Andrew v. American Savings Bank & Trust Co.

258 N.W. 911, 219 Iowa 921
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedFebruary 12, 1935
DocketNo. 42109.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 258 N.W. 911 (Andrew v. American Savings Bank & Trust Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Andrew v. American Savings Bank & Trust Co., 258 N.W. 911, 219 Iowa 921 (iowa 1935).

Opinion

Powers, J.

The American Commercial & Savings Bank of Davenport, Iowa, and the Citizens Trust & Savings Bank of Davenport, Iowa, were each independently engaged in the banking business at Davenport. The Citizens Trust & Savings Bank was a relatively *924 small institution, having a capital of $150,000, and deposits of approximately $2,000,000. The American Commercial & Savings Bank was a much larger institution, having a capital of $1,500,000, and deposits of approximately $32,000,000. Affiliated with the American Commercial & Savings Bank of Davenport was an independent corporation doing a trust and investment business and known as the American Trust Company of Davenport, Iowa. All the stock in the American Trust Company was held by trustees for the benefit of the stockholders of the American Commercial & Savings-Bank in the proportion that said stockholders owned stock in the American Commercial & Savings Bank. For brevity, these institutions will be referred to as the Citizens Bank, the American Bank, and the affiliate,' respectively.

On April 27, 1931, the two banking institutions entered into a contract, subject to the approval of the stockholders of each institution, which was denominated a plan of merger consolidation and capital readjustment. This contract provided that the American Bank should purchase all the property of the Citizens Bank, subject to its liabilities, for a consideration to be paid to the stockholders of the Citizens Bank of $160 per share; that in order to effect the sale, the American Bank would increase its capital stock by 1,000 shares of the par value of $100 each, or $100,000, and make 923 of such additional shares available to the stockholders of the Citizens Bank at $260 per share; that the officers of the Citizens Bank would arrange and provide for the purchase by stockholders of the Citizens Bank of said 923 additional shares of the American Bank at $260 per share; that each stockholder of the Citizens Bank should have the privilege of subscribing to shares of the American Bank equal in number to the shares previously held by said stockholder in the Citizens Bank; that the $160 per share to be paid by the American Bank was to be made available as a liquidating dividend, but the proportion thereof to be given any stockholder of the Citizens Bank could be applied, first, as a payment on the subscription of any such stockholder to the capital stock of the American Bank; that the American Bank was to put three stockholders of the Citizens Bank on its board of directors; that the officers and employees of the Citizens Bank were to be taken over and given employment by the American Bank; that the shares of stock in the American Bank should carry with them a pro rata equitable interest in the outstanding stock of the affiliate; that “subject to the approval of the Banking Department, it is con *925 templated” that the American Bank should change its name to the American Savings & Trust Company, or some other suitable name, that it would change its articles of incorporation so as to authorize it to exercise trust powers, and that the trust business of the affiliate should be taken over by the American Bank, that all other assets of the affiliate be taken over by the American Bank, except assets sufficient to support a capital of $160,000, that the affiliate should change its name to the American Company, should increase its capital stock from $100,000 to $160,000, and continue in operation only as an investment company.

The stockholders of the Citizens Bank were circularized and before the date set for the stockholders meeting enough subscriptions had been obtained for stock in the American Bank to insure Lhe carrying out of the arrangement.

Thereafter, and on the 29th day of May, 1931, this contract was submitted to the stockholders of each of the banking institutions at a special stockholders meeting duly called to consider the proposition and was approved by each group of stockholders; and on that day, or the following day, all the assets of the Citizens Bank were moved over and became a part of the assets of the American Bank, and the American Bank assumed all the deposit liabilities of the Citizens Bank.

Frank J. Riling, the claimant herein, and his wife owned forty-five shares in the Citizens Bank. He subscribed for the same number of shares in the American Bank, and on June 10th paid the additional $4,500 to complete the purchase.

The American Bank changed its name, as contemplated by the contract, increased its capital stock, acquired trust powers, and took into its organization the officers and employees of the Citizens Bank, and assumed the deposit liabilities of the Citizens Bank. All the things which the contract provided should be done were done except that the transfer of the trust business from the affiliate to the American Bank was not made and the capital stock of the affiliate was not increased and its name was not changed, as contemplated by the contract.

The American Bank and its affiliate continued to operate without objection or complaint on the part of Mr. Riling or his wife, or any other stockholder who had been a stockholder in the Citizens Bank, or any other person until the first day of October, 1931, when insolvency proceedings were instituted against the American Bank, *926 and the superintendent of banking placed in charge of the bank for liquidation as an insolvent institution. Thereafter, Riling having-succeeded to the rights of his wife, filed a claim in the receivership proceedings for $11,700, or the liquidating dividend on the forty-five shares of stock in the Citizens Bank at $160 per share, and the $4,500 represented by the check which he sent to- the president of the Citizens Bank as a subscription for additional stock in the American Bank, and a preference was asked in payment of said claim on the theory that the amount was a trust fund in the hands of the American Bank. Claimant also alleged in a separate count of his cláim that the assets which the American Bank had taken over from the Citizens Bank were held in trust by the American Bank for the creditors of the Citizens Bank and asked that his claim be established against them. The claim was rejected by the receiver and the action of the receiver confirmed by the court after hearing had; and from that ruling this appeal was taken to this court.

I. It is urged that the American Bank took the $4,500 and the liquidating dividend on the Citizens Bank stock, amounting to $7,200, in trust for a special purpose, viz: to hold the same for investment in the stock of the new financial institution, to be formed in the merger and consolidation. The difficulty with this contention is that it does not fit the facts in this case, and the principle invoked cannot, therefore, be applied here. There was no new financial institution provided for by the contract, or described in appellant’s stock subscription. The so-called merger agreement provided for the purchase of the assets of the Citizens Bank by the American Bank and that shares in the American Bank should be made available to the stockholders of the Citizens Bank. The claimant signed a subscription for stock in the American Bank. This subscription is as follows:

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Bluebook (online)
258 N.W. 911, 219 Iowa 921, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/andrew-v-american-savings-bank-trust-co-iowa-1935.