Culpeper National Bank, of Culpeper, Va., Inc. v. Walter & Walter

77 S.E. 484, 114 Va. 522, 1913 Va. LEXIS 114
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedMarch 13, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 77 S.E. 484 (Culpeper National Bank, of Culpeper, Va., Inc. v. Walter & Walter) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Culpeper National Bank, of Culpeper, Va., Inc. v. Walter & Walter, 77 S.E. 484, 114 Va. 522, 1913 Va. LEXIS 114 (Va. 1913).

Opinion

Cardwell, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The Culpeper National Bank, of Culpeper, Va., brought this action of debt against E. T. Walter and E. A. Walter, partners, trading as Walter & Walter, to recover the principal sum of $2,500, with interest, alleged to be due and owing by them on the following negotiable note, to-wit:

“Culpeper, Va., April 4th, 1906. “$2,500.00. On demand after date we promise to pay to the order of Culpeper Nat. Bank, without offset, Twenty-five hundred dollars, with interest.
“For value received, negotiable and payable at the Culpeper National Bank, of Culpeper, Ya.
******
“Credit the Drawer.
“Due, Call Loan.
“(Signed) Walter & Walter.”

[524]*524Endorsements on the note show interest thereon to have been paid annually up to July 1, 1909.

The defendants pleaded the general issue to the action and filed three special pleas in writing; the substance of these pleas being that before the commencement of this suit the defendants paid to the plaintiff the sum of money in the declaration demanded. Accompanying one of the special pleas is the following statement in writing: “The defendants say that S. E. Smith, prior to the date mentioned in the foregoing plea, was indebted to these defendants in a sum of money equal to that demanded in the declaration, and being so indebted deposited with the plaintiff before that time a large sum of money, to-wit: The sum of ten thousand dollars, out of which he had the right to and did direct the said plaintiff to pay the sum of $2,500.00, which was the amount due on said note sued upon, if anything was due thereon.”

Upon the hearing of the cause, upon the evidence and under instructions of the court as to the law applicable thereto, the jury rendered a verdict in favor of the plaintiff in the sum of thirty dollars, with interest thereon from September 10, 1909; whereupon the plaintiff moved the court to set aside the verdict and grant it a new trial on the grounds (1) that the jury had been misdirected by the instructions of the court, and (2) because the verdict was contrary to the law and the evidence, which motion the court overruled and entered its judgment in accordance with the verdict of the jury, to which ruling the plaintiff duly excepted and applied for and obtained this writ of error.

During the progress of the tidal in the court below, the plaintiff took a number of exceptions to the action of the court in excluding evidence offered by the plaintiff and in granting instructions offered by the defendants, and in refusing to grant or in modifying instructions offered by [525]*525the plaitiff, but we will not find it necessary in disposing of the case here to refer especially to these exceptions.

In the statement of the facts of the case following, we shall, for convenience, speak of the plaintiff in error as the bank, and the note sued on as the Walters’ note.

It appears that S. Russell Smith, for a number of years prior to April, 1909, was the president and chief executive and managing officer of the bank; that about November, 1908, Francis I. Coats, U. S. bank examiner, discovered that Smith.was indebted and liable to the bank for a large sum of money, of which liability the bank had no prior knowledge, and afterwards John J. Davies, who had •then recently been employed as the bank’s assistant cashier, discovered other large indebtedness and liability of Smith to the bank, which, together with other indebtedness and liability before known, aggregated, as of March 1, 1909, about one hundred thousand dollars. Upon the discovery of this large indebtedness of Smith to the bank, Coats and Davies reported it to the bank’s directors, who took up the matter with Smith, with the view of securing some settlement of, or security for, said indebtedness; and in a conference between Smith and certain of the bank’s directors, Davies, and the bank’s attorney, there was then presented to Smith the demands of the bank against him, amounting (as stated above) to about $100,000, and upon practically all of said demands Smith then admitted his liability. About the time of this conference Smith turned over to the bank about $8,000 of notes of the Lunenburg Lumber Company, $25,000 in cash and $10,000 in the notes of Charles Forbes, with directions that the bank was to apply said cash and the proceeds of said notes when collected to the debts of Smith to the bank, and by express agreement, according to the weight of the evidence, the application was left entirely with the bank, Smith to have no right to direct the application of any of the said [526]*526money or the proceeds of said notes to any particular debt of his to the bank, but the bank was to apply the same to such items of his indebtedness as the bank might see fit.

It further appears that the bank at once discounted the Lunenburg Lumber Company’s notes turned over to it by Smith, and gave his account credit by the proceeds thereof, as well as the said $25,000 of cash, and then charged off against this credit certain debts of Smith, and reserved in its hands the Forbes notes for $10,000 for collection and future applicátion.

If further appears that the cash and collateral turned over by Smith to the bank did not discharge his indebtedness to the bank by about $60,000, and on demand of the bank Smith executed a deed of trust to John B. Miller, trustee, on certain real estate in and near the town of Culpeper, Va., which deed of trust provided for the sale of said real estate and the application of the proceeds therefrom, first, to the payment of notes held by the bank, of which Smith was the maker; second, to the payment of notes held by the bank on which Smith was endorser, and third, to the payment of any other indebtedness of Smith to the bank. At the time of the execution of said deed of trust, the estimated value of the real estate thereby conveyed was $12,000, but the bank only realized about $10,000 from the sale thereof.

The transactions just related were had during the period from March 1, 1909, to April 1st of the same year, and Smith retired from the presidency of the bank in April, 1909, but had not participated in the management thereof for some months prior thereto; the said John J. Davies, the bank’s assistant cashier, having been the managing officer from about December, 1908. Upon assuming the management of the bank, Davies found among its assets the Walters’ note here sued on, which was carried by the bank on its books under the head of “Time Loans,” loans [527]*527on which the bank collected interest on January and July 1st of each year. The interest on the Walters’ note to January 1, 1909, had been paid by Smith to the bank’s teller, but the bank did not know by whom this interest was paid, and only knew that it had been paid up to that date; and a short while prior to July 1, 1909, the bank notified, through the mail, Walter & Walter that interest on their note (the Walters’ note) would be due and payable on the 1st day of July following. In response to said notice E. A. Walter came to the bank and informed its assistant cashier, Davies, that Walter & Walter thought the note in question had long since been paid off by Smith, as he had promised so to do. E. A.

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Bluebook (online)
77 S.E. 484, 114 Va. 522, 1913 Va. LEXIS 114, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/culpeper-national-bank-of-culpeper-va-inc-v-walter-walter-va-1913.