Bank of Commerce v. Fairbank

239 S.W. 387, 153 Ark. 56, 1922 Ark. LEXIS 337
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedApril 3, 1922
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 239 S.W. 387 (Bank of Commerce v. Fairbank) 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
Bank of Commerce v. Fairbank, 239 S.W. 387, 153 Ark. 56, 1922 Ark. LEXIS 337 (Ark. 1922).

Opinion

Hart, J.

(after stating the facts). We are of the opinion that the chancellor was right in holding that the conveyance of the Arkansas lands hy William English and C. 0. Fairbank and Mary Edna Bock to Isaac Greenizen, although absolute on its face, was intended as a deed of trust to secure the Fairbank estate in the amount owed it by English, and that the title was placed in Greenizen to enable him to sell the lands and. to account to the parties for their respective interests after the mortgage indebtedness was taken out of the share of the lands owned by William English. This was the construction put upon the instrument by the parties themselves. Greenizen was allowed to take charge of the lands and to begin to sell the same, and to account to the parties for the proceeds according to their respective interests, and to apply the proceeds from the sale of the interest of English towards the satisfaction of his mortgage indebtedness to the Fairbank estate. There is no dispute between the parties as to their respective interests in the lands, or to the principal of the mortgage indebtedness of English to the Fairbank estate.

Counsel for appellant, however, contend that there is an error against English in a large amount on account of interest charges. In other words, it is claimed that the court erred in allowing interest in favor of the Fair-bank estate against English calculated at the rate of 6% per annum on monthly or quarterly balances.

According to the testimony of English, J. H. Fair-bank, in his life time, promised to adjust the interest account between them on an equitable basis.

A. M. McQueen, under power of attorney from the executor, was in full control of the estate of J. H. Fair-bank, deceased, until May, 1916. He had also been in charge of the Fairbank estate from 1892 to the time of the death of J. H. Fairbank. According to his testimony, accounts were rendered by the 'bank to English at stated intervals. These accounts showed that 6 per cent, per annum was charged English. This was the lowest and the customary bank rate. It was the general banking custom in Ontario to compound interest monthly on overdrafts, but, where notes were given to cover overdrafts, the custom was to compound the interest quarterly. English’s bank pass book and the statement of his accounts was submitted to him periodically, perhaps monthly, and the accounts so submitted to English included the interest charges; and at no time while McQueen was bank manager did English in person, or through another, make any complaint about the interest charges.

Grreenizen testified that English never made1 any complaint to him that the interest charged on his accounts was excessive, but, on the contrary, admitted the correctness of his accounts on more than one occasion.

C. 0. Fairbanks testified that he made no agreement with English relative to any matter in the case. It was shown that these bank statements were regularly submitted to English’s agent in Canada while English was in Arkansas.

It also appears from the record that English made periodical trips back to Ontario. It does not appear that McQueen has any interest whatever in this case. If bis statement about the submission of the accounts to English’s agent in Ontario is not correct, that fact could have been easily established by such agent. It was the duty of English to have examined his accounts when they were delivered to him by the bank and to have notified the bank in a reasonable time that the charges were improper, if he deemed them to be so. It will be remembered that the bank belonged to J. H. Fairbank, and the account it rendered to the agent of English of the state of the accounts between English and-J. H. Fairbank became a stated account when English failed to object to the same within a reasonable time after they were delivered to him. Citizens’ B. & T. Co. v. Hinkle, 126 Ark. 266.

Appellant could have no greater rights in the premises than English. Therefore, the chancery court did not err in holding against appellant on the item of interest charges.

In connection with the interest charge, the contention is made that it was unlawful to charge compound interest. Isaac Greenizen was a practicing barrister and solicitor of Petrolea, Ontario, and as such has been engaged in the practice of the law there for’ many years. He had represented J. H. Fairbank as attorney for many years prior to his death in 1914, and since that time has' represented the estate. Greenizen stated further that he had been familiar with banking transactions in that country for over thirty years, and knew that it was the custom of banks in Ontario to charge interest at the rate of 6 per cent, on loans of money and to compound the interest quarterly, and that such compounding of interest was legal in Ontario.

As we have already seen, McQueen, who had charge of the bank until in 1916, testified to the same fact. Hence the transaction was not an illegal one, and, as above stated, the accounts became accounts stated after the lapse of a reasonable time after their delivery to English.

It may also be stated that counsel for appellant claim that the court erred in not allowing English for the amounts expended by him in clearing some of the lands. We do not agree with counsel in this contention. It will be observed that Fairbank and English were tenants in common in the lands, and that English owned a three-fourths interest therein. The lands were principally timber lands, and it was expected that their chief profit would be derived from the sale of the timber. Fairbank furnished English with money with which to cut and remove the timber. English, after cutting the timber off of the lands and disposing of it, cleared and cultivated a part of them. The lands were situated in Arkansas, and English acted for' his own benefit in clearing and cultivating them. Fairbank remained in Ontario, and it does not appear that he knew anything about English clearing the lands and cultivating the same. English collected the rents and used them. Under these circumstances Fairbank would not be required to contribute to the permanent improvement of the lands made without his knowledge or consent. Dunavant v. Fields, 68 Ark. 534, and Lemly v. Works, 138 Ark. 426.

It is next contended that Greenizen committed a breach of trust in his disposition of the lands. It will be remembered that when the deed to Greenizen to the lands was executed by William English and C. 0. Fair-bank, and Mary Edna Rock, on November 22,1916, it was contemplated that Greenizen should sell the lands and distribute the proceeds between the parties according to their respective interests, after satisfying the mortgage indebtedness of English out of his interest. English had a three-fourths interest in the lands, and the Fair-bank estate a fourth interest in the lands. Greenizen had sold all of the lands except two tracts and had applied English’s share towards the satisfaction of the mortgage indebtedness before the present controversy. It is not contended by counsel for appellant that Greenizen was guilty of any breach of trust with regard to these sales, but it is contended that .Greenizen was guilty of a breach of trust with regard to the remaining tracts which he had made an executory contract to sell at the time the present controversy arose.

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Bluebook (online)
239 S.W. 387, 153 Ark. 56, 1922 Ark. LEXIS 337, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bank-of-commerce-v-fairbank-ark-1922.