American Insurers' Life Ins. v. First Nat'l. Bank

367 S.W.2d 97, 236 Ark. 361, 1963 Ark. LEXIS 628
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedApril 1, 1963
Docket5-2868
StatusPublished

This text of 367 S.W.2d 97 (American Insurers' Life Ins. v. First Nat'l. Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
American Insurers' Life Ins. v. First Nat'l. Bank, 367 S.W.2d 97, 236 Ark. 361, 1963 Ark. LEXIS 628 (Ark. 1963).

Opinions

Ed. F. McFaddin, Associate Justice.

This litigation arose by complaint filed by the First National Bank in Blytheville against The American Insurers’ Life Insurance Company and also Mrs. Gladys Gill, executrix of the estate of H. Noble Gill, deceased. There were answers, cross-complaints, and interventions by various parties; and a great mass of evidence and exhibits were offered in the trial in the Chancery Court, so that the record now before us is voluminous and the issues are varied. At the outset, we identify the parties:

(a) The First National Bank in Blytheville is a national banking corporation and is hereinafter identified as “Bank.”

(b) Mrs. Gladys Gill is the executrix of the estate of H. Noble Gill, who departed this life testate on June 11, 1960, a citizen and resident of Mississippi County, Arkansas.

(c) The American Insurers’ Life Insurance Company is an insurance company organized under the laws of Arkansas on the 28th day of February, 1958; and will be hereinafter identified as “American Insurers.”

(d) Lester Gill is a brother of H. Noble Gill, deceased.

(e) Other parties, referred to as “Intervenors, ’ ’ were creditors of H. Noble Gill, and are Primrose Oil Company, Blytheville Propane Company, Buchanan Agency, and Marcus Evrard.

This appeal brings into the open some of the tangled affairs of the late H. Noble Gill. He owned interests and equities in a number of enterprises in Eastern Arkansas, including' stock in the Cape County Milling Company of Jackson, Missouri, and in the Dell Compress of Dell, Arkansas ; and also lands in Mississippi County, Arkansas, and in the State of Mississippi. Most all of his holdings were encumbered, but the general public thought he had considerable equity. On February 28, 1958, H. Noble Gill organized the “American Insurers”; and transferred to it substantially all of his various holdings and equities for 1,941,468 shares of no par value stock in American Insurers. Among other assets there was the equity of his shares of stock in the Cape Comity Milling Company held by the Bank. Gill envisaged that he could sell some of his stock in American Insurers1 to pay the Bank’s claim, and also that a large income tax liability would be avoided. For convenience, we list and discuss the controversies between the various litigants.

I. The Issiies Between The Bank And American Insurers. At all times from August 4, 1956 to his death, H. Noble Gill was indebted to the Bank in large sums of money; and the Bank, along with other security, all the time hold for the protection of its loan all of the duly endorsed stock certificates of H. Noble Gill in the Cape County Milling Company. These certificates totalled three-fourths of all the preferred and common stock of said company. On May 4,1959, H. Noble Gill, to evidence accumulated indebtedness, executed a note to the Bank for $60,000.00, secured by all of his stock certificates in the Cape County Milling Company held by the Bank. There was also other security not necessary to be described. This $60,000.00 note was reduced by payments, so that at the time of Gill’s death the balance due the Bank was $30,000.00 and interest; and on September 7,1960, the Bank filed this suit.

The American Insurers claimed title to the certificates free of the claim of the Bank because (a) H. Noble Gill executed a “Transfer of Stock”2 to American Insurers on February 28,1958; (b) the Bank (acting by its Vice President Reese) informed American Insurers on February 28, 1958 that on payment of $74,000.00 the certificates would be delivered to American Insurers; and (c) American Insurers (by Mr. Butler) paid the Bank the $74,000.00. The Chancery decree awarded relief to the Bank; and against that decree American Insurers prosecutes this appeal.

We conclude that the decree, in favor of the Bank, was correct in awarding it a prior claim on the Cape County Milling Company stock. We begin with the thoroughly established fact that H. Noble Gill’s stock certificates in Cape County Milling Company were endorsed by him and pledged to the Bank as security for his then or thereafter indebtedness to the Bank.3 Furthermore, the Bank has completely established the amount of the indebtedness of H. Noble Gill to the Bank. So the Bank has made a complete case for itself, unless and until the American Insurers as the adverse claimant can disprove or rebut the Bank’s claim.

The claim of American Insurers was really estoppel: that is, American Insurers claimed that the representative of the Bank told it that for $74,000.00 the Bank would release the H. Noble Gill stock certificates in Cape County Milling Company held by the Bank; and American Insurers paid the $74,000.00. The American Insurers had the burden of proving such estoppel (Watson v. Murray, 54 Ark. 499, 16 S. W. 293); and the Chancellor, who saw the witnesses, held that the evidence was not sufficient to sustain American Insurers on this point. We rest our affirmance on the delay and laches of American Insurers. The alleged representation by Mr. Reese was on February 28, 1958. In March 1958 American Insurers learned — as it admitted4 — that the Bank would not deliver the stock certificates. Instead of demanding a return of the $74,-000.00, American Insurers kept the notes and the assignment tendered by the Bank, as tantamount to a novation.

The American Insurers never returned the notes and assignment to the Bank; so from March 1958 to and including the trial below, American Insurers kept what the Bank tendered in lieu of the Cape County Milling Company stock certificates. From March 1958 until American Insurers filed its first pleading in this case on September 23, 1960, American Insurers never asked any court to require the Bank to surrender the Cape County Milling Company stock certificates free of the claim of the Bank. In the interval from March 1958 to September 1960, Mr. Reese, the Vice President of the Bank and the person alleged by American Insurers to have made the $74,000.00 representation, has died. H. Noble Gill, who is alleged to have heard the $74,000.00 representation, has died. There was thus a delay of two years and six months by American Insurers after it had full notice of the Bank’s refusal; and during that time many, many events have happened which have materially changed the situation of the litigants from that existing in March 1958. American Insurers was the delaying party. It took the chance that H. Noble Gill would make a success of his insurance venture. American Insurers cannot “have its cake and eat it also.” This is a clear case of loss of a claim by laches. See Walker v. Norton, 199 Ark. 593, 135 S. W. 2d 315; and Falls v. Jackson, 205 Ark. 435, 186 S. W. 2d 787. We affirm the Chancery decree in favor of the Bank on the Cape County Milling Company stock certificates.

II. The Issues Behveen Lester Gill and American Insurers. On February 7, 1957, the indebtedness of H. Noble Gill to the Bank had become so large that it was in excess of the aggregate amount of credit that the Bank could extend to one individual (that is, it was in excess of $60,000.00); so on the date mentioned Lester Gill, as a favor to his brother, H. Noble Gill, and at the request of the Bank, executed a note to the Bank for $25,000.00, signed by Lester Gill. H.

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Bluebook (online)
367 S.W.2d 97, 236 Ark. 361, 1963 Ark. LEXIS 628, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/american-insurers-life-ins-v-first-natl-bank-ark-1963.