Cole v. Commonwealth

11 S.W.2d 921, 226 Ky. 732, 1928 Ky. LEXIS 167
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedDecember 11, 1928
StatusPublished

This text of 11 S.W.2d 921 (Cole v. Commonwealth) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cole v. Commonwealth, 11 S.W.2d 921, 226 Ky. 732, 1928 Ky. LEXIS 167 (Ky. 1928).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge McCandless—

Reversing.

Charged with the crime of knowingly assenting to the receiving of a deposit by the Citizens ’ State Bank of Greenup, while he was its cashier, and at a time when that bank was insolvent, W. T. Cole was convicted and sentenced to the penitentiary for one year. Pie appeals.

Defendant became cashier of the bank in 1909. It had a capital stock of $15,000 -and a surplus of $1,500. Only two dividends were declared during the ensuing 17 years. The bank in a way was run as a family affair. Defendant’s son was assistant cashier, and his brother was its president during the year 1926. Defendant and his wife owed it debts of $5,000 each secured by mortgage. His brother A. D. Colé owed it $5,000, and other members of his family and relations owed $3,000 or more. Defendant needed more money, and as he could not legally incur a g-reater indebtedness at the bank, he induced various friends from time to time to execute their several notes to the bank and give them to him in exchange for his notes for like amount, payable to the individual making the exchange, with the understanding that he would negotiate the one received by him at the bank for his own benefit. In this way the bank made loans aggregating $14,000 or $15,000. In this record these obligations are styled “accommodation notes.” The state bank examiners discovered this practice in October, 1926, and expressed their dissatisfaction with it and suggested a change in the management and an audit of the books, and at the bank’s instance employed an expert accountant to make an audit, and this was completed about January 1, 1927. Presumably nothing improper or irregular was disclosed by that audit, as the accountant did not testify and no reference is made to his report. Early in January, 1927, the banking commissioner and deputy' state bank examiner spent several days in an effort to *734 straighten ont the affairs of the bank, and the former continued to insist on a change in the management; perhaps suggested that it was well to have the various obligees on the ‘ ‘ accommodation notes ’ ’ to make a statement touching those obligations. The defendant went to see the parties, and several of them testify that he requested them to make an affidavit that they had received the proceeds of the notes, while he testifies that he merely áslced them to certify an acknowledgment of their several obligations, and all admit that he was then asserting that the bank was solvent. One of these, Hugh Boggs, made a deposit of $1,050 on January 5th, which was received by defendant’s son as cashier, and which forms the basis of this prosecution.- On January 10th, an effort was made to -get the First National Bank of Greenup to take over the business. The bank was favorably inclined, and it is testified that it expressed its willingness to take $66,000 of the paper at $58,000 cash, leaving the banking house, fixtures, and $11,000 in notes undisposed of. But as some of the mortgage collateral did not' mature for three years it doubted its authority to receive this under the National Banking Act, and did not accept the proposition. Thereupon, on motion of A. D. Cole, the officers of the bank agreed to a voluntary liquidation under the state banking department. On January 11th the bank was closed. A. V. Polláck was appointed special banking commissioner for the purpose of liquidation. At that time the total deposits owing by the bank-approximated $115,000, and its assets, book value, $137,000-. The- latter, consisted of cash on hand, due from other banks and Liberty bonds, $52,973.02; loans and discounts, $79,-412.28;. bank building and fixtures, $4,402.50; “cash items” and overdrafts, $565.99. Of the amount due from banks, $43,.236.38 was deposited in the Farmers ’ & Traders ’ Bank at Maysville. The defendant’s brother, H. W. Cole, was vice president and A. D. Cole, another brother, was a director of that bank. Soon after the closing of the 'Citizens ’ Bank and the demand of its deposit, the Mays-ville Bank was also forced into liquidation. The' indictment of defendant followed.

'Supplementing the above facts the state- banking commissioner, Mr.. Phillips, testified that he-'was unable to tell from his examination whether the Greenup Bank was insolvent at the time it went into liquidation., He also testifies that he had expressed dissatisfaction with *735 the management of the. Maysville bank, and that it was possibly insolvent. H. H. Shanks,' the bank examiner who conducted the examination, wa,s not introduced by the commonwealth, but an affidavit was read by defendant as his deposition,. in which he stated that in going over the assets and liabilities of the bank, and after making a careful examination, the department was of the' opinion that—

“They (referring to the banking department) decided that while the bank needed a change in the personnel that the same was solvent and recommended to the officers of the bank that with a change of personnel they could go on operating the bank with the same assets under the same conditions that it was then' operating . . .■ and that the bank was put in the process of liquidation upon the suggestion of the president and other officers of the bank, and was not closed by the state banking commissioner or put in their hands arbitrarily but upon the above suggestion. ”'

Mr. Pollack, the special commissioner in charge of the liquidation, testified that during his 12 months’ tenure he had paid the depositors two dividends amounting to 40 per cent, of their claims, and had $10,000 in cash on hand for distribution; he had mailed notices to the various debtors of the bank, but did not undertake- to go into details as to the value of the assets remaining on hand. He, however, did testify that he had been informed by the state banking department that it was probable the bank of Maysville would pay 60 per cent, of its liabilities, and based on this hypothesis he thought the depositors of the Greenup bank would receive about 85 per cent, of their claims. The various makers of the ‘ f accommodation notes ” were permitted to testify at length as to the transactions in which those notes were executed, as well as to the defendant’s request for an affidavit admitting their liability thereon. One of these testified that the defendant was very much excited at the time he did this; that he then said the examiners were reflecting on his honor, and threatened to procure a pistol and shoot them, which witness dissuaded him from doing.

The defendant testified that he considered the bank solvent at the time he received the deposits, and; still be *736 lieved it to 'be so. He explained the transactions with the various makers of the accommodation paper by saying that they were all his friends; that he had explained to each of them his need of money; and that in each instance the obligor fully understood the obligation he was incurring and accepted defendant’s note in lieu thereof. In visiting them at the time of the examination, he understood the bank examiners to claim the accommodation notes were not genuine, and merely undertook to show they were bona fide. The makers of the notes were solvent, and the bank was in no wise injured by these transactions. In the latter respect he is not contradicted except by two parties. One of these, T. H.

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Related

Parrish v. Commonwealth
123 S.W. 339 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1909)

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Bluebook (online)
11 S.W.2d 921, 226 Ky. 732, 1928 Ky. LEXIS 167, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cole-v-commonwealth-kyctapphigh-1928.