pleadings. The allegations in the plaintiff’s petition are substantially as follows: That one Mrs. Elizabeth Mueller took out a policy on her own life in the Germania Life Insurance Company for $1,000 payable to herself or her executors, administrators or assigns, and on which was to be paid during her life a semiannual premium of twenty-seven dollars and fifty cents; that in 1872 the assured for a valuable consideration, assigned and delivered her said policy to Cornelius and the defendant Menia, alias Philomena Arn, the latter then being husband and wife; that in 1879, the said Cornelius and Menia, being unable to pay the premiums then and thereafter to become due on said policy, requested the plaintiff to pay the same, and as a security therefor delivered to him the said policy; that in 1880 the said Cornelius died; that in. 1892, the said Menia, for a valuable consideration, assigned said policy to plaintiff; that in 1897 the assured died and in consequence thereof there became due on said policy $1,124.20 to the proper beneficiary; that at the time of the death of the assured plaintiff, for the purpose of keeping said policy alive, had advanced in accordance with the said request of the said Cornelius and Menia Arn the sum of $1,137.75; that the said insur
The administrator answered admitting that the insurance money had been received and was held by him as alleged in plaintiff’s petition, and was subject to the orders of the court.
The other defendant by her answer put in issue the allegations of plaintiff’s petition and claimed that she was the owner of the policy at the time of the death of the assured and that the amount collected thereon by the administrator was collected for her use and benefit and she therefore prayed that the said administrator be required to pay over said amount to her.
There was a trial resulting in a decree for defendant Menia Am in conformity to the prayer of her answer. The plaintiff appeals.
Life insurance: assignment of .policy: joint ownership: survivor-ship: assignee: action. The objection is made that there is no equity in the plaintiff’s petition. If this objection is well taken it is fatal. The assignment of the policy to Cornelius and Menia Am created a joint ownership of the policy and Menia being the surviving joint assignee took the policy by survivorship. Shields v. Stillman, 48 Mo. 82; State v. Brady, 52 Mo. App. 202. Menia having made a formal assignment
money had and received • ls-iw and equity. Originally, actions for money bad and received were of purely equitable cognizance. But courts of law now universally exercise jurisdiction in sucb actions except in_ those cases where adequate relief can only be obtained in equity, or where tbe transactions are complicated and a discovery from the defendant is required. Coal Co. v. Slevin, 56 Mo. App. 107; Clark v. Bank, 57 Mo. App. 277. Tbe plaintiff having a plain, adequate and complete remedy at law, there was neither necessity nor occasion for invoking tbe aid of a court of equity by a bill of interpleader.
Action:ínterjurisdiction^1^ But it is no barrier to a court of equity proceedings to grant relief in a cause, even if there be an adequate remedy at law, as here, for in sucb case tbe court will go forward and afford relief in any cause of action, legal or equitable. Blair v. Railway, 89 Mo. loc. cit. 393; Harper v. Rosenberger, 56 Mo. App. 388. This is a suit by one claimant of a fund against another claimant and tbe bolder thereof, tbe object of which is to obtain a decree awarding tbe fund to him. Hathaway v. Foy, 40 Mo. 540, was a suit in tbe nature of a bill of interpleader brought by tbe claimant of certain unpaid dividends which bad been declared on one hundred shares of stock in a certain incorporated railway company against another claimant and tbe bolder thereof. Tbe prayer was that tbe bolder of tbe dividend be decreed to pay tbe same over to plaintiff, etc. Tk sourt, in tbe course of tbe opinion, says
In Boyer v. Hamilton, 21 Mo. App. 521, it was said that the debtor alone and not the creditor can' maintain a bill of interpleader. It was further said in the same connection that the fund in controversy was not in the possession of the court and the court could never have made any order in regard to its distribution even if the pleadings and evidence had warranted
But the plaintiff contends that the principles announced by these authorities have no application since the adoption of section 1994; Revised Statutes 1889. But a reference to that section as it stood in the Revisions of 1865 and 1879 will show that the same has not been changed by the amendment further than to make the rule as to joining parties apply in suits in equity as well as in actions at law. It is not believed that by this amendment of the statute it was intended to require a departure from the well .established principles of pleading announced in the cases to which we have adverted. If the plaintiff had brought his action at law against the administrator to recover the fund, the latter might have answered in the nature of a bill of interpleader and prayed that he be permitted to pay the fund into court and for an order requiring the adverse claimants to assert their rights thereto. By
tice: equit/cases: deferment to trial court: conflicting Even if the pleadings had been framed, so that the court could have tried and 'determined the rights of the parties in respect to the fund, yet on account of the numerous glaring and irreconcilable conflicts in the testimony presented by the record, we A J ’ should have deferred to the finding of the trial court so far as the rights of the plaintiff are concerned. The rule of practice now is, that where the testimony is conflicting, or where it is evenly balanced and the finding seems to be correct, the revisory courts will so far defer to the finding. Benne v. Schnecko, 100 Mo. 250; Clark v. Bank, ante. Under the testimony the court might very well have found that the plaintiff at the request of Cornelius and Menia Arn made the advancements of the several semiannual premiums on the said policy as claimed by him and yet that the amount of such advancements had in one way and another been returned to him so that when this suit was begun there was nothing due him on that account. Buc since, on account of the fatal infirmity in the pleadings, to which we have already referred, we shall cut the case up by the roots, it will serve no useful purpose to either review the testimony or notice the propositions of law discussed in the briefs of counsel.