Baugher v. State

15 Ohio Law. Abs. 328, 1933 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 1248
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 4, 1933
DocketNos 2312 & 2313
StatusPublished

This text of 15 Ohio Law. Abs. 328 (Baugher v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Baugher v. State, 15 Ohio Law. Abs. 328, 1933 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 1248 (Ohio Ct. App. 1933).

Opinion

OPINION

By BARNES, J.

“The whole case therefore turns upon two fundamental propositions:

“(1) Did the defendants have the right to make the loans and were the loans approved by the board of directors;
“(2) Even if the loans were not legally made, did the defendants believe and did they have reasonable grounds for believing that they were legally made, and did they act in good faith in borrowing the money.”

After a careful examination of the record we agree with counsel as to the fundamental questions involved.

Very exhaustive, voluminous and helpful briefs have been filed by the respective parties. We think the law on the subject is completely covered and the pertinent legal literature exhausted.

The indictment contained four counts. The trial court entered finding of not guilty on the first and second counts and guilty as to the third and fourth counts. The third count in the indictment, among' other things, charged that,

E. M. Baugher and Langdon T. Williams, on or about the 3rd day of February, 1931, the said Baugher “being then and there the president, a director and a member of the executive committee of The Columbian Building & Loan Company, of Columbus, Ohio, a building and loan association duly incorporated and organized and then existing' and doing business under the laws of [330]*330■the state of Ohio, and the said Langdon T. Williams being then and there an officer, to-wit, the executive vice-president and a director and a member of the executive committee of said building and loan association, knowingly, wrongfully, fraudulently and unlawfully did wilfully misapply to and for their own use and benefit, $110,-000.00 in the amount of the moneys of the said building and loan association, without the authorization, knowledge, consent or approval of said building and loan association, or of its board of directors or executive committee, and with the intent t,o injure and defraud the said building and loan association, by the means and in the manner and form following.”

(Then follows m the indictment a detailed recital of the manner and method of the claimed misapplication, which it is unnecessary to set forth in detail or substance at this time.)

The fourth count of the indictment covers the same transaction and is identical in its language except that where count number 3 describes the claimed criminal act as “knowingly, wrongfully, wilfully, and unlawfully did wilfully misapply to and for their own use and benefit,” count number 4 describes the claimed wrongful act as “knowingly, wrongfully, wilfully, fraudulently and unlawfully did abstract and convert to their own use and benefit.”

The law authorizing indictments for the alleged criminal acts will be found in §12472 GC, the pertinent portion of which reads as follows:

“Whoever being a president, director, trustee, member of a committee, secretary, treasurer, attorney or other officer or agent of a building and loan association or savings association as provided by law, embezzles, abstracts or wilfully misapplies any of the moneys, funds or credits thereof, shall be imprisoned,” etc.

The following is a short recital of pertinent facts and necessary to a complete understanding as to how the questions arise.

During the month of October, 1930, the defendants had negotiations with a Mr. Van Sickle for the purchase of all of his stock in The Columbian Building & Loan Company of Columbus, Ohio, on the basis of $300,000.00 for 1000' shares, par $100.00 per share, being all the stock then owned and controlled by Mr. Van Sickle. The contract also provided for the transfer of an additional 600 shares at the option price of $105.00. The 1600 shares comprised all the issued and outstanding nonwithdrawable stock of the company. The contract of sale and purchase provided for an appraisal of the assets of the Columbian as a check on its financial statement.

The defendants and their associates appointed an appraiser and Mr. Van Sickle appointed one and work started immediately. The total loans outstanding were something over 8000 in number, and it was soon found that it was not practical to make a separate appraisal on each tract. It was finally determined to select some 125 or 150 tracts wherein the loan exceeded $20,000.00 in each instance. The appraisal on this list disclosed a potential loss of about $1,-250,000.00. Mr. Van Sickle was unwilling to accept the appraisal, and as a result on or about the 5th of November a new contract was entered into between the parties, wherein it was provided that $100,000.00 of the $300,000.00 consideration would be deposited in the Columbian in the name of. an escrow agent, with the provision that if the losses on the then existing loans, over a period of three years amounted to more than $500,-000.00, then and in that event the escrow agent should turn the $100,000.00 to the Columbian to reduce the losses. But in the event the losses over the named period should not be greater than $500,000.00, then the deposit should be delivered to Mr. Van Sickle.

In the negotiations and ultimate purchase of the stock of the Columbian, the defendants were the active moving spirits, although they had others associated with them as advisers and stockholders in sufficient number to organize and officer the company in conformity to the provisions of its Constitution and By-Laws. The defendant E. M. Baugher was elected director and in the organization of the board was selected president and a member of the discount committee. The defendant Langdon T. Williams was elected director and in the organization of the board, after an amendment of the Constitution and By-Laws, was made executive vice president and a member of the executive committee. Following the acquiring of the stock and organization by the Baugher-Williams group, amendments of the Constitution and By-Laws followed very early. This was done in order to conform to the operative ideas of the new group. The amendments covered numerous sections and appear to be very carefully considered and all in order to effectually provide .for the desired change in plan of operation.

Under the Van Sickle regime the Colum[331]*331bian had carried three different kinds of stock, all represented by certificates of $100.00 each. And a fourth is sometimes referred to in the evidence as “pass book” subscription. But this latter when paid becomes one of the other three as and when the stock certificate was issued. One class of stock represented the capital of the company and was nonwithdrawable except upon final dissolution and liquidation. A second class, of stock was known as withdrawable stock and this provision was written on the back of the certificate. The owner was entitled to cash it at any time. The company had the option to call it in at any time. A third class was known as loan stock. This stock was subscribed by individuals who desired to negotiate loans with the company, and was designated as withdrawable stock. It could be applied on the final payment of the loan and then would be can-celled. If not applied on the payment of loan it would remain as withdrawable stock. It was the policy of the Baugher-Williams group to have but one class of stock, and under the early amendments to the Constitution and By-Laws provision was made for the withdrawal of all other stock either by paying off or Converting into certificates of deposit.

It is claimed that by the last of January.

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Related

Young v. State
184 N.E. 24 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 1932)

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Bluebook (online)
15 Ohio Law. Abs. 328, 1933 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 1248, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baugher-v-state-ohioctapp-1933.