Anderson v. Bundy

171 S.E. 501, 161 Va. 1, 1933 Va. LEXIS 296
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedSeptember 21, 1933
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 171 S.E. 501 (Anderson v. Bundy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Anderson v. Bundy, 171 S.E. 501, 161 Va. 1, 1933 Va. LEXIS 296 (Va. 1933).

Opinion

Holt, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

In this suit an attempt is being made to hold directors liable for negligence in the administration of the affairs of their bank. There was a decree for the defendants. Plaintiffs have appealed.

In the village of Cleveland, the People’s Bank of Cleveland was established in 1907 and continued in operation [5]*5until May 10, 1928, when it was forced to suspend and a receiver was appointed1. Its paid in capital was $10,000. Taking its record at its face value there was a surplus in 1922 of $5,000 with $531.93 to the credit of undivided profits. In 1923 the surplus was $6,000; undivided profits $40.31. In 1924 the surplus was $7,000, and undivided profits, $2.97. In 1923 surplus was $9,000 and undivided profits $42.73. In 1926 surplus was $10,000 and undivided profits $93.76. In 1927 the surplus was $10,000 and undivided profits $78.84. And finally in 1928 the surplus was still $10,000 with undivided profits $17.93. In 1922 a ten per cent dividend was declared; in 1923 a fifteen per cent dividend; in 1925 a six per cent dividend, and in 1926 a ten per cent dividend. No dividends were paid in 1927 or 1928. Net profits for 1922 were $1,508.38; for 1923, $2,462.66; for 1924, $2,039.76; for 1925, $1,407.83; for 1926, $921.25, while for 1927 there was a loss of $60.65.

From the minutes of its hoard these gentlemen appear as members of the board of directors: In 1920, T. L. Bundy (president), M. A. Thompson, J. S. Tate and J. B. Kennedy. In 1924, T. L. Bundy, J. S. Tate, P. H. Bundy and E. F. Jessee constituted the board. From the 10th of January, 1925, to the 9th of January, 1926, T. L. Bundy, P. H. Bundy, M. A. Thompson, J. S. Tate and E. F. Jessee made up the board. They continued in office until the 15th day of January, 1927. From that date until the bank closed the board was made up of T. L. Bundy, J. S. Tate, M. A. Thompson, E. L. Musick, W. A. Jessee, C. B. Jessee and E. F. Jessee.

To complainants’ bill T. L. Bundy, J. S. Tate, P. H. Bundy, M. A. Thompson and E. L. Musick demurred and answered. There was an amended and supplemental bill to which they again demurred and there was after-wards a second amended supplemental bill. On March 10, 1932, the trial court, holding with the defendants, dismissed this cause and ordered it to be stricken from the docket.

In January, 1920, E. F. Jessee was employed as cashier and continued in that office and as the executive officer [6]*6of the bank until its final suspension. He was a young man, amply competent, of pleasing address, and then of good reputation, although he had no property of moment.

It is charged that he ran this bank with the single purpose of promoting the interest of himself, his kins-people and associates; that over him his board exercised no real supervision; and that this situation continued until the institution was wrecked.

The defendants claim that they did, with due care, superintend the operations of their bank, and that its failure was due to change of business conditions in its vicinity, to the falling away of customers and to embezzlements by the cashier which were not known to them and could not have been known by them in the exercise of ordinary care.

In 1920 this cashier became interested in the Jessee Department Store, No. 1, at Cleveland, a partnership composed of J. S. Jessee, his father, W. A. Jessee, his uncle, and C. B. Jessee, his cousin. In 1922, he, together with W. A. Jessee, J. A. Jessee and C. B. Jessee bought the merchandise of Kingsport Stores Corporation at Clinchfield, agreeing to pay therefor $40,000. In 1923, he, with W. A. Jessee, J. A. Jessee and C. B. Jessee, opened a drug store. In the same year he, with C. B. Jessee and S. J. Scordas, opened a pool room. In the same year, with W. A. Jessee and C. B. Jessee, he opened another pool room and a barber shop. In 1924 he went into partnership with M. T. Kiser, under the name of Kiser & Co. About the same time he, with C. B. Jessee, went into the bottling business, under the name of Cleveland Bottling Company. He went into the poultry business with A. M. McReynolds, and he went into the poultry business with A. R. Jessee. He went into another poultry business with C. B. Jessee, W. A. Jessee, J. C. Tate and S. J. Cody. He went into business with W. A. Jessee, J. A. Jessee and C. B. Jessee under the style of Cleveland Motor Company. In 1925 he went into business with W. A. Jessee. J. A. Jessee, C. B. Jessee and M. C. Looney under the name of [7]*7Jessee Furniture Company. With C. B. Jessee he operated the Jewell Theatre, and also with him they opened up another pool room and barber shop and possibly he again ventured into the poultry business.

All of these undertakings must have been known to the directors, centering as they did around a community in which the bank was and where they lived. He built for himself a handsome home. Needless to say they were failing ventures and all of the Jessees are now bankrupt.

As indicative of the confidence placed in this cashier, he was by the board of directors, on February 21, 1925, authorized to borrow unlimited sums of money and that authority was never revoked, although in December, 1926, he was arrested for unlawfully passing counterfeit money. After the bank failed he confessed and was sent to the penitentiary.

T. L. Bundy was president, Tate was vice-president. There were monthly meetings of the board as provided for by statute (Code, section 4149 (23)), and twice each year (Code, section 4149 (24)), examinations, called for by statute, of the bank’s affairs were had. It is claimed that the cashier’s reports were examined with care and that at each meeting the minutes of the preceding meeting were read and approved. In short, these gentlemen contend that the duties which devolved upon them at monthly meetings were properly performed and that they semi-annually examined generally the affairs of their bank.

The cashier, E. F. Jessee, is an embezzler and a convict. He tells us that he wrote up minutes of the directors’ meetings, and that as written by him they were accepted and signed without any real examination at all. This the directors deny, but Jessee’s testimony is intrinsically supported by the minutes themselves. From them it appears that C. B. Jessee was present as a director of the meeting of December 22, 1927, and in his capacity as director signed the record of that meeting. The same is true of the meeting of October 22, 1927; of the meet[8]*8ing of September 24, 1927; of the meeting of August 20, 1927; of the meeting of July 23, 1927; of the meeting of June 25, 1927; of the meeting of February 19, 1927; and of the meeting of January 22, 1927. C. B. Jessee appears to have been elected a director at a meeting on January 15, 1927. He never qualified and was never present at any of these meetings, and, as we shall further see, these directors have no real recollection about the extension of an extraordinary line of credit to J. A. Jessee, to W. A. Jessee and to C. B. Jessee.

The loans to these Jessees is a matter of major importance. Certainly they in a large measure brought about ultimate bankruptcy.

By Acts of 1920, pages 818, 820, chapter 491 (section 4115), it is provided that the liability of no person, partnership or corporation shall exceed twenty-five per cent of the bank’s capital and permanent surplus unless authorized by a majority of the board of directors and recorded in its minutes.

This statutory limitation.. was afterwards changed.

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Bluebook (online)
171 S.E. 501, 161 Va. 1, 1933 Va. LEXIS 296, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/anderson-v-bundy-va-1933.