deed for behoof of his creditors and the executry estate had subsequently been sequestrated.

Headnote:

Certain moneys were lodged in the defenders' branch bank at Dundee on account-current in the name of “A. G. Fleming, for behoof of the representatives of the late William Ireland, hardware merchant, Dundee.” The amount standing at Fleming's credit on 30th January 1880 was £413, 5s. 3d., and on that date he presented a cheque, as factor and agent for Mrs Ireland and the executry estate, and countersigned by her as executrix foresaid, for £100, payment of which was refused, and the present action was raised in the Sheriff Court of Forfarshire at Dundee for payment of that sum with interest from that date. The defenders resisted the action, on the ground that the late Mr Ireland died indebted to them in £130, and his estates were sequestrated at their instance on 29th April 1880, and that the pursuer Fleming having executed a trust-deed for behoof of his creditors, they were entitled to retain the funds in their hands until payment, or as security for the payment of their debt or the dividend effeiring thereto, or at least until the pursuers were able to give them a valid and sufficient discharge. They also pleaded that the pursuers had no title to sue, and that the petition was incompetent, in respect that Fleming being insolvent should be required to find caution for expenses. The Sheriff-Substitute ( Cheyne) repelled the defences and decerned in favour of the pursuer Fleming for the contents of the cheque with interest and expenses.

Note.—As the balance in defenders' hands is upwards of £400, and as their agent admitted at the discussion that their claim against the estate of the deceased was not above £130, there is plainly nothing in their plea of retention, and that plea being out of the way, I fail to see any excuse for their refusal to honour the cheque, or to find any

Page: 168

ground on which they can resist decree passing against them in favour of the pursuer Fleming. Mr Hunter relied mainly upon the fact that Mr Fleming had granted a trust-deed for behoof of his creditors, and was still under trust, arguing that this necessitated either that the trustee should be made a party to the action, or that Mr Fleming should be called upon to find caution for expenses; but the simple answer to their argument is, that the trustee has no interest whatever in the money now in question, which is admittedly held by Mr Fleming in trust for others, and that in view of the large sum in the defenders' hands, their demand for caution for expenses is utterly unreasonable and unnecessary. My only doubt in regard to the disposal of the case is occasioned by the fact that since the record was closed the estates of the deceased William Ireland have been sequestrated, but on consideration I do not think that this constitutes a sufficient reason for my sisting the process or refraining from at once giving decree. The executrix's title is no doubt superseded pending the sequestration, and therefore I have not given decree in her favour, but Mr Fleming being the party with whom the defenders contracted, had a perfectly good title to sue by himself, and it seems to me that his receipt will be a sufficient discharge to the defenders, even in a question with the person who may be appointed trustee in the sequestration. It is said, that even granting the propriety of the action at the time it was brought, and the defenders' consequent liability for expenses, Mr Fleming can have no legitimate reason in pressing for decree, as he will be liable to account for the money to the trustee; but I am not quite sure about that. For all I know, Mr Fleming may have a claim against the estate for services rendered, and assuming that to be so, I am not prepared to say that his wish to get this money into his hands is unnatural or illegitimate. Be that, however, as it may, I should be doing him a grievous injustice if I were to act upon the assumption that there was any risk of him not faithfully accounting for all moneys paid over to him for behoof of the estate.” On a reclaiming petition and answers the Sheriff ( Maitland Heriot) adhered. In his note the Sheriff said:—“On the whole, the Sheriff fails to discover any good reason for the defenders' conduct in dishonouring Mr Fleming's cheque. No doubt the estates of the late William Ireland have since been sequestrated at the defenders' instance on the 29th April, but that does not appear to the Sheriff to be any good reason for dishonouring Mr Fleming's cheque on the 30th January; under this sequestration it may be that Mr Fleming or Mrs Ireland may be bound to draw this money from the defenders' bank and convey it to a trustee when appointed. The defenders themselves cannot convey it to the trustee. The money must be drawn out of the bank by those entitled to do so. It seems to the Sheriff that it would lead to great confusion in business if banks were to be entitled to inquire how funds lodged with them by a trustee were to be applied by such trustee. A bank is discharged by the signature of the party who lodged the money. The trustee is liable to account not to the bank but to the beneficiaries under the trust.”

