Darden v. American Bank & Trust Co.

130 So. 507, 130 So. 508, 158 Miss. 742, 1930 Miss. LEXIS 68
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 3, 1930
DocketNo. 28852 1/2.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 130 So. 507 (Darden v. American Bank & Trust Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Darden v. American Bank & Trust Co., 130 So. 507, 130 So. 508, 158 Miss. 742, 1930 Miss. LEXIS 68 (Mich. 1930).

Opinion

Griffith, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The Hurricane plantation, situated on ■ an island in the river about twenty miles below Vicksburg, had in the year 1911 become heavily indebted, and among the means to provide for its obligations there was a bond mortgage placed upon it for twenty-five thousand dollars. The bonds became the property of the American Bank & Trust Company, to cover in part a previous debt. The bank had made various other loans on plantation property, *745 and, by reason of adverse conditions, the bank bad been compelled to acquire real estate and plantation securities in an overlarge amount, to tlie embarrassment of tbe convenient operation of the bank. Dr. Gr. T. Darden, appellant’s testate, a wealthy resident of Sharkey county, was a large depositor in the bank, and. was on terms of intimate friendship with some of those directly interested in the bank’s welfare. In this situation, on April 29, 1912, Mr. Thos. Eose, then the active manager of the bank, induced Dr. Darden to take over from, the bank for cash at face value an amount of bonds .aggregating more than sixty thousand dollars, and, to evidence the transfer of the title thereof, a memorandum somewhat similar in form to a bill of sale was on said date executed by the bank to Dr. Darden, and, in turn, there was an indorsement by the bank on this memorandum that the bonds were to be held by it as trustee. The Hurricane bonds were included in this transaction.

Evidently Dr. Darden was not willing to purchase the said Hurricane bonds outright, as being surely worth their face value in cash, without recourse, for on the same day the bank manager and Dr; Darden called into the conference Mr. E. L. McLanrin, who was a director of the bank, a close friend of Dr. Darden, and also the attorney both for the bank and Dr. Darden; and the parties stated to Mr. McLanrin in substance that it was desired that he should be the witness to an oral agreement between the bank and Dr. Darden to the effect that as to these Hurricane bonds the bank would redeem them at any time at face value on demand of Dr. Darden.

So far as the record shows, there was no other transaction between the bank and Dr. Darden from the date last mentioned, April 29,1912, until March 28, 1917, other than that Dr. Darden continued as a large depositor and valued customer of the bank. The bonds remained in the bank, and still there remain, and the interest continued to be paid as due. On the date last mentioned, *746 the bank again prevailed on I>r. Darden to take over undesirable property — from the banking standpoint — and to purchase from it the Catalpa plantation in Washington county, at a purchase price of approximately forty-five thousand dollars. A deed of trust on the property to secure the purchase-money notes was executed by Dr. Darden, the notes extending through a series of five years, 'but on the same day the bank delivered to