Austin v. Burden

297 S.W. 648, 1927 Tex. App. LEXIS 632
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 20, 1927
DocketNo. 1546.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 297 S.W. 648 (Austin v. Burden) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Austin v. Burden, 297 S.W. 648, 1927 Tex. App. LEXIS 632 (Tex. Ct. App. 1927).

Opinion

WALKER, J.

Appellee instituted this suit in the district court of Montgomery county, Tex., -against Chas. O. Austin, banking commissioner, and the First State Bank of Dobbin, Tex., alleging that the bank had voluntarily placed its assets and affairs in the hands of the commissioner for liquidation; that she was an unsecured, noninterest-bear-ing depositor with the bank, at the time the commissioner took charge of its affairs, and as such prayed judgment for the amount of her deposit. The commissioner and the bank demurred to the petition on the ground of misjoinder of parties and answered by general denial, and the commissioner, by cross-action, asked for judgment against appellee, alleging that at the time the bank failed she was the owner of two shares of the capital stock of the bank, and was therefore liable on the assessment made by him against such stock. The bank also answered by cross-action against appellee.

On trial to the court without a jury the demurrers were overruled, judgment was entered in favor of appellee for the sum of ?7,-291.G3, classifying her claim as an unsecured, noninterest-bearing deposit, and against the commissioner on his cross-action. The bank abandoned its cross-action.

The court did not err in overruling the exception of the commissioner and the bank to appellee’s petition on the ground that the joining of the bank with the commissioner was a misjoinder of parties. The practice of joining the bank as a defendant with the commissioner has the approval of our Courts of Civil Appeals in Chapman v. Eastland County, 260 S. W. 889, and State Banking Board v. Pilcher, 256 S. W. 996, in both of which cases writs of error were granted, and the joining of the banks ¿s defendants was not criticized by the Supreme Court. The joining of the bank as a defendant was not fundamentally erroneous, and, if error, not reversible error, except upon an affirmative showing of injury, which was not made in this case. The bank not only answered by the exception referred to, but made itself a party to the action in an affirmative way by pleading a cross-action against the plaintiff, thereby becoming a proper party to the litigation and rendering harmless the court’s ruling on the exception of mis-joinder of parties.

By her petition appellee pleaded the incorporation of the bank under the state banking laws, its insolvency, the voluntary surrender of its affairs and effects to the banking commissioner, who took official charge thereof, her deposit in the bank as unsecured, non-interest bearing, the notice by the commissioner, the filing and prosecution of her claim as entitled to be paid out of the depositor’s guaranty "fund, its wrongful classification by the commissioner, and, further, that her claim “was filed as one coming under the depositors’ guaranty fund law of the state of Texas covering unsecured, noninterest-bearing deposits in state banks of the state of Texas.” The necessary intendments of these allegations as against a general demurrer were that the depositors in the bank were secured by the guaranty fund, and that appellee’s claim was so secured. Chapman v. Mooney (Tex. Civ. App.) 257 S. W. 1106. If appellants desired a more specific allegation as to the relation of the bank to the guaranty fund and that appellee’s claim was not changed from an interest-bearing to a noninterestbearing deposit within 90 days prior to the closing of the bank, it should have been called for by special exception. Her petition was good as against the general demurrer urged.

As the petition was not subject to a general demurrer for failure to allege more specifically the relation of the bank to the guaranty fund, it follows that no error was committed in receiving proof that it was a guaranty fund bank. Any omission in the pleadings on the point discussed was rendered harmless by the evidence, since it was shown without controversy that the First State Bank of Dobbin was a guaranty fund bank; that appellee’s claim was an unsecured, non-interest-bearing deposit, and that it had never been interest-bearing,

Appellants have duly reserved their excep *650 tions to the following portion of tlie trial court’s decree:

“It is therefore ordered, adjudged, and decreed by the court that the plaintiff do have and recover of and from the commissioner of banking for the state of Texas, Ohas. O. Austin, as such commissioner, and of and from the First State Bank of Dobbin, Tex., the sum of $7,291.63, with 6 per cent, interest thereon annually from October 5, 1926, as an unsecured, noninterest-bearing deposit in said bank at the time the same was surrendered to the commissioner of banking, Chas. O. Austin, on February 2, A. D. 1926; that the same be and is hereby established as a general deposit, unsecured and non-interest-bearing, which is protected by the guaranty fund under the state banking laws of the state of Texas; and that the said Chas. O. Austin, as commissioner of banking, be and he is hereby ordered to pay the same, or cause the same to be paid, out of the cash on hand and other assets of the said First State Bank of Dobbin, Tex., and if said cash on hand and other assets of said State Bank of Dobbin, Tex., be insufficient to pay the full amount of same, then the said Chas. O. á-ustin, as commissioner of banking of the state of Texas, is hereby ordered to pay the balance or cause any such balance to be paid through the banking board of the state of Texas out of the guaranty fund provided for under the state banking laws of the state of Texas.”

This decree was erroneous in the following respects:

(a) Appellee was not entitled to recover interest as against the commissioner. Eastland County v. Chapman (Tex. Com. App.) 278 S. W. 425.

(b) The general language directing the commissioner to pay the claim “out of the cash on hand and other assets” of the bank was subject to the construction of giving appellee a preference over other claims of the same classification. This language should be so modified as to remove that ambiguity and to give appellee the right to recover payment with other claimants of the same classification in the due liquidation of the bank.

(c) The court was without jurisdiction to direct the commissioner “to pay the balance or cause any such balance to be paid through the banking board of the state of Texas out of the guaranty fund provided for under the state banking laws of the state of Texas.” . The banking board was not a party to this suit, and therefore, it follows without further hrgument that the district court had no jurisdiction of the guaranty fund, which is under the ‘administration of the banking board, and can be used by the commissioner only (quoting from article 448, Revised Statutes) “through the banking board.” On the pleadings of appellee, the district court hhd no jurisdiction beyond classifying appellee’s , deposit as unsecured and noninterest-bearing, and directing the commissioner to pay the same (a) out of the assets of the bank as and with other claims of the same classification, and (b) the balance to be paid in the due administration of the guaranty fund as and with other claims of the same classification.

It is our order that the paragraph of the trial court’s judgment above given be reformed to conform, with the directions herein given.

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Bluebook (online)
297 S.W. 648, 1927 Tex. App. LEXIS 632, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/austin-v-burden-texapp-1927.