Bernstein v. Commercial Nat. Bank

108 So. 117, 161 La. 38, 1926 La. LEXIS 2009
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJanuary 4, 1926
DocketNo. 26776.
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 108 So. 117 (Bernstein v. Commercial Nat. Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bernstein v. Commercial Nat. Bank, 108 So. 117, 161 La. 38, 1926 La. LEXIS 2009 (La. 1926).

Opinions

OVERTON, J.

This is the second time that this ease has been brought here. On the first occasion it was lodged in this court on an appeal from a judgment sustaining an exception of misjoinder of parties defendant and of causes of action (96 So. 506, 153 La. 653).

The suit is one for defamation of character, and to annul a guarantee given. It is instituted against the Commercial National Bank, E. K. Smith, S. G. Sample, A. J. Peavy, A. J. Ingersoll, P. P. Keith, and Abe Meyer. Smith was president of the bank at the time the cause of action arose herein, and the remaining persons, named as defendants, were members of the bank’s directorate. Plaintiff was, at the time this cause of action arose, a member of the board of directors, and active vice president of the bank. The substance of plaintiff’s petition is correctly and tersely stated in the opinion handed down, when the case was before us, on the exception of misjoinder, and is as follows :

“Plaintiff alleges, in substance, that, whilst he was 'an officer and director, certain loans were made by the bank after being approved by the discount committee, of which he was a member; that said loans resulted in a loss, and that the loss was attempted to be saddled upon him; that the losses in question were investigated by the board of directors of said bank, "and that said board, under date of September 15, 1920, exonerated him in a resolution that day passed to be forwarded to the Comj)troller of the Currency at Washington; that thereafter the six remaining defendants, who were directors and officers of said bank, entered into a fraudulent conspiracy, and as a result of same prepared and sent a letter addressed to the Comptroller of the Currency, in which it was stated that the resolution was er- , roneous, and that plaintiff was responsible for the losses in question; that this letter was delivered to the Comptroller and exhibited to other' parties without plaintiff’s knowledge or consent, with a view of casting reproach upon the plaintiff and bringing the personal reputation of plaintiff into question; that as a result of said letter plaintiff was denied a hearing before the Comptroller of the Currency, and was informed by the said Comptroller that he was morally and legally bound for the losses incurred; that, yielding to the misrepresentations of the defendants, and under pressure brought to bear by the Comptroller, he executed an instrument of guaranty under date *43 of February 23, 1921, in tbe sum of $70,000; that he is entitled to have said guaranty declared null and void as having been, obtained by fraud und duress, and without consideration, and to have judgment against all the defendants * * * for slander and. defamation as itemized in the petition; and he prays for judgment accordingly.” Bernstein v. Commercial National Bank et al., 96 So. 506, 153 La. 653.

The defenses of the Commercial National Bank are that, if plaintiff was defamed in said letter delivered to the Comptroller, it (the bank) was not a party to the preparation and publication of the same, but that the preparation and publication of the letter was the act of those who signed and delivered it to- the Comptroller, while acting in their individual capacities; that, in the event this defense should be overruled, then that said letter was a privileged communication, delivered in good faith to the Comptroller, for the delivery of which it is not liable in damages ; and, in the event this defense should be overruled, then it pleads that the contents of said, letter are true. The bank also pleads the prescription of one year against plaintiff’s demand for damages. As relates to the demand for the annulment of said guaranty, the bank denies that the guaranty was* given without consideration; denies that it was obtained by means of duress or fraud; and avers that it was freely and voluntarily given by plaintiff, and is, in itself, a compromise of the differences between plaintiff and the bank. The defenses of the remaining defendants, with possibly the exception of Abe Meyer, who, though he answered plaintiff’s demand, later retracted the statements complained of in the letter to the Comptroller, are that the letter to the Comptroller was a communication made in compliance with a duty which they owed, and was therefore privileged, and, in the event the defense of privilege should be overruled, then they plead that the statements in the letter are true. ' These defendants also plead the prescription'. .Of one year against plaintiff’s de'-. maná for damages.

Plaintiff became a member of the board of directors of the Commercial National Bank in 1900, and in the summer of 1915 was elected active first vice president of the institution. At the time of his election to the vice presidency, E. K. Smith, one of the defendants herein, was president of the bank, and had been president since some time in August, 1914. The remaining persons named as defendants were members of the bank’s ■board of directors.

One of the customers of the Commercial National Bank was the Tex-La-Homa Oil Corporation. At times the deposits of this company in the bank exceeded $100,000, though its usual balance w.as anywhere from $30,000 to $2,000. By reason of the connections which the company had it was able to, and did, bring to the bank deposits more valuable than its own.

The Tex-La-Homa Oil Corporation owned and operated the Globe Oil Company. Another concern, the Mohawk Oil Company, sold its holdings to the Tex-La-Homa Oil Corporation, retaining as security for the deferred portion of the purchase price a mortgage and vendor’s privilege on the property sold, and taking in payment of the remainder of the purchase price, or of a large part thereof, stock of its vendee. Plaintiff owned one-fourth of the stock of the Mohawk Oil Company, and E. N. Brown, Jr., the remaining three-fourths. Hence plaintiff was interested through the Mohawk Oil Company in the Tex-La-Homa Oil Corporation.

The Tex-La-PIoma Oil Corporation was organized chiefly through the efforts of G. G. Gillette, who went to Shreveport,' La., from Tulsa, Old., in 1919. The chief assets of the company were large oil properties which it acquired from W. G. Strange, largely on terms of credit, for a price exceeding $3,-000,000. Gillette was actively organizing, or assisting in the organization of, other corporations, among them being the Paramount Petroleum Company. There were associated *45 with' him, as stockholders in the Tex-LaHoma Oil Corporation, a number oí men of means.

Gillette, on notes signed as maker in some instances by the Tex-La-Homa Oil Corporation, in others by himself, and in still other instances by those associated with him, or upon the note of some corporation, obtained money from the bank. The transactions were carried in the liability ledger of the bank in an account running in the name of G. G. Gillette. An examination of Gillette’s liability sheet shows that the bank advanced on this account, on October 11, 1919, the sum of $12,750 on a note signed by B. R. Farmer; $20,400 on a note signed by O. J. Backwater; and $20,000 on a note signed by J. O. Mitchell and W. II. Walker. These loans or discounts appear to have been approved by Ricks, assistant cashier of the bank. This sheet also shows that there was advanced on this account on October 14, 1919, on three notes, made by the Globe Oil Company, a subsidiary of the Tex-La-Homa Oil Corporation, $30,600, and that, on October 17, 1920, there was loaned on two Globe Oil Company notes $20,404.40.

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Bluebook (online)
108 So. 117, 161 La. 38, 1926 La. LEXIS 2009, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bernstein-v-commercial-nat-bank-la-1926.