Carlton v. Union Banking Co.

269 N.W. 200, 277 Mich. 351, 1936 Mich. LEXIS 675
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 5, 1936
DocketDocket No. 20, Calendar No. 38,876.
StatusPublished

This text of 269 N.W. 200 (Carlton v. Union Banking Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Carlton v. Union Banking Co., 269 N.W. 200, 277 Mich. 351, 1936 Mich. LEXIS 675 (Mich. 1936).

Opinion

North, C. J.

In this suit, originally started as a suit at law but later transferred, by stipulation, to equity, plaintiff seeks reimbursement from defendants for upwards of $16,000 paid by him in satisfaction of a judgment obtained against him by the Commercial National Bank & Trust Company. This judgment was obtained upon plaintiff’s note given to the defendant Union Banking- Company and as *353 signed by it to the Commercial National Bank & Trust Company. It is plaintiff’s claim that the note was merely an accommodation note given without consideration. Decree was entered in the circuit court dismissing plaintiff’s bill of complaint and he has appealed.

In 1929 the Union Banking Company, a Michigan banking corporation, doing business in St. Joseph, Michigan, accepted for discount three promissory notes, each in the sum of $5,000, signed by R. C. Crawford. As collateral there accompanied these notes 200 shares of the Irving* Trust Company of New York in the form of "street certificates.” The individual defendants Merrill, Benning* and Burk-hard each purchased from the bank one of these notes. But later the bank repurchased each of the notes. In the meantime the bank had retained possession of the Crawford notes and the collateral stock.

In February, 1930, the bank officials were anticipating* an examination of the bank. The Crawford notes were past due and the collateral stock had depreciated in market value so that it Avas at least $2,500 below the aggregate of the notes. It is alleged in plaintiff’s bill of complaint that there was some question as to the collectibility of the Crawford notes "and that for the best interest and the good of the Union Banking Company it Avas necessary that someone take up the past due paper and give to said bank a neAV note for the said indebtedness.” Plaintiff Avas a director of the bank, secretary of the board of directors, and a member of the discount and auditing committees. The president and some of the directors of the bank prevailed upon plaintiff to give his nonnegotiable note to the bank for $15,350 for six months in lieu of the Crawford notes or, as appellees assert, as payment for the *354 purchase by plaintiff of the stock deposited as collateral to the Crawford notes. Plaintiff’s note was approved by the discount committee; but plaintiff asserts it was then understood to be only an accommodation note and that shortly after plaintiff gave his note the bank president was to go to Chicago and endeavor to secure further collateral for the Crawford notes or a reduction of the indebtedness by partial payment. This appears not to have been accomplished. In March, 1930, the bank examiner criticized plaintiff’s $15,350 note as an overloan and required the bank directors to extend to plaintiff an additional line of credit if the bank was to continue to hold plaintiff’s note. At the May meeting of the board, attended by plaintiff, such action was taken. Prior to this the bank cashier, with authority from the bank president, wrote to plaintiff the letter quoted below. But appellees claim, and the record seems to support this claim, that the other directors did not authorize and wore not aware of the writing of this letter.

“February 19, 1930.

“Arthur Carlton,

‘‘ City.

“Dear Sir:

“This will acknowledge receipt of your note of $15,350 and which this bank accepts Avithout any liability on your part and inasmuch as it is an accommodation in taking up three' $5,000 notes of R. C. Crawford against Avhich we hold 200 shares of Irving Trust Company of New York as collateral.

“Youry truly,

“Harry A. Johnson,

‘ ‘ Cashier. ’ ’

It appears from plaintiff’s testimony that when he was about to advise the others present at a directors’ meeting of the character of his note the *355 bank president shook his head at plaintiff and the latter was deterred from making his statement to the other directors.

On May 23, 1930, the Union Banking Company sold and assigned certain of its commercial papers to the Commercial National Bank & Trust Company and received therefor $51,000. This sale and assignment included plaintiff’s note, and the assignment contained the following:

‘ ‘ The Arthur Carlton note has collateral attached consisting of 200 shares Irving Trust Company. Certificates Nos. 24,840-24,839.”

Plaintiff’s note was not paid at maturity and thereupon the assignee brought suit and recovered judgment against plaintiff on June 4, 1931. Plaintiff satisfied the judgment rendered against him by paying part in cash and giving his note for the balance. When suit was brought by the Commercial bank ag’ainst Mr. Carlton he notified the Union Banking Company and authorized it to appear and defend, but the bank did not do so. In his defense Mr. Carlton pleaded and unsuccessfully urged that the note on which suit was brought was a nonnegotiable accommodation note, given without consideration, and that the Commercial National Bank & Trust Company was not a holder in due course. Prior to the suit by the assignee on plaintiff’s note, and on February 9, 1931, the following entry was made in the minutes of a meeting of the directors of the Union Banking Company:

"The matter of the accommodation n'ote given by Mr. Carlton to the Union Bank was discussed, and it was the sense of the meeting that any deficiency between the value of the security and the face of his accommodation note should be charged to the liquidating fund of the Union bank.”

*356 These minutes were signed by five of the bank’s directors, including plaintiff, and defendants Merrill and Benning. This belated action really amounted only to expressing a desire that the bank, rather than plaintiff, should bear the apparent loss incident to the Crawford transaction. The recital in the minutes constituted competent evidence as an admission, but it could not change the nature of the prior transaction in connection with which plaintiff had given his note to the Union bank.

Plaintiff contends that he had no knowledge of his note having been sold by the Union bank to the Commercial bank until after its maturity when he was notified and demand of payment was made by the Commercial bank. Because of this circumstance, as well as its general bearing upon the case, the further statement of facts is material. Shortly following the assignment of plaintiff’s note (May 23,1930) to the Commercial bank, and on June 21, 1930, the Union bank entered into a liquidating contract with the Commercial bank whereby all of the assets of the former were transferred to the latter which undertook to pay the scheduled liabilities of the Union bank. Plaintiff, both as a director and as a stockholder of the Union bank, actively participated in this transfer of its assets; and this transaction occurred prior to the maturity of his note. Plaintiff must have known that his note had passed with other assets of the Union bank. On the 24th day of September 1931, the Commercial National Bank & Trust Company suspended operation and defendant W. R. Payne was appointed receiver. In plaintiff’s brief it is stated: “Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
269 N.W. 200, 277 Mich. 351, 1936 Mich. LEXIS 675, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carlton-v-union-banking-co-mich-1936.