Bank of Rockwood v. Foster

12 Tenn. App. 418
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedJune 6, 1930
StatusPublished

This text of 12 Tenn. App. 418 (Bank of Rockwood v. Foster) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bank of Rockwood v. Foster, 12 Tenn. App. 418 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1930).

Opinion

OWEN, J.

These two bills filed by the same complainant were consolidated in the court below.

On February 20, 1928, the complainant filed its original bill against E. J. Foster, E. G. Foster, L. E. Ryan, G. W. Strunk, J. I. Foster, John Toomey and John L. Sileox, seeking to recover the sum of four thousand seventy-four and 62/100 dollars ($4,074.62), together with interest thereon and ten percent attorneys fees, on a promissory note for said amount dated July 11, 1926.

On the 17th day of March, 1928, the defendants filed an answer to said bill and also a cross-bill, admitting the execution by them of the note sued on, but stating that said note is a renewal note, and that the facts surrounding the execution of the original' note are as follows:

That on July 23, 1924, the First National Bank of Huntsville, Tennessee, had re-discounted with the Federal Reserve Bank, the sum of seventeen thousand, six hundred fifteen dollars ($17,615), and that m addition to said sum said First National Bank of IRmtsville owed bills payable in the sum of twenty-five thousand dollars ($25,000), and that in order to secure the payment of said amounts of indebtedness, it had placed with the Federal Reserve Bank $17,615 in collateral, with the First National Bank of Oneida, Tennessee, $5,000, with the Fifth Third National Bank of Cincinnati, Ohio, $20,000, with the Fourth and First National Bank of Nashville, Tennessee, $10,000, and that in order to prevent the First National Bank of Huntsville being taken over by a Receiver and liquidated, the defendants in said cause who were the directors and officers of the First National Bank of Huntsville, nego *420 tiated for and obtained a loan from the First National Bank of Rockwood in the sum of $15,000, and executed two notes therefor in the principal sum of $7,500 each, and that the amount of this loan thus obtained was transferred to the credit of First National Bank of Huntsville, 'and used by it in the payment of its obligations; that these defendants did this because the First National Bank of Huntsville could not borrow any more money, and that said obligations and notes executed for said loan by the defendants were recognized as the obligations of the First National Bank of Huntsville; that these notes were renewed from time to time, and that when the obligations of the First National Bank of Huntsville had been paid down to a point where said bank could, sign said note, the makers thereof requested the First National Bank of Huntsville to assume said obligation, and that its directors refused to do so; that thereupon the makers of said notes refused to renew them any further.

Upon these facts the said defendants filed their answer as a cross-bill, and prayed process,, requiring the complainant, First National Bank of Rockwood, and the First National Bank of Huntsville, to answer said cross-bill, and further praying that:

“The First National Bank of Huntsville, Tennessee, be decreed to be estopped by its actions in denying -the obligation to the full extent of said note sued on,” and, third, “that the cross-complainants have a judgment against the First National Bank of Huntsville, Tennessee, for the full amount of said note, interest and attorneys fees-sued on by the First National Bank of Rock-wood, and that it be required to assume and pay same.”

The First National Bank of Rockwood filed its answer to said cross-bill, stating that it neither admitted nor denied the allegations of the cross-bill with respect to the indebtedness of the First National Bank of Rockwood, set up by the cross-complainants in their cross-bill, and further stating that the First National Bank of Rock-wood at the instance of certain officers and directors of the First National Bank of Huntsville had loaned to said cross-complainants the sum of $15,000, in order to tide said bank over a financial difficulty or crisis which at the time confronted it, and alleging that at the time it made saffi loan to the cross-complainants, it understood they were borrowing said money for the use and benefit of the First National Bank of Huntsville.

The Bank of Rockwood further averred that it was not advised as to what attitude the officers and directors of said First National Bank of Huntsville have now taken or assumed with reference to the payment of said loan. On May 31, 1928, the First National Bank of Huntsville filed its answer to the cross-bill, admitting that on •Tuty 23, 1924, it had re-discounted with the Federal Re *421 serve Bank, the sum of «$17,615, but denying that it, on said date, was indebted to the First National Bank of Oneida in the sum of $5,000. It admitted that on said date it had re-diseounted paper with the First National Bank of Oneida, Tennessee. It admitted that on said date it owed a note for $10,000 to the Fifth Third National Bank of Cincinnati, Ohio, and owed a like amount to the Fourth First National Bank of Nashville, Tennessee, and that on said date it had additional collateral with the Federal Reserve Bank, but it denies that it had $5,000 additional collateral to the rediscounted paper at the First National Bank of Oneida. The answer neither admits nor denies that in order to save the Bank’s being taken over by a Receiver and liquidated, it became necessary to raise additional funds.

The answer denies that the First National Bank of Huntsville ever authorized defendants and cross-complainants to obtain a loan of $15,000 from the First National Bank of Rockwood. On the contrary, the facts with reference to said’loan are averred in the answer of First National Bank of Huntsville as follows:

“The cross-complainants, all of whom were stockholders and directors in the First National B:ank of Huntsville, except E. G. Foster, took notes from the assets of the First National Bank of Huntsville, Tennessee, to the extent of $15,000, and cross-complainants borrowed the said >$15,000' from said Rockwood Bank.

“And had the proceeds of said $15,000, to-wit, $14,700, deposited to the credit of this defendant bank, although no record was ever made on the minute book of defendant bank of the said transaction. ’ ’

It is further insisted in the said answer that the First National Bank of Huntsville has never made any payment of any kind on the note sued on and has never recognized same as the liability of the First National Bank of Huntsville, and has never carried same as a liability on any of its statements or reports, but that on the contrary, the cross-complainants, J. I. Foster and L. E. Ryan, and probably others of the cross-complainants, have repeatedly signed and sworn to statements of the condition of the First National Bank of Huntsville to the Comptroller of the United States of America since July'23, 1924, and in none of said sworn statements has the note of indebtedness' claimed by the First National Bank of Rockwood ever been listed as a liability of First National Bank of Huntsville.

The answer-also sets up the amount of stock or amount of shares that various ones owned in said Bank of Huntsville, and with the exception of E. G. Foster, it was said that all of these cross-complainants had very material and financial interest and investment *422 to protect and in that way received material benefit and consideration from said transaction.

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Bluebook (online)
12 Tenn. App. 418, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bank-of-rockwood-v-foster-tennctapp-1930.