The defenders appealed to the First Division, and argued—The right of the executrix to demand payment is superseded by the bankruptcy Fleming's right is no higher than hers, and the cause should be sisted till a judicial factor is appointed on the deceased's estate, and intimation ordered to be made to him of the process— Gray v. Johnston, L.R., 3 E. & I. App. 1—this is the ordinary course in a depending process.

Answered for pursuers—The bank was not entitled to refuse payment; they do not aver any grounds of suspicion; as depositaries they cannot object to the title of the depositor— Lopez v. Stewart, 1871, 9 Macph. 957.

Judgment:

At advising—

Lord President—This is a very clear case. One of the pursuers is widow and executrix of her deceased husband, a merchant in Dundee; the other, Mr Fleming, was her cautioner and her confidential agent. The executry estate consisted in part of funds lodged on account-current which this lady had opened in the usual way with the North of Scotland Banking Company. The money was lodged in the name of Mr Fleming for behoof of the representatives of the late William Ireland, and the reason of this is plain, to secure Mr Fleming as cautioner for the executrix—quite a natural and proper arrangement. Of course Mr Fleming could draw on the account while the funds lasted, and what are the averments of the pursuers and the defenders' answers on this point? They say—“That the pursuer Alexander Gilruth Fleming lodged the said moneys so collected and recovered by him on behalf of the co-pursuer, as executrix foresaid, on account-current with the defenders, at their branch office at Dundee, in name of ‘A. G. Fleming, for behoof of the representatives of the late William Ireland, hardware merchant, Dundee.’ The amount standing at the credit of that account at this date, exclusive of interest, is £413, 5s. 3d. sterling, and this sum is due by the defenders to the pursuer Alexander Gilruth Fleming, on behalf of the co-pursuer Isabella Rogers Butchart or Ireland, as executrix foresaid and the sole representative of the said deceased William Ireland. ( Ans.) Admitted that the male pursuer lodged certain moneys in an account-current in his name, ‘for behoof of the representatives of the late William Ireland, hardware merchant, Dundee,’ with the defenders' branch at Dundee, and that on 30th January 1880 the balance at the credit of that account, exclusive of interest, amounted to £413, 5s. 3d.” Then the pursuers further aver that in these circumstances “The pursuer Isabella Rogers Butchart or Ireland, requiring the sum of £100 sterling for the purposes of the said executry, got her agent, the pursuer Alexander Gilruth Fleming, to draw a cheque upon the said account for said sum, which he accordingly did, and which she countersigned as executrix of the said deceased William Ireland; said cheque, which is dated 29th January 1880, and is herewith produced, was on 30th January 1880 duly presented for payment at the defenders' said branch office at Dundee, but payment thereof was illegally and unwarrantably refused, and the said cheque was duly protested for non-payment, in consequence of which the pursuers have sustained loss.” Now, on these facts, I think it is plain that the bank were wrong in refusing to cash the pursuers' cheque; for let us consider the circumstances at the time

Page: 169

it was presented. The funds to meet it were there, and the cheque was drawn by the person in whose name they were lodged, and countersigned by the executrix, to whom they belonged. Was there anything to justify the refusal? It is not said that William Ireland's estate was sequestrated, for that had not then been done, and was not done till the month of March subsequent. There was then nothing to interfere with the management of the executrix or to prevent her agent drawing funds for her. It is said, however, that he had executed a trust-deed for behoof of his creditors. But the bank has nothing to do with that. They are not entitled to assume that when a man becomes insolvent he is going to commit fraud, and while funds are in a bank the banker cannot set up a title in anyone else so as to refuse the owner's cheque or himself to account as depositary for the funds.

Lord Deas—I am entirely of the same opinion. The point of time at which the question is to be taken is the date of presentation of the cheque, and I think it was then the duty of the bank to pay it.

Lord Mure—I am of the same opinion.

Lord Shand—I am of the same opinion. If there had been an averment to the effect that the bank were aware that the depositor who asked back the money he had deposited was about to commit a breach of trust, then there might have been something said for their right to retain the funds. But all that is said is that he had executed a trust-deed, and the bank are bound to fulfil their contract of deposit.

Their Lordships dismissed the appeal.

Counsel:

Counsel for the Appellants and Defenders— Kinnear— H. J. Moncreiff. Agents— Carment, Wedderburn, & Watson, W.S.

Counsel for Respondents and Pursuers— Rhind. Agent— Robert Menzies, S.S.C.

1880


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URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1880/18SLR0167.html