City National Bank v. Price's Estate

196 N.W. 429, 225 Mich. 200, 1923 Mich. LEXIS 558
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 19, 1923
DocketDocket No. 30.
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 196 N.W. 429 (City National Bank v. Price's Estate) 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
City National Bank v. Price's Estate, 196 N.W. 429, 225 Mich. 200, 1923 Mich. LEXIS 558 (Mich. 1923).

Opinion

Steere, J.

Lawrence Price died in Lansing on February 12, 1917. He was at that time and had been since January 12, 1909, a director of plaintiff’s bank, twice a member of its examining committee and for a year a member of its discount committee. At the time of his death the bank owned and held as unpaid a promissory note for $500 dated October 13, 1916, due 90 days thereafter, signed by C. E. Chamberlain and Carrie Chamberlain, and indorsed by said Lawrence Price. It ran in usual form, “For value received, with 6 per cent, interest,” with the added *202 provision that “All parties to this instrument do hereby expressly waive presentation, demand, protest and notice of protest.”

Plaintiff filed a claim, based on this note, for $500 with accrued interest, against the estate of said deceased in the probate court of Ingham county. It was disallowed by the commissioners on claims and appeal was taken to the circuit court of Ingham county, where a verdict was directed for plaintiff and judgment entered thereon against said estate. Upon the trial plaintiff made proof of the note, its ownership, and that the same had not been paid, making out by these facts a prima facie case. No claim was made that the makers of the note or Mr. Price had ever gone to the bank and directly paid the amount of the note, but it was contended, and testimony introduced against objection to sustain the claim, that Mr. Price was released from his indorsement by reason of claimed misapplication of certain collateral. A motion by the defense for a directed verdict was denied. Defendant’s assignments of error are based on the proposition “that the note has been paid or ought to have been paid and would have been paid if certain collateral up in the hands of the bank was properly accounted for,” and cover refusal of the court to direct a verdict for the defense, granting plaintiff’s motion for a directed verdict, and charging the jury as follows:

“On the showing made here I do not think it can be said that if there was an improper disposal of the stock of the Perry-Barker Company, the City National Bank can be charged with such action. In other words, Mr. Davis, as trustee, handled the stock. He did not handle it as president of the City National Bank and on the showing made here I don’t find that the City National Bank was bound by what he did in that regard. It is certain that the bank did not receive payment of the amount due on the note. I charge you, therefore, ladies and gentlemen of the *203 jury, that the special or affirmative defense raised here has not been made out by the proofs and that on the record as it stands before you the plaintiff is entitled to recover the amount of the note with the interest thereon, viz.: $622.25. Your verdict will accordingly be for the plaintiff in that amount.”

The testimony relating to this defense ranges over a period of some 10 years, starting prior to March 15, 1907, at which time the Perry-Barker Candy Company was inaugurated. It was incorporated with a capitalization of $25,000 divided into 2,500 shares with a par value of $10 each. The amount actually paid in as stated in its articles of association was $4,000 in cash and $7,000 in other property consisting of the merchandize, tools and machinery of the Lansing Confectionery Company. Claude (C. E.) Chamberlain, one of the makers of the note in issue here, was one of the incorporators, subscribed its articles of association for 700 shares, was a director and the first president of the corporation. Lawrence Price and Harris E. Thomas were also directors. Price was its second president and Thomas succeeded him in 1910.

The corporation took over the business and property of the Lansing Confectionery Company, a copartnership composed of Claude E. Chamberlain and his mother, Carrie Chamberlain, who transferred all its assets to the Perry-Barker Candy Company and dissolved their partnership on that date. Previous to their partnership, the business belonged to and was carried on by Claude and his father, as copartners, and on the latter’s death Mrs. Carrie Chamberlain took the place of her husband as a partner in the firm. At the time the firm was dissolved and the Perry-Barker Candy Company took over its assets and business at a valuation of $7,000, the Lansing Confectionery Company was indebted to the City National Bank *204 in the principal sum of $8,450 which with accrued interest then amounted to $8,537.25.

Of the 700 shares of stock in the Perry-Barker Candy Company subscribed for by Claude Chamberlain on March 18, 1907, to be issued in payment for the assets of the confectionery company then turned over, one share was issued to Claude and 699 shares were issued on May 25, 1907, certificate No. 7, to “B. F. Davis, trustee for the John Chamberlain estate.” Claude Chamberlain testified that the agreement between him and Davis as to this being done “was all verbal” and explained that, “inasmuch as we were owing the bank considerable money from the Lansing Confectionery Company that stock was turned over to Mr. Davis as trustee to take care of the indebtedness for the bank.”

It appears that $4,000 of the indebtedness of the confectionery company to. the bank, on March 15, 1907, was represented by a note dated October 13, 1906, due January 11, 1907, signed by the Lansing Confectionery Company, indorsed by H. E. Thomas, Claude and Carrie Chamberlain. This note, according to the records of the bank, appears to have been renewed with the same maker and indorsers on December 4, 1907, and carried until February 12, 1909, when it was “cleared”- on the records on receipt of a personal note given by Thomas with some Auto Body and New-Way motor stock as collateral. This personal note was renewed by Mr. Thomas from time to time down to at least August, 1913, in which month Mr. Davis assigned the 699 shares of Perry-Barker stock to Thomas, to whom new certificates were issued by the corporation for the number of shares of stock covered by the old certificate so assigned to him by Davis. It is claimed for the defense that in this transaction a former $500-note of which the one in issue here is the last in a series of renewals was *205 either paid in fact, or in effect, by releasing stock held with it as collateral.

Just when, or what for, the original indebtedness of the confectionery company represented by the note in question arose is in some particulars left to conjecture, or inference. Price had been an indorser for the confectionery company before the Perry-Barker Candy Company was incorporated. The bank: records show it handled a 30-day note of the confectionery company for $3,450, dated September 7, 1906,' indorsed by Price and the two Chamberlains, which was taken up, or renewed, on October 11, 1906, by two 30-day notes dated October 8, 1906, given by the confectionery company and indorsed by the Chamberlains, one for $2,950 and the other for $500. The latter remained in the bank past due and unpaid when the Perry-Barker Candy Company was incorporated in March, 1907, and was then “cleared,” as the assistant cashier testified—

“by giving a demand note which passed through the bank’s hands on December 4, 1907, said note being signed by the Lansing Confectionery Company and indorsed by Carrie and C. E.

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Bluebook (online)
196 N.W. 429, 225 Mich. 200, 1923 Mich. LEXIS 558, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-national-bank-v-prices-estate-mich-1923.