Daniel v. Best

279 N.W. 374, 224 Iowa 1348
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedMay 3, 1938
DocketNo. 43699.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 279 N.W. 374 (Daniel v. Best) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Daniel v. Best, 279 N.W. 374, 224 Iowa 1348 (iowa 1938).

Opinion

DoNegan, J.

As this case comes to us on appeal it involves the liability of the estate of John Young, deceased, and of property of his estate in the hands of the defendants, Ruth Young Keith, Agnes Young Sherrick, and Grace Young Pike, to contribute to the payment of the indebtedness of two private banks in which he owned an interest during his lifetime. To a better understanding of the issues involved it seems advisable to set out a statement of facts upon which such liability is based.

In 1890 the Traer State Bank was organized, with its place of business at Traer, Tama county, Iowa. John Young was one of its organizers and the owner of five shares of its stock. His holdings of stock were increased thereafter, and at the time of his death he was the owner of 47*4 shares, the last addition to his stock having been acquired in 1925. The record does not show when John Young first became a director of this bank, but it does show that he was a director from July 1903 to 1911, when he became president, and that, from that time, he continued as director and president until his death on the 7th day of February, 1927. At a regular meeting of the stockholders in January 1904, it was voted that $3,000 of the surplus of the Traer State Bank be appropriated to the organization of a private bank at *1350 the town of Buckingham, Tama county, Iowa, to be known as the Bank of Buckingham. The plan for the organization of this bank provided that the $3,000 appropriated from the surplus of the Traer State Bank should be placed in the hands of three trustees; that these trustees should be selected by the directors of the Traer State Bank from their own number; and that the stock of the Bank of Buckingham would be owned by the stockholders of the Traer State Bank. The business of the Bank of Buckingham was profitable and, as the result of accumulations from its own profits and additional appropriations from the Traer State Bank, its capital, in January 1907, had increased to $10,000. In January 1908, the stockholders of the Traer State Bank voted to establish another private bank at the town of Voorhies in Black Hawk county, and $8,000 of the surplus accumulated in the Traer State Bank and the Bank of Buckingham was directed to be used for that purpose. By January 1909, another $2,000 was turned over to this new bank, thereby increasing its capital to $10,000. At all times thereafter the capital of each of these banks was $10,000. Both of these private banks were conducted in identically the same manner. The property and assets of each bank were held and managed by a board of three trustees, who were directors of the Traer State Bank selected by the directors of that bank. Beginning some time later, the three trustees were always the president, the vice president and the cashier of the Traer State Bank. The business of each of the private banks was conducted independently of the business of the other, and of the Traer State Bank. Separate accounts were kept for each bank and different persons employed in conducting the business of each. All three banks continued to operate, to show profits, and to declare dividends over a period of many years and until some time before they were finally closed on the 2d day of November, 1931.

No separate certificate of stock or other writing indicating the extent of the interest owned by each stockholder of the State Bank of Traer in either of the two private banks was ever issued. While the plan of organization adopted by the stockholders of the Traer State Bank, in January 1904, does not expressly so state, there is sufficient in the express provisions of the plan, when considered in connection with the actual conduct of the parties to the plan, in carrying it out thereafter, to indicate that it was the intention and understanding that each *1351 stockholder in the Traer State Bank was the owner of an interest in the Bank of Buckingham, and later in the Bank of Yoor-hies, which bore the same ratio to the business and assets of each of these two banks that the number of shares of stock held by such stockholder in the Traer State Bank bore to the total number of the shares of capital stock of said bank. When dividends were paid by the Bank of Buckingham and the Farmers Bank of Yoorhies, each stockholder in the Traer State Bank received the same amount of dividend that he would have received had the total amount distributed in dividends been paid by the Traer State Bank as dividends of the Traer State Bank. At no time during the entire existence of the Bank of Buckingham and the Farmers Bank of Yoorhies was any separate written instrument executed or delivered to evidence the transfer or assignment of the interest and ownership held by any stockholder of the Traer State Bank in the property and assets of the Bank of Buckingham or the Farmers Bank of Yoorhies. During the period intervening between the establishment of these two banks and the death of John Young, there was a change of ownership in more than two-thirds of the 600 shares of stock of the Traer State Bank resulting from the death of stockholders in that bank. In such cases the stock of the Traer State Bank was transferred either by will or inheritance, or by sale from the estate of the deceased owner to new owners, and the transfer evidenced by assignment and issuance of new certificates. In none of these cases was any written instrument executed to transfer the interest of the deceased in the private banks, nor does any reference whatever appear in the probate proceedings in regard to the interest of such deceased stockholder of the Traer State Bank in the property and assets of the Bank of Buckingham and the Farmers Bank of Yoorhies. In every instance, however, where, upon the death of a stockholder of the Traer State Bank, the stock of such deceased person in the Traer State Bank passed, by will or inheritance, to his beneficiaries or heirs, or by sale from his estate to new owners, all the parties involved in these changes of ownership of such stock of the Traer State Bank appear always to have understood that the ownership of the interest of the deceased in the private banks followed the ownership of the stock of the Traer State Bank. Moreover, during all the years from the time John Young became president of the Traer State Bank until his death he was one of the trustees in charge *1352 of the private banks. From 1919 to 1931, inclusive, separate statements of the Traer State Bank and of each of the private banks were made to the assessor for taxation purposes, the statements for the years 1919 to 1926 being signed and sworn to by John Young. The statements of the Traer State Bank and of the Bank of Buckingham were filed in the office of the auditor of Tama county and the statement of the Farmers Bank of Yoor-hies was filed in the auditor’s office of Black Hawk county. In each of these yearly statements the owners of the Bank of Buckingham and the Farmers Bank of Yoorhies were the same as the stockholders of the Traer State Bank, and the extent of their ownership in the private banks was in the same ratio as their holdings in the stock of the Traer State Bank. At different times combined statements of the Traer State Bank and the two private banks were printed and distributed among the stockholders of the Traer State Bank and the public generally. These statements listed the stockholders of the Traer State Bank and stated that the Bank of Buckingham and the Farmers Bank of Yoorhies were partnership banks, and that the stockholders or partners were individually responsible for the whole liability of the two banks.

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Bluebook (online)
279 N.W. 374, 224 Iowa 1348, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/daniel-v-best-iowa-1938.