Bank of Willard v. Pennsylvania & Kentucky Fire Brick Co.

194 S.W. 110, 175 Ky. 192, 1917 Ky. LEXIS 302
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedApril 24, 1917
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 194 S.W. 110 (Bank of Willard v. Pennsylvania & Kentucky Fire Brick Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bank of Willard v. Pennsylvania & Kentucky Fire Brick Co., 194 S.W. 110, 175 Ky. 192, 1917 Ky. LEXIS 302 (Ky. Ct. App. 1917).

Opinion

Opinion of the Count by

Judge Thomas

Affirming.

The appellee and defendant below, the Pennsylvania & Kentucky Fire Brick Company, a Kentucky corporation, [193]*193on May 20, 1907, executed its four promissory notes, aggregating $3,958.00, payable to one J. W. Shumate, in the amounts and at the times following: $1,152.00 four months thereafter; $500.00 six months thereafter; $1,153.00 eight months thereafter, and $1,153.00 twelve months thereafter. To secure the payment of each and all of them the company executed a mortgage to Shumate on certain real estate in Rowan county consisting of lands and the mineral clay under certain other lands, which mortgage was duly acknowledged and put to record in the Rowan county clerk’s office. At that time the Olive Hill National Bank of Olive Hill, Ky., was a going concern, and Shumate was, or shortly thereafter became, its president. He had been prior to that time, and in a way continued to be after that, a sort of agent for the Pennsylvania & Kentucky Fire Brick Company, as well as for some auxiliary companies which had been organized for the purpose of acquiring interests in fire brick clay, and the further purpose of developing and manufacturing it into fire brick. But this appears to have been a mere incident to his many varied interests.

Some time in 1909 the affairs of the Olive Hill National Bank, of which Shumate was president, became so embarrassed that it went into liquidation, and Shumate was appointed its liquidating agent. After the collapse of that bank it appears that he organized the Phoenix Bank, of which he became president, and after a few months it met a similar fate to that which befell its predecessor, the Olive Hill National Bank.

About May 20, 1911, Shumate disappeared from that community, and has never been heard from since. After this it was discovered that his business affairs were in a greatly entangled condition, and that evidences of his duplicity, perfidy and fraud were multifarious. Until this discovery it uncontradictorily appears that he sustained the reputation of an honest man, and seems to have had the confidence of his business associates and all persons with whom he had dealings or transactions.

The notes which the appellee brick company had executed and secured by its mortgage were kept by Shumate in the Olive Hill National Bank, where he did business-, and some of the original ones were not paid in cash at the time they became due, but were either then or shortly thereafter renewed by others of the same denominations. It also appears that perhaps the first renewals, or at any rate some of them, were themselves .renewed for a [194]*194second time after they became due. Under the belief, as the record shows by the testimony of the brick company, that Shnmate would either destroy or preserve the old notes as they would be renewed or paid, they would not be taken up by the company, but were left, as it supposed, in the vaults of the Olive Hill National Bank.

On January 5, 1911, Shumate executed his note for $1,152.00, due in four months, to the appellant, Bank of Willard, and to secure it deposited with the bank as collateral security one of the old notes of the brick company for the same amount, dated May 20, 1909, and due two months thereafter. In other words, the collateral note at that time was past due one year, six months and fifteen days.

On January 18, 1911, the Olive Hill National Bank executed its note to the Phoenix Bank for the sum of. $1,500.00, due three months thereafter, and pledged as collateral security thereto a note of the appellee brick company to Shumate for $1,152.00, of date September 18, 1909, and due four months thereafter. It will be observed that at the time the Olive Hill National Bank executed this note it had gone into liquidation and ceased to do. business and that Shumate was its liquidator, and the collateral note at the time it was deposited as such was exactly one year past due.

On December 5,. 1910, Shumate executed his note to appellant, Mrs. Fitzpatrick, for the sum of $550.00, due three months thereafter, and to secure it she holds a note for $1,152.00 executed by appellee brick Company to Shumate of date September 20, 1908, due four months thereafter, which was one year, ten months and fifteen days after it matured. Shumate also discounted a note for $1,152.00 which the appellee brick company had executed to him on September 18, 1909, due in four months to the Commercial Bank of Grayson, Kentucky, which was contested below on the ground that it had been paid to Shumate by the brick company, but that contest has been abandoned on this appeal.

This suit was filed by the Bank of Willard against Shumate, the appellee brick company, and the other banking corporations heretofore mentioned, seeking to collect its debt from Shumate. The brick company and the other corporations by appropriate pleadings manifested their respective debts and asked the same relief as against Shumate and the brick company, which included a prayer for the sale of the mortgaged property.

[195]*195The answer of the brick company (wbicb term we have heretofore used and will continue to use to designate tbe appellee, Pennsylvania & Kentucky Fire Brick Company) acknowledged tbe execution of tbe notes, but alleged that they were transferred by Shumate to the various claimants after they became due, and after they had been paid by it to Shumate after they had matured, and when the brick company had no notice or knowledge of their transfer as collateral or otherwise. These allegations were denied, which completed the issue. The evidence was taken by depositions, and upon submission the court adjudged that the petition of the Bank of Willard, and the cross-petitions of the other appellants, be dismissed, but rendered judgment in favor of the Commercial Bank of Grayson for its debt, from which judgment the appellants prayed an appeal and the brick company also prayed an appeal from the judgment against it in favor of the Commercial Bank of Grayson. As intimated above, the appeal prayed by the appellee from the judgment against it in favor of the Commercial Bank of Grayson has been abandoned, and the only questions to be considered now are as to the correctness of the court’s ruling and its finding that the notes held by the respective appellants were paid by the brick company after they became due and without notice or knowledge of their transfer, or that they had been transferred after they had been paid.

Upon the issue of payment the evidence is confined almost entirely to the deposition of J. B. Hammond, who was vice president of the brick company, and who resides and did reside at Bolivar, Pennsylvania. He says that during the year 1907 the brick company, through him, paid one of the notes for $1,153.00 and the one for $500.00, and that the others were renewed. He exhibits checks to Shumate as follows: One for $500.00, July 20, 1909; $300.00, July 23, 1909; $504.00, July 27, 1909; $251.67, November 18, 1909; and $250.00, December 23, 1909, and shows conclusively that he endorsed to Shumate a note for $500.00 executed by a different corporation known as Kentucky Fire Brick Company, which was subsequently paid, which checks, together with the Kentucky Fire Brick Company note, aggregate $2,305.67, which, with the other notes which he claims to have paid, makes the sum of $3,958.67, or only 67 cents more than the total aggregate of the amount of the notes. He also1 shows cheeks for much smaller sums which-he issued to Shu[196]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
194 S.W. 110, 175 Ky. 192, 1917 Ky. LEXIS 302, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bank-of-willard-v-pennsylvania-kentucky-fire-brick-co-kyctapp-1917.