Chemical Nat. Bank v. Jackson

108 So. 53, 214 Ala. 458, 1926 Ala. LEXIS 34
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedJanuary 21, 1926
Docket3 Div. 725.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 108 So. 53 (Chemical Nat. Bank v. Jackson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chemical Nat. Bank v. Jackson, 108 So. 53, 214 Ala. 458, 1926 Ala. LEXIS 34 (Ala. 1926).

Opinion

SAYRE, J.

In a general but sufficient way appellant’s bill in this cause was stated in Montgomery v. Chemical National Bank, 98 So. 898, 209 Ala. 585. Upon the return of the cause to the trial court, sitting in equity, the bill was amended to meet the defect pointed out on the first appeal, and in some other minor respects to which we may refer later on. Defendant, Jackson, who took the place of Montgomery as his successor in the office of state superintendent of banks, made his answer a cross-bill. Everything, in short, was denied, and cross-relief prayed on the theory that the Merchants’ Bank had not at any time prior to its indorsement of the note for $33,780 been answerable to appellant Chemical Bank for the amount represented by that note, and that when appellant repudiated the agreement in virtue of which it had accepted the $60,000 note, along with the note for $33,-780, in consideration of its release of the Merchants’ Bank on account of the transaction involving the two banks and the HallBeale Cotton Company, it of necessity repudiated the entire transaction, the $33,780 included, and so became liable to the Merchants’ Bank to the extent of its collections in the meantime of collaterals pledged with it to secure another and different indebtedness of the Merchants’ Bank to it in the sum of $100,000 — that is, liable to the extent its collections exceeded the amount of its separate claim of $100,000. Upon final hearing upon pleading and proof it was decreed that appellant was not entitled to relief against the agreement whereby it released the Merchants’ Bank from its claim of indebtedness to the extent of $60,000, this, because no fraud had been shown, and further because, in any event as to that, appellant had estopped itself to claim such relief — by conduct, we presume, which is urged in the brief and will be hereafter noticed in necessary detail —but the particular grounds of which are not stated. Thus the validity of the agree *461 ment against which appellant seeks relief was decreed, and upon that hypothesis a reference was ordered to ascertain the status of the account between the banks to the end that a decree might be rendered on the cross-bill for the amount, if any, by which appellant’s collections exceeded defendant’s other indebtedness of $100,000 and its indorsement of the Hall-Beale note for $33,780. The complainant in the original bill, Chemical National Bank, prosecutes this appeal.

Appellee denies that the Merchants’ Bank was ever indebted to appellant bank on account of the drafts drawn by the Hall-Beale Company on itself in the sum of $100,000 and sold by appellant in New York, the proceeds being placed to the credit of the Merchants’ Bank with appellant, a similar credit being at the same time given to the Hall-Beale Company on the books of the Merchants’ Bank. This credit was afterwards used by the Hall-Beale Company. We shall not undertake to answer this argument in its utmost detail. The elaboration of its ingenuity forbids the effort. We purpose to notice its most impressive points. Its mainstay is found in the assertion that when Gaddis undertook to represent the Merchants’ Bank in the matter of securing a loan of $100,000 from the Chemical Bank for the Merchants’ Bank, or for the Hall-Beale Company, if the latter form of statement be preferred, he had no authority from the Merchants’ Bank — indeed, apart from some meticulous suggestions of a lack of agreement between allegata and probata, this is the one assertion without which the entire argument, on this branch of the case, falls to the ground.

Perhaps a sufficient refutation of this contention is found in the fact that in the beginning of the relationship between the two banks, that is to say, when the owners of the Merchants’ Bank took over the stock and business of its predecessor and changed its name to “Merchants’ Bank of Montgomery” and sought to establish a connection with the Chemical Bank as its New York correspondent, the last-named bank required that the board of -directors of the Merchants’ Bank pass a resolution authorizing the president — who then, and afterwards until the hank went into the hands of the superintendent of banks, was Gaddis — the vice president and cashier, or either of them, among other things, to “effect loans at any time for the Merchants’ Bank from the Chemical National Bank, and for such loans to make, execute, and deliver promissory notes, commercial paper, and other written obligations of this hank, * * * to sell or discount or rediscount commercial paper, bills receivable, securities, and other instruments and evidences of debt at any time held by this bank or subject to its control; and to that end to indorse and assign, transfer, and deliver the same.” The directorate of the Merchants’ Bank passed this resolution. In passing it they, of course, had not in mind the transaction here in question, as appellee suggests, for this transaction had then not been conceived; but, obviously, that is of no consequence, for, on its face, the resolution was broadly intended to cover all future transactions between the two banks, and, evidently, to prevent just such difficulties as have arisen in this case out of the plea that Gaddis had acted, though apparently for the bank, in fact without authority. This power appears to be comprehensive enough to cover the transactions now in judgment, but whether any refinement, of which the parties then were innocent, may distinguish and eliminate them, the Merchants’ Bank was bound, for the reason that Gaddis had all along been its “managing head” and had “negotiated its lines of credit in New York.” These are the expressions of Noble, its vice president and cashier, testifying as a witness in the cause, and they confirm the strong impression, made by the evidence as a whole, that Gaddis was the managing head of the bank in all its affairs. Montgomery Bank & Trust Co. v. Walker, 61 So. 951, 181 Ala. 368, is cited by appellee. That case abundantly shows that by usage, as well as by express authority, the president of a banking corporation may be invested with all the powers usually exercised by its cashier ox-board of directors. When Gaddis procured the Ghemical Bank to sell the Hall-Beale Company’s notes or drafts in New York, the, proceeds to be placed to. the credit of the Merchants’ Bank, the Chemical Bank required, and Gaddis, acting as president of the Merchants’ Bank, agreed, that the local bank would guarantee that the Hall-Beale Company woxxld ■ meet the obligation thus shown within 60 days.

Payment of the Hall-Beale obligation was secured by the deposit with the Merchants’ Bank of warehouse receipts for 1,185 bales of cotton, and in its dealing with appellant, the bank, the Merchants’ Bank, agreed to hold these receipts as trustee for the appellant. Officers and members of the bank, other than Gaddis, depose that they knew nothing of his guaranty on behalf of the bank, and it may be assumed that they were not informed of his express undertaking on behalf of the bank to hold these receipts in trust; but they knew everything else in connection with the tx-ansaction, and, on appellee’s showing, apart from any express engagement as trustee, the bank held these receipts in trust for appellant. And yet the bank, on some fraudulent pretense by the Hall-Beale Company that they needed possession of the receipts in order to realize upon the cotton, allowed one member of the Hall-Beale Company, a partnership, to dispose of 1,000 bales of the cotton so that the benefit of the pledge to that extent was wholly lost to appellant, ' whose recoux-se against the Hall-Beale Company was there *462

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Bluebook (online)
108 So. 53, 214 Ala. 458, 1926 Ala. LEXIS 34, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chemical-nat-bank-v-jackson-ala-1926.