TREVOR
v.
FUHRMANN.
Docket No. 24, Calendar No. 45,924.
Supreme Court of Michigan.
Decided November 27, 1953.Francis W. McCauley (Wayne A. Anderson, of counsel), for plaintiff.
Fildew, DeGree & Fleming and Wallace Visscher, for defendant.
CARR, J.
Plaintiff brought suit to recover from defendant the sum of $13,000, claiming that he had been induced to part with the money through the fraud of a third person and that defendant had received it without payment of consideration therefor. The declaration alleged that on or about the 27th of October, 1951, one Eva Lott undertook to procure a loan from plaintiff, representing that she intended to use the money to finance a certain investment that *221 she claimed to have previously made and that plaintiff would be repaid within a few days thereafter. Plaintiff alleged that he relied on the representations by Mrs. Lott, that said statements were in fact false and made with intent to cheat and defraud him, and that Mrs. Lott intended to use the money to pay certain existing debts that she owed.
Plaintiff further alleged that he made an appointment with Mrs. Lott to meet her at a certain bank for the purpose of delivering the money to her, that at the appointed time Mrs. Lott did not come in person but sent another party to receive the funds, requesting plaintiff by telephone to give to such party a check in the sum of $13,000 for her account. Plaintiff complied with the request. He further claimed that subsequently the check was indorsed by Mrs. Lott's representative to the order of the defendant and was later paid by the bank on which it was drawn. The pleading did not aver any fraud on the part of defendant, or in fact any knowledge on her part of Mrs. Lott's fraudulent misrepresentations, if such there were, but asserted that as a result of the transaction defendant became "unjustly enriched" in the sum of $13,000 to which sum the plaintiff was legally entitled.
On the trial of the case plaintiff offered testimony tending to show that Mrs. Lott had negotiated the loan by representing that she intended to use the money to protect an investment or trust fund in the Oxford Paint & Varnish Company of Oxford, Ohio, and that within a few days she would be in position to make repayment. Plaintiff testified in substance that he believed Mrs. Lott's statements and that he issued the check to her representative, Mrs. Borck, who was Mrs. Lott's stepmother, in reliance on the truth thereof. At the time he took a note, signed by Mrs. Borck, in the amount of the check.
*222 Mrs. Borck was called as a witness on behalf of plaintiff, testifying that she represented Mrs. Lott in actually obtaining the check from him. She then took it to Mrs. Lott who directed her to deliver it to Fred W. Fuhrmann, the husband of the defendant in this case. Thereupon Mrs. Borck went to the Fuhrmann home and, having indorsed the check, handed it to Mr. Fuhrmann. It was the claim of the latter that he had previously loaned money to Mrs. Lott and that the check handed to him by Mrs. Borck was in repayment of a portion of such loans.
Mr. and Mrs. Fuhrmann testified that some conversation was had with Mrs. Borck as to the form of the indorsement, and that Mr. Fuhrmann requested, or directed, that the instrument be indorsed to Mrs. Fuhrmann to the end that she might deposit it in the bank. Accordingly Mrs. Fuhrmann wrote on the back of the check the words "Pay to the order of Louise C. Fuhrmann," and Mrs. Borck signed her name beneath. A couple of days later Mrs. Fuhrmann deposited the check in the National Bank of Detroit, in which Mr. and Mrs. Fuhrmann maintained a joint account. Subsequently the check was paid by the Wabeek State Bank on which it was drawn.
It appears from the undisputed testimony of both Mr. and Mrs. Fuhrmann that the money in their account in the National Bank of Detroit came from the earnings of the former and that Mrs. Fuhrmann had no income of her own. It thus appears that the husband was the actual owner of the funds in the account. Murphy v. Michigan Trust Co., 221 Mich. 243; Van't Hof v. Jemison, 291 Mich. 385. It may be noted further that the money loaned by Mr. Fuhrmann to Mrs. Lott was checked from this same account.
It was the claim of defendant on the trial that in the transaction in question she acted merely as the *223 agent of her husband, that the check was indorsed to her and deposited by her for the convenience of Mr. Fuhrmann, that the check was in payment of an obligation owing to him alone, and that she did not in fact receive the money that plaintiff was seeking to recover. Testimony offered in her behalf for the purpose of showing what actually occurred at the time Mrs. Borck brought the check to Mr. Fuhrmann was objected to by counsel for plaintiff, and was received at the time subject to such objection, but was later disregarded by the trial judge in reaching a decision in the case, apparently on the theory that the form of indorsement on the check was conclusive. Judgment was entered for the plaintiff and defendant has appealed, claiming that the negotiable instruments law[*] is not involved in the case.
The averments of the declaration clearly indicate that plaintiff did not seek recovery on the check, but was prosecuting his action on the theory of money had and received. It was, in substance, his claim, as set forth in his pleading, that defendant had in her possession a sum of money which belonged to him and which he was entitled to recover. The theory of such an action was considered by this Court in the early case of Moore v. Mandlebaum, 8 Mich. 433, 448, where it was said:
"We understand the law to be well settled, that the action of assumpsit for money had and received is essentially an equitable action, founded upon all the equitable circumstances of the case between the parties, and if it appear, from the whole case, that the defendant has in his hands money which, according to the rules of equity and good conscience, belongs, or ought to be paid, to the plaintiff, he is entitled to recover. And that, as a general rule, where money has been received by a defendant under any state of facts which would in a court of equity entitle the *224 plaintiff to a decree for the money, when that is the specific relief sought, the same state of facts will entitle him to recover the money in this action."
The foregoing statement was quoted with approval in Weintraub v. H.B. Earhart, Incorporated, 273 Mich. 668, 674. It will be noted that such statement clearly imports that the defendant, in order to be held liable, must have received the money that the plaintiff seeks to recover. Of like import are Wixson v. Haywood, 33 Mich. 68, and Clark, Mason & Co. v. Parker, Webb & Co., 131 Mich. 139. In recognition of the rule of law in this respect it was said in Northwestern Upholstering Company v. First National Bank & Trust Company of Minneapolis, 193 Minn 333 (258 N.W. 724):
"An action in indebitatus assumpsit for money had and received will not lie against one who has not been personally enriched by the transaction. Erickson v. Borchardt, 177 Minn 381 (225 N.W. 145); Burleson v. Langdon, 174 Minn 264 (219 N.W. 155)."
See, also, 58 CJS, p 929, § 23; 4 Am Jur, p 510.
In Marine Company v. City of Milwaukee, 151 Wis 239 (138 N.W. 640), the plaintiff brought action to recover the amount of a special assessment paid under protest, claiming that it was invalid. However, the money had been paid over to the contractor who held a special assessment certificate issued pursuant to the city charter. In holding that the plaintiff was not entitled to recover in an action for money had and received, it was said:
"Such action is founded upon the theory that the defendant has the money which is sought to be recovered, or that he has been enriched by the transaction, so that in equity and good conscience he should be compelled to turn over to plaintiff a portion or the whole of the amount in controversy. The basis of a common-law action for money had and received *225 is not only the loss occasioned to the plaintiff on account of the payment of the money, but the consequent enrichment of the defendant by reason of having received the same."
Counsel for plaintiff cites and discusses the case of Walker v. Conant, 65 Mich. 194. This Court there reversed an order of the trial court sustaining a demurrer to the plaintiff's declaration in assumpsit and remanded the case for trial on the merits. On such trial defendant had judgment and plaintiff again appealed, with the result that the judgment was affirmed. Walker v. Conant, 69 Mich. 321 (13 Am St Rep 391). The later opinion discusses the material facts, and the first opinion in the controversy should be read in conjunction therewith.
In view of the nature of the action defendant was entitled to show in the instant case that she did not actually receive plaintiff's money and was not "unjustly enriched" thereby. The testimony offered by her in this connection was competent. It was sufficient to overcome any possible inference or presumption arising from the form of the indorsement on the check and to establish beyond question, being uncontradicted in any respect, that defendant was not liable. The judgment entered against her must be reversed.
The case is remanded to the trial court with directions to set aside the judgment in plaintiff's favor and to enter judgment for defendant. Appellant may have costs.
DETHMERS, C.J., and ADAMS, BUTZEL, BUSHNELL, SHARPE, BOYLES, and REID, JJ., concurred.
NOTES
[*] CL 1948, § 439.1 et seq. (Stat Ann § 19.41 et seq.). REPORTER.