Andrew v. Farmers & Merchants State Bank

218 N.W. 520, 205 Iowa 712
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedMarch 13, 1928
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 218 N.W. 520 (Andrew v. Farmers & Merchants State Bank) 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. Farmers & Merchants State Bank, 218 N.W. 520, 205 Iowa 712 (iowa 1928).

Opinion

Morling, J.

The principal question argued is whether the settlement is in the interest of the depositors. The receiver, while filing a general denial, and setting up his reasons for the settlement, further in answer asked:

‘ ‘ If there is any just, valid, or legal reason for holding that the same is not a good settlement, and not for the best interests of the depositors, that then the court make such orders in the premises as will restore it status quo.”

On the face of the guaranty, the directors apparently guaranteed payment of bills receivable amounting in the total to $394,775.63, of which $270,984.26 is classified as doubtful. The amount now claimed on the guaranty is $256,943.33. Before the bank closed, the directors had deposited their notes for upwards of $81,000, for the pui’pose of carrying through a merger with another bank, and had agreed to a stock assessment. They appear to have property subject to execution approaching in value the amount of the guaranty. The settlement made and approved was for $36,000. Over against this startling contrast are the facts that the application is made by only five depositors. The total number of depositors and the total amount. of deposits do not appear, further, than that, at a depositors’ meeting, 200 to 250 are said to have been present, .and the receiver asserts in argument (apparently with the acquiescence of applicants) that the total amount of deposits is $470,000. The deposits of the five applicants are $10,720.79. The settlement was approved by the five members of the depositors’ committee (acting in this respect, however, individually, but apparently with the acquiescence of all depositors except applicants). ' It was approved by the examiner in charge, by the banking department, by the attorney-general, and by the court ex parte. Judge Kelley, of the twelfth district, was specially assigned to *714 hear the present application, and after a trial, announced not only his concurrence in the ex-parte order, but also affirmatively his conclusion that it was for the best interest of all concerned that the settlement be allowed to stand.

Applicants complain that the trial court did not pass upon the validity of the guaranty. At the time of the settlement, the directors claimed that the guaranty was without consideration. The settlement was approved December 2, 1924. The order of confirmation entered on the trial of this proceeding was made December 4, 1926. Our opinion in In re Estate of Prunty, 201 Iowa 670, handed down March 16, 1926, determining that in such a case there is a sufficient consideration, seems not to have come to the notice of the parties or the trial court. That case has recently been followed in Hills Sav. Bank v. Hirt, 204 Iowa 940. Under the rule of those cases, there was a sufficient consideration for the guaranty; but the question was an open one when the settlement was made. Though the guaranty is valid for such liability as can be proved to come within its terms, the question remains whether the settlement made upon it is in the interest of the depositors. The validity of the covenant of the guaranty on its face is but one factor. Abstractly, it may be valid and actionable. Concretely, the question still is, What amount of recovery upon it, if any, is warranted by the facts?

The guaranty is dated December 27, 1922. It recites an examination of the bank, from which the superintendent of banking and examiners had expressed the “opinion that the following described bills receivable or other assets of the party of the second part are of doubtful value. (A list of said assets being attached hereto, and identified as Exhibit A.) ” In terms, the directors “severally hereby guarantee payment on or before three years from this date of each and every said bills receivable or any renewals of the same, and hereby waive notice of the acceptance of this guaranty and agree that this guaranty shall continue in full force and effect until the bills receivable or renewals thereof have been fully converted into cash. ’ ’ Exhibit A of the guaranty is made in three columns: the first headed “Name of Borrower,” the second, “Total Amount in Bank,” and third, “Amount Doubtful.” There are some 42 borrowers listed, the amounts against them ranging from $75 up to $35,723.52. Most of them are large amounts. As illustrations, *715 Ave may take the folloAving items opposite the names of different borrowers: One item shows total amount in bank $3,500; amount. doubtful, $2,000. Another item shows the total amount in bank $6,037.80, amount doubtful, $6,037.80; another, total amount in ( bank $22,929.42, amount doubtful, $12,000; another, total amount in bank $35,723.52, amount doubtful, $35,723.52. Some 22 of the items have the same amount in both columns. That is, the amount doubtful is the same as the total amount in the bank. These aggregate some $175,000. The footing of the items in the column headed “total amount in bank” is $394,775.63. The footing of the doubtful column is $270,984.26. An appendix to the agreement, added before signing, provides:

“That Avhen any of the above bills receivable listed in Exhibit A and classed as doubtful have been or are eliminated from the published assets of the Farmers & Merchants State Bank, Washington, Iowa, either by cash, assessment, charging same to undivided profits or surplus reduced to undivided 'profits or by securities acceptable to the superintendent of banking said guarantors whose signatures are attached hereto, shall be released from payment of bills receivable as are eliminated in the above mentioned manner. Guarantors further reserve the right to exercise any of above mentioned methods to eliminate such doubtful bills receivable and that if an assessment is agreed upon same Avill be enforced as per the statutes of this state.”

A question Avhich to the court seems quite determinative receives but little attention from appellants in argument. That is, in ‘applying the guaranty to the bills receivable of the bank, upon AA’hat ones and in Avhat amounts would the receiver be entitled to recover of the guarantors! The applicants went into the subject Avith great thoroughness, by means of an audit made by a firm of certified accountants. These accountants returned to applicants an elaborate report, consisting of 13 pages of comments and explanations and nearly 300 pages of details of all notes found in the bank of borroAvers named in Exhibit A to the guaranty. The report contained topical summaries, and also a general summary, consisting of three pages of notations and 22 columns of results of the examination with respect to each borrower. The guaranty is dated December 27, 1922. The bank closed April 28, 1924. The auditor’s feport to applicants is made as of May 31, 1925. In this report it is said:

*716 “We made no application of payments, so as to show onlj-the net amount open, or to show such of the most recent notes that would make úp such net amount, but show, in every case, all the loans and all the payments which result in the note which we were tracing.

“All the loans that were yet open on the date of this report, with the exception of those that were considered good and collectible, have been handled as outlined above, but there were cases in which persons, whose open loans were traced, had other loans during the period with which we have not concerned ourselves. ’ ’

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Bluebook (online)
218 N.W. 520, 205 Iowa 712, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/andrew-v-farmers-merchants-state-bank-iowa-1928.