Canal-Commercial Trust & Savings Bank v. Brewer

108 So. 424, 143 Miss. 146, 47 A.L.R. 45, 1926 Miss. LEXIS 252
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 15, 1926
DocketNo. 25200.
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 108 So. 424 (Canal-Commercial Trust & Savings Bank v. Brewer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Canal-Commercial Trust & Savings Bank v. Brewer, 108 So. 424, 143 Miss. 146, 47 A.L.R. 45, 1926 Miss. LEXIS 252 (Mich. 1926).

Opinion

McGowen, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

Earl Brewer, as complainant, filed his bill in the chancery court of Coahoma county and sued out an attachment therein against the Canal-Commercial Trust & Savings Bank, a nonresident corporation domiciled and doing business in New Orleans, La., and also naming as defendants C. G. and B. K. Bobo and the Bank of Clarksdale, all in the Second district of Coahoma county, Miss. The bill alleged that the complainant, Brewer, was -the owner of notes described as the Bobo and Gates notes, and that these notes were in the hands of the resident defendants, and that he was entitled to the possession of the notes as well as a judgment against the Canal-Commercial Trust & Savings Bank for the amount collected thereon. The bill charged that these six notes (the Bobo and Gates notes) had been by the complainant, Brewer, *163 pledged as collateral security for the payment of his note to the Canal-Commercial Trust & Savings Bank for three hundred twenty-five thousand dollars dated February 1, 1921, and held by said bank in accordance with a pledge agreement of same date entered into by and between Earl Brewer and the Canal Bank. The bill charged that complainant had paid his note about June, 1923, and that upon the payment of his note he was entitled to the possession of the collateral pledged to secure same, and that the Canal Bank declined to surrender the Bobo and Gates notes to him upon the payment of the original debt, for all of which the Bobo and Gates, notes were pledged-as collateral security.

The bill was also filed against the Hibernia Bank & Trust Company of New Orleans, La., but upon agreement of parties the Hibernia Bank & Trust Company was released by a decree of the court, and the Bank of Clarksdale, as garnishee defendant, turned over these notes to the clerk of the court as receiver, and the litigation proceeded as though the Canal Bank was the only defendant; it assuming to conduct the litigation as though the Hibernia Bank & Trust Company had no interest in the collateral involved or in the debt upon which the bank claimed to hold the Bobo and Gates notes as collateral.

Complainant further charged that the defendant, the Canal Bank, sought to hold his collateral under the written pledge agreement as collateral for the note of' W. P. Holland, and that he was not bound by his indorsement of the note of W. P. Holland, which was on its face for five hundred thousand dollars, but which by the pledge agreement of February 1, 1921, was reduced, by payment then made by Earl Brewer to two hundred sixty-three thousand dollars. Briefly stated, the bill charged that the Canal Bank had secured the signature-of Earl Brewer as indorser on said Holland note by fraudulent statements made to him by a representative-of the bank on the date of his signature thereon; that. *164 lie was not bound legally by his signature on said Holland note because of the alleged fraud in fact or fraud in law; that he was released in law from any obligation by virtue of his signature on said note or his pledge of his collateral in payment' of the said Holland indebtedness.

The bill then traced the execution of a note by Earl Brewer for two hundred thousand dollars to the Planter’s Bank of Clarksdale and the placing of these Bobo and Gates notes as collateral for this two hundred thousand dollar note, which in turn had by Holland, formerly president of the Planters’ Bank of Clarksdale, been purchased from his bank and deposited with the Canal Bank at New Orleans as collateral security for his (Holland’s) five hundred thousand dollar note.

To state all the pleadings and proof taken in this case would cover an entire volume of our Mississippi Reports, and so we shall set out only the main points and make only such reference as is necessary to a decision of the case.

The Canal Bank answered and admitted that it held the Bobo and Gates notes and had sent them to the Bank of Clarksdale for collection, but alleged that it had a right to hold said notes because of Brewer’s indorsement on February 1, 1921, of the Holland five hundred thousand dollar note; it further said that in addition to holding Brewer’s two hundred thousand dollar note on said date, it (the Canal Bank) held as collateral to the Holland note a certain series of notes called the Glidden-Townsend and McNally notes, which was a series of notes of about four hundred thousand dollars each, due January 1, 1926, and anually thereafter until January 1, 1930; that Glidden-Townsend and McNally had purchased from the Richardson-May Land & Planting Company two plantations and executed the’ir notes for about eight hundred thousand dollars to the Richardson-May Land & Planting Company, which notes were secured by a first mortgage on these plantations; that *165 the land and planting company discounted these notes to the Planters’ Bank, and either at the time or later were indorsed by Governor Brewer and Ed Brewer; that the first half of the series of these notes were pledged thereafter by W. P. Holland, president of the Planters’ Bank of Clarksdale, .to the Missouri State Life Insurance Company, and the remainder of the notes above described were by Plolland pledged to the Canal-Commercial Trust' & Savings Bank for the payment of the five hundred thousand dollar note above described.

The money was obtained by Brewer by the sale of the bonds of Tchula Stores (Inc.) in the amount of seven hundred thousand dollars, which bonds were handled or purchased by the Canal Bank apparently at a profit, and the bank here defends that if it had known that Brewer would contest his indorsement of the Holland note, it (the bank) would not have “financed” the Tchula Stores bonds, and pleads an estoppel as against Brewer to assert that the Holland note was not binding and valid.

The Canal Bank alleged that the transaction on February 1st by which Brewer took up his note for two hundred thousand dollars, and his cousin Ed Brewer’s note for twenty-five thousand dollars, and received credit on the books of the bank for one hundred thousand dollars cash, was a recasting or “revamping” of Brewer’s indebtedness to the Canal Bank, and that there was sufficient consideration for Brewer’s indorsing the Holland note; denied any charge of fraud. And the Canal Bank filed its cross-bill in which it sought to set up: First, that Brewer as president of the Richardson-May Land & Planting Company had dissipated the assets of that corporation, which assets consisted of the proceeds of the Glidden-Townsend-McNally notes discounted at the Planters’ Bank, and asked for an accounting as the holder of the notes to become due beginning January 1, 1926, and ending January ,1, 1930, for about four hundred thousand dollars; second, the cross-bill sought to have the title to the Bobo and Gates notes vested in *166 the cross-complainant, the Canal-Commercial Trust & Savings Bank; and, third, the bank sought to have the Glidden-Townsend-McNally notes decreed by the court as a set-off as against the claim of Brewer to the Bobo and Gates notes.

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Bluebook (online)
108 So. 424, 143 Miss. 146, 47 A.L.R. 45, 1926 Miss. LEXIS 252, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/canal-commercial-trust-savings-bank-v-brewer-miss-1926.