Burnes Nat. Bank v. Mueller-Keller Candy Co.

86 F.2d 252
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedNovember 13, 1936
DocketNo. 10654
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 86 F.2d 252 (Burnes Nat. Bank v. Mueller-Keller Candy Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Burnes Nat. Bank v. Mueller-Keller Candy Co., 86 F.2d 252 (8th Cir. 1936).

Opinion

GARDNER, Circuit Judge.

™. . , f * .. This is an appeal from an order of the lowef CQurt confirmi and approving an order Qf ^ referee in bankru tc which rejected and disallowed appenant-s daim against the Mueller-Keller Candy ComP^’ a corporation, bankrupt.

"^he c^a™ *s i? JÍ!,e f°rm °f a promisnote f°r $7.000, dated January 1,. *932, payable to the order of Fred M. Keller’ at. at ~ per “ntv and sl&ned. e,^"Ke Í5r ffnd7 Pany> E- Keller, President. The trustee filed objections to the allowance of *e claim, alleging _that (a) the note was f lth,out consideration and was_ acquired by dal”“t af¿er “^urity and with knowledge of the absence of consideration; (b) the note was signed by Fred M. Keller as president of the bankrupt, payable to his own order, without consideration and without authority of the bankrupt s board of directors, when he was heavily indebted to tbe bankrupt, and such facts were known to claimant when it acquired the note; (c) at the time the purported note was executed, the payee named therein was indebted to the bankrupt in a sum exceeding $87,-500; that said note was executed by the [253]*253payee without authority from or knowledge of the board of directors, and he was indebted to the bank in sums greatly in excess of $7,000 on January 1, 1933, when he executed and delivered to himself the promissory note; that all said facts were known to" claimant before it acquired and attempted to become the owner of said promissory note.

The claim was rejected and disallowed by the referee, who filed findings of fact and conclusions of law sustaining the contentions of the trustee. On review, the lower court approved and confirmed the order of the referee, and in doing so said: “I concur in the views and reasoning expressed by the learned referee in connection with his order disallowing the claim of the Burnes National Bank.”

. . appeal it is urged by appellant (1) that the referee erred m finding and concluding that the note was_ without cpnsideration; (2) that as against claimant, the indorsee of the note, there was no right of set-off because only equities that are connected with the note itself constitute a defense; (3) the referee erroneously he d that the note was a sequel to Kellers debt created by his unlawful appropriations, and hence a set-off was not allowable; (4) that Kellers withdrawals and their satisfaction by delivery of stock did not deprive him, as president and business manager of the company, of the power to make a valid contract for a lawful purpose; and (5) that the trustee is estopped to deny that Keller s debt to the company was paid by delivery of stock. The findmgs of the referee which were approved by the court are not seriously challenged on this appeal, although the inferences drawn therefrom are urged to be unwarranted by appe ant.

It appears from these findings and conelusions (1) that the execution of the note already described was not authorized by any action of the board of directors; (2) that prior to its execution Fred M. Keller, president and business manager of the company, had advanced to the company, from money borrowed on his life insuranee, various sums from January 2, 1932, to September 15, 1932, amounting in the aggregate to $7,000; (3) that prior to these advancements, and beginning in the year 1926, Keller, without authority from the board of directors, borrowed or advanced to himself various sums of the company’s money, with which he purchased from other stockholders their stock in the company, the amount of said debt amounting on July 1, 1926, to $25,619.56, and increased to $85,-772 on December 31, 1929; (4) that during these years, and until 1930, the sums so borrowed from the company were charged to Keller’s open account on the books of the company, in which account he was credited with his salary as president, and debited with bis withdrawals; (5) that about January 1, 1930, the account was increased to $87,500, and by direction of Keller to the cashier and bookkeeper, _ and without authority from the board of directors, it was segregated as a separate ac“unt of Keller under the heading “F M. Keller, Special, to distinguish it from Keller's active account. On the active account be owed> °n January 1, 1932, over $2,000; (6) that on January 1, 1932, Keller owed the company $87,500 on this spedal account5 and thereafter, in July, 1932, without authority of the board of directors, be then directed the cashier and bookkeeper tQ dose out this ¡al account of his indebtedness as of date January 2, 1932, and tQ charge capital stock witb said amountj tbus “by sucb nunc pro tunc en_ causing the books of the company to sbow £bat sa;d indebtedness had been wiped QUt b tbe transfer of said stock wben the advancéments of the $7,000 began, Tbese advancements, totaling $7,000, were then carried on open account as a cbarge agabist the company until January 1, 1933, wben tbey were by Keller as president, wbbout autbority from the board of direct t in the form of tbe company’s note, whidl ¡s the basis of appeilant-s claim; (7) tbat at subsequent annual meetings of the stockbolders and adjourned sessions thereof beld in Janua and Februar 1933) it was contended tbat Keller still owed the company this $87,500, and had no right to turn in said stock in payment thereof, and that the company had no authority to purchase it, and at this time “three trustees, who were elected directors, though requested by Keller to do so, refused to recognize this $7,000.00 note”; (8) that members of the board of directors of the company and officers of the Burnes National Bank had knowledge of said controversy in January and February, 1933, the president of the bank and one of the bank’s directors being in attendance at said stockholders’ meeting; that about a month prior to the time the $7,000 note was delivered by Keller to the bank, pursuant to direction of some one assuming the right [254]*254to speak for the company, the cashier and bookkeeper charged back to Keller’s account the $87,500 previously charged off; (9) that the Burnes National Bank knew of said debt of Keller and his attempted stock payment thereof* and of the absence of authorization and of the criticism of the transaction, when, in May, 1934, it acquired from Keller'the note in question; that it was at said time turned over to claimant in payment of his debt owed by and then due from Keller to the bank.

The referee concluded that claimant was not a holder of the note in due course, but that it took with knowledge of its infirmities; that the note was not a separate transaction divorced from the transactions by which Keller unlawfully withdrew and •appropriated to his own use the funds of the company, and that the claimant stood in no better position than did Keller, and that the transfer of said note to claimant did not defeat or have the effect of cutting off the right of set-off. The referee entered still other conclusions which, in “Stl^e =im;Son this anneal

That claimant was not a holder in due course is conceded by appellant in its reply brief, and hence we need give that issue no further consideration. •

It is contended by appellant, however, that, notwithstanding the fact that it is not a holder in due course of this negotiable paper, it is nevertheless in a better position to assert the claim than was the ■original payee, Keller. The circumstances under which this note was executed are, to ■say the least, extraordinary. The payee was the president and business manager of the Mueller-Keller Candy Company, and as -such apparently in full charge of its business affairs. Without any authorization therefor, he withdrew and appropriated to his own use the sum of $87,500 of the •company’s money.

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86 F.2d 252, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/burnes-nat-bank-v-mueller-keller-candy-co-ca8-1936.