Birch Tree State Bank v. Brown

133 S.W. 860, 152 Mo. App. 589, 1911 Mo. App. LEXIS 137
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 3, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 133 S.W. 860 (Birch Tree State Bank v. Brown) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Birch Tree State Bank v. Brown, 133 S.W. 860, 152 Mo. App. 589, 1911 Mo. App. LEXIS 137 (Mo. Ct. App. 1911).

Opinion

NIXON, P. J.

This suit was commenced in the circuit court of Greene county, the object of which was to establish and foreclose a lien on bank stock in the hands of defendant W. C. Potter which plaintiff claims was put up as collateral to secure the payment of a note of $1500.00 which W. H. Brown, one of the defendants, executed to the plaintiff for money loaned for the purpose of buying bank stock. The suit was tried before, the court sitting in equity which rendered a judgment in favor of plaintiff and against Brown on the note, and also found that Potter had notice of plaintiff’s claim at the time he purchased the stock hereinafter referred to; [592]*592and that plaintiff had a lien on the hank stock, but to the amount of only $62.25, and that Mrs. W. B. Moore, one of the defendants, was entitled to $1437.75 held out of the purchase price. From this judgment, the plaintiff appealed.

Defendant W. H. Brown was a clerk in the Birch Tree State Bank and desired to get a position as cashier in some other bank. He arranged with E. T. Pate, cashier of said bank, for the bank to loan him $1500, with which he was to purchase bank stock, and it was agreed that he would pledge this bank stock to secure the note. The note was made out and signed, but the money was not paid at the time, it being understood that Brown was to draw for the money when he had bought the stock. Brown started out on a prospecting trip and finally located at Fair Grove, Missouri, where he purchased stock in the Bank of Fair Grove. Brown’s negotiations with the Bank of Fair Grove resulted in his purchasing considerable more than $1500 worth of stock; in fact, he purchased forty-five and one-half shares of stock in this bank, at the price of $150 a share, making a total investment of $6825. The money for this investment came from the following sources: $3825 from the Bank of Commerce, of Springfield; $1500 from plaintiff bank; and $1500 from Brown’s mother-in-law, Mrs. W. B. Moore, one of the defendants. Four shares of this stock were subsequently sold and the $600 received was applied on the note which had been executed to the Bank of Commerce, leaving forty-one and one-half shares. At the time Brown borrowed the $3825 from the Bank of Commerce, he put up with that bank thirty-nine and one-half shares of stock, valued at $5925, to secure this note. Just prior to the time he bought the stock, he drew on the plaintiff bank for the $1500 which that bank was to let him have, but Mr. Pate, cashier of that bank, refused to honor Brown’s check because Brown had not put up the stock as collateral. On assurances from Brown that he would send [593]*593the stock, Pate honored Brown’s check; later Brown admitted that the thirty-nine and one-half shares of stock pnt np with the Bank of Commerce could also be held to secure his note held by the plaintiff bank. This fact was communicated to Mr. Pate and he made a memorandum on Brown’s $1500 note as follows: “Secured by bank stock held by Bank of Commerce, Springfield.”

The evidence tended to show that defendant, Mrs. Moore, did not know- of Brown’s indebtedness to the plaintiff bank, and that she never in any way consented for her stock or her interest in the bank stock of the Bank of Fair Grove to be hypothecated for his debt to that bank (plaintiff) or to the Peoples Bank. That Brown did not disclose to the Bank of Commerce at the time he made his loan and deposited the bank stock as security that $1500 of the money he was using was the money of Mrs. Moore or that she claimed any part of the stock; that afterwards, $600 was paid on the note executed to the Bank of Commerce; that Mrs. Moore, when she ascertained that the stock had been taken in Brown’s name, within a reasonable time, considering the circumstances, made complaint, and insisted that the stock he placed in her name, and that by an arrangement with Mrs. Moore and Brown she agreed, to take more of the, stock than her $1500 would come to at $150 a share; that, with such understanding, she did take twenty and three-fourths shares. After some of the stock was re-issued, we find the stock in question distributed as follows:

Held by Banlc of Commerce-.
14% shares, W. H. Brown,
19% shares, Mrs. W. B. Moore,
5% shares, Mrs. Bertha Brown.
39% shares.
[594]*594Not Held as Collateral Security:
1 share, W. H. Brown,
1 share, Mrs. W. B. Moore.

When the arrangement for the new loan was made by the Bank of Commerce, its cashier notified the plaintiff bank of the transaction and told the plaintiff bank there was enough stock in Brown’s name to secure said bank. Later, the Bank of Pair Grove was examined by a state bank examiner and Brown was found to be short with the bank about $1000. • This resulted in negotiations leading to the purchase of the forty-one ■and one-half shares of Brown’s and Mrs. Moore’s stock by defendant, W. C. Potter, the president of the Bank ■of Pair Grove, and the discharge of Brown as cashier. Potter paid $147 a share for said stock, making a total. ■of $6100.50. Of this purchase price, $3200 was paid to the Bank of Commerce, leaving a balance of $2900.50. Of this balance, $1500 was retained by defendant Potter, and the remainder, $1400.50, was paid over to Brown, who stated that he paid it to the Peoples Bank, •of Springfield, from which he had borrowed $1500.

The note sued on is as follows:

“$1500.00 Birch Tree, Mo., April 19, 1909.
“One day after date, for value received, I promise to pay to the order of the Birch Tree State Bank, at the Birch Tree State Bank, the sum of Fifteen Hundred Dollars, with interest from maturity at the rate of •eight per cent per annum, payable annually; and if the interest be not paid annually or when due, to be added to and become a part of the principal and bear the same rate of interest. ...
“W. H. Brown.
“No. 2052. P. O. Pair Grove.
■“Secured by bank stock held by Bank of Commerce,
Springfield.”
Endorsed on back: “Int. paid to Peb. 16, ’1Ó.
-SI 00.00.” •

[595]*595From the foregoing statement of facts developed at the trial, it will be .seen that the vital and controlling evidence that determines the rights of the parties is practically uncontradicted. It appears from this evidence that sometime prior to June, 1909, the defendant, W. H. Brown, son-in-law of the defendant, Mrs. W. B. Moore, had borrowed from the Bank of Commerce of Springfield, Missouri, the sum of $3825. for which he had executed his note, and, to secure its payment, deposited as collateral forty-one and one-half shares of stock of the Bank of Fair Grove, valued at the sum of $6225. That this stock, had been issued as follows: Thirty-four shares to W. H. Brown; five and one-half shares to Mrs. Bertha Brown, his wife; and two shares-held by W. H. Brown, but not deposited' as collateral security. That such stock had, on the application of Brown, been issued in his name and delivered to him and by him deposited as such collateral security. That Mrs. Bertha Brown, wife of W. H. Brown, knew nothing of the transaction and had none of her money invested in the stock issued in her name.

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Bluebook (online)
133 S.W. 860, 152 Mo. App. 589, 1911 Mo. App. LEXIS 137, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/birch-tree-state-bank-v-brown-moctapp-1911.