Baumlisberger v. Dorman, Banking & Securities Commissioner

81 S.W.2d 876, 259 Ky. 37, 1935 Ky. LEXIS 264
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedMarch 5, 1935
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 81 S.W.2d 876 (Baumlisberger v. Dorman, Banking & Securities Commissioner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Baumlisberger v. Dorman, Banking & Securities Commissioner, 81 S.W.2d 876, 259 Ky. 37, 1935 Ky. LEXIS 264 (Ky. 1935).

Opinion

*39 Opinion of the Court by

Judge Richardson

Affirming in part and reversing in part.

Again we are required to review a proceeding to reorganize, under section 165a-64, Kentucky Statutes, 1933 Supplement, the Jefferson County Bank.

An action for that purpose was first instituted in the Franklin circuit court. It entered a decree approving the plan of reorganization. On an appeal it was reversed solely for the want of jurisdiction of that court. See Sweeny et al. v. Jefferson County Bank’s Reorganization Committee et al., 250 Ky. 187, 61 S. W. (2d) 1090. 'Thereafter, the reorganization committee endeavored to induce and persuade the banking and securities commissioner to approve the plan of reorganization, which he declined to do. Later this action was filed in the Jefferson circuit court to have it approve the same.

After much pleading and the employment on the part of the banking commissioner of many dilatory tactics, the court, by an appropriate decree, on February 15, 1934, approved the plan of reorganization; directed the banking commissioner to accept and approve it as it is set forth in the court’s decree; “to do and perform all things necessary for, or incident to the reopening of” the bank in accordance herewith; and “to prepare and perfect, without delay, all papers, applications, and other information necessary for, or incident to, the obtaining of a loan from the Reconstruction Finance Corporation and Federal Insurance of Deposit in banks and for the sale to Reconstruction Finance Corporation of preferred Stock in the bank, not to exceed Ten Thousand ($10,000.00) Dollars par value.”' To accomplish this expeditiously, they were authorized, to employ “such additional and clerical help and assistance as necessary for the proper preparation of” the needed papers and to pay the assistants engaged therein, not exceeding the sum of $250 out of the bank’s assets. The liquidating agent and- the counsel employed in connection with the bank’s affairs were “directed to prepare and file herein within twenty (20) days from” that date a complete statement of the affairs of the bank.

The decree granted “the reorganization committee sixty (60) days from its date within which to perfect *40 the plan of reorganization, with the right to apply to the Court for the extension of such time, if proper showing is made to the effect that such time should be ■extended.” “The Court reserved the right to modify so much of the foregoing judgment as relates to the status of the present stockholders of the Bank in connection with the purchase of new stock in the Bank if circumstances should seem to require, any such modification.”

The status of the bank at the commencement of this ■action was. continued and preserved by a restraining order until September 15, 1934.

All parties reserved an exception to the court’s ■decree approving the plan of reorganization and directing the reopening of the bank. No appeal therefrom, however, has been prosecuted by either the plaintiffs ■or the defendants.

After the order of February, 1934, was entered, the banking commissioner and the liquidating agent, ■acting in obedience to the former’s direction, persistently disregarded it. A rule was sought against the banking commissioner for contempt of court “for not complying with the order requiring him to send a letter to the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation advising approval” of the plan of reorganization and the application for a loan from the Reconstruction Finance Corporation and insurance, etc., as directed by the court’s decree.

The motion for the rule was supported by the ■affidavit of the Honorable- J. Blakey Helm. _ It_ states he had “called the office of Wigginton (liquidating agent) at Jeffersontown by telephone, and found that Wigginton was away and was advised by W. B. Helt over the telephone that he had a copy of (the record of the bank containing the essential facts necessary to ■obtain the loan from the Reconstruction Finance Corporation, etc.) not certified which he would furnish immediately; that Mr. Helt then wrote to the affiant on that date that Wigginton had instructed him not to give the information to the plaintiffs until next week. * * * Affiant then went on August 20, 1934 to the office •of the banking and securities commission at Frankfort and advised him of the. failure of the liquidating agent to furnish him the certified copy of said balance sheet.” *41 and “requested the banking and securities commissioner to furnish him the certified copy”; he “exhibited to him a bimonthly report of the Bank for the period ending July 31, 1934”; but “refused to give the reorganization committee a certified copy of said balance sheet” and imparted the information to the affiant that a copy'of it had been filed in the circuit court. The affidavit further states that on the next day he examined “the records of the Circuit Court,” and “found that despite the fact that said bimonthly report had already been furnished to the banking and securities commissioner, no copy had been filed in the office of the Circuit Clerk as required by law,” and that on the 22d day of August, W. B. Helt mailed him an uncertified copy of the balance sheet which he furnished the supervising examiner for the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, when he was advised by the latter it was insufficient because .it had not been certified.

A rule was issued against the banking and securities commissioner requiring him formally to approve the amended plan of reorganization. His response to the rule reads:

“Defendant having heretofore signed and sworn to' an answer which is now a part of the record in this, case, in which he sets forth in detail his objections to said plan as amended, and having withdrawn all grants of authority to said committee as provided in House Bill #84, Acts. of the .General Assembly of Kentucky, Session 1932, and as subsequent events have confirmed the judgment expressed by him in said answer; for the purpose only of complying with the said order of court, the defendant, as Banking Commissioner, does now formally approve of the said amended plan of reorganization embraced in and filed as a part of said order of court, the said approval made by him herein being done under protest and without waiving the objections to same heretofore outlined in this case.”

In a supplemental response he further states:

‘ ‘ He had mailed to the Reconstruction Finance Cor-' poration, at Louisville, Kentucky, and to Mr. Yance Sailor, Supervising Examiner, Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, Louisville, Kentucky, letters-formally approving said plan of reorganization as- *42 amended in compliance with the orders of this court.”

The court determined his response sufficient. On September 14th, a second affidavit of the Honorable J. Blakey Helm, setting forth in detail “all the activities for the completion of the reorganization,” was filed in support of a motion for an extension of time of sixty days for the completion of the reorganization of the bank.

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Related

Crews v. American Surety Co.
1941 OK 73 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1941)
Dorman v. Baumlisberger
113 S.W.2d 532 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1938)
Baumlisberger v. Dorman, Banking Com'r
99 S.W.2d 800 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1936)
Snowden v. Dorman, Bank'g and Securities Com'r.
92 S.W.2d 40 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1936)

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Bluebook (online)
81 S.W.2d 876, 259 Ky. 37, 1935 Ky. LEXIS 264, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baumlisberger-v-dorman-banking-securities-commissioner-kyctapphigh-1935.