Casto v. Martin

230 S.E.2d 722, 159 W. Va. 761, 1976 W. Va. LEXIS 210
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 23, 1976
Docket13541
StatusPublished
Cited by43 cases

This text of 230 S.E.2d 722 (Casto v. Martin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Casto v. Martin, 230 S.E.2d 722, 159 W. Va. 761, 1976 W. Va. LEXIS 210 (W. Va. 1976).

Opinion

Flowers, Justice:

This action was instituted to recover upon a promissory note for $94,073.48 signed by the defendant, George T. Martin, made payable to the order of Claude C. Casto. Contemporaneously, Castro had endorsed all his corporate stock in McKay Corporation over to Martin for transfer to Donald Carman. The note was never out of the possession of the maker’s attorney, it being the defendant Martin’s contention that payment was to be made only if he first got paid for the stock by the purchaser, Carman. Carman defaulted and Martin repurchased the stock at a foreclosure sale. Casto died and his widow brought this suit as executrix of his estate.

The ease was tried before a jury in the Common Pleas Court of Kanawha County and the trial court entered judgment in favor of the plaintiff upon a jury verdict of $94,073.48, the amount of the note. The judgment was affirmed by the Circuit Court of Kanawha County and *764 the defendant Martin was granted an appeal to this Court.

The three major questions forming the basis of this appeal are whether the trial court erred (1) in admitting into evidence an unauthenticated and wholly typewritten memorandum purporting to be from the defendant to plaintiff’s testator; (2) in failing to direct a verdict in the defendant’s favor at the conclusion of plaintiff’s evidence and at the conclusion of all the evidence and in refusing to set aside the verdict and judgment because the evidence sufficiently established that the delivery of the note was predicated upon the occurrence of a condition precedent; and (3) in giving Plaintiffs Instruction 4 as amended.

Three commercial events provide the background for the disputed liability upon the note: (A) George T. Martin, the defendant, Claude Casto, the plaintiff’s decedent, and two other associates bought controlling interest in the First National Bank of South Charleston; (B) two years later Martin and the same associates sold all their stock to Donald Carman upon a deferred payment arrangement; (C) Carman defaulted in making the second and final payment and a foreclosure sale was held.

Although this case presents a rather complex factual situation, an expanded presentation of the facts as they relate to these three events reveals but little dispute about what transpired.

A

Warden Allen, who owned 42% of the stock of the First National Bank of South Charleston, died on June 16, 1967. Since an additional 10% of the bank stock was owned by other members of his family, collectively the Allen family held the controlling interest in the bank.

After the death of Warden Allen who had served as president of the bank until his death, there was apparently divided sentiment about whether the stock should be sold to George T. Martin or to Claude C. Casto. Casto *765 for a number of years had served as vice-president of the bank. When Casto could not secure the funds to buy the stock, it was offered to Martin.

Martin, who was not experienced in the banking business, invited Casto to participate with him in the purchase. Casto was permitted to include two other bank employees in the venture. Using Martin’s credit and cash to bind the deal, the four associates formed a bank holding company called “McKay Corporation.” The McKay Corporation issued stock and accepted the subscribers’ promissory notes in full payment therefor as follows:

Name Shares Note Amount
George T. Martin $250,000 250
Claude C. Casto 100,000 100
Garth E. Thomas 50,000 50
Lovell Myers 30,000 30

McKay Corporation then borrowed $719,900, the full purchase price of the South Charleston bank stock, from The Charleston National Bank, pledging the 6,260 shares purchased from the Allens as collateral.

Martin agreed that the salaries of Casto, Thomas and Myers at the First National Bank would be increased sufficiently to retire their notes and thus pay for their McKay stock over a ten-year period. The approximate annual salary increases were, respectively, Casto $11,000; Thomas $5,500; and Myers $3,500. The parties, to insure the financial stability of McKay, contributed $10,000 to the corporation as “seed money” in the same ratio as their stock holdings. When McKay Corporation income from its bank dividends became insufficient to keep The Charleston National Bank loan current, Martin bought an additional 290 shares of McKay stock at the original price.

In unrelated transactions, George Martin, individually, had purchased other shares of First National stock. About 18 months after the Allen sale to McKay Corpora *766 tion, Martin and Casto jointly purchased a block of 2,800 shares in the same bank.

B

Sometime in 1969, Martin was approached by Donald Carman who expressed an interest in purchasing controlling interest in the South Charleston bank. By this time various stock splits had apparently inflated the number of shares of stock outstanding. McKay Corporation held 20,866 shares and Martin individually owned 13,699 shares. Martin advised that he would only sell if Carman would purchase the stock of his associates at the same unit price. After some negotiation and discussion principally between Carman and Martin, Carman and Martin executed an agreement dated August 4, 1969, by which:

1. Martin sold Carman 3000 shares of bank stock at a price of $65.00 per share.

2. For the sum of $55,000 Martin granted an option to Carman

a. to purchase all 720 shares of McKay Corporation or its 20,866 shares of bank stock for $1,356,290 (which would be $65.00 per bank share);
b. to purchase Martin’s remaining 10,699 individually held bank shares for $695,435 (which equals $65.00 per share);
c. to purchase Martin’s controlling interest in Wheeling Coca-Cola Bottling Co. for $733,000;
d. to purchase Martin’s controlling interest in McNicol-Martin, a Clarksburg china company, for $195,000.

The total purchase price for the optioned items was $2,979,725, subject to certain adjustments plus credit for the $55,000 option price. The option was exercisable by payment of the balance on February 4, 1970, or on August 4, 1970, with an 8% increase in the gross price. Apparently sometime after the date of the document, *767 August 4, 1969, Martin and Carman treated the option as an agreement of sale of the various business entities and Carman gave his note, payable on the respective exercise dates, to Martin at The Charleston National Bank.

In a separate transaction on October 15, 1969, Martin and Casto sold to Carman the shares of bank stock which they held jointly. The unit price of the shares appears to be the same $65.00 rate and this sale, which was apparently for cash, yielded each a profit of $35,000.

On October 17, 1969, events crucial to the present dispute took place.

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Bluebook (online)
230 S.E.2d 722, 159 W. Va. 761, 1976 W. Va. LEXIS 210, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/casto-v-martin-wva-1976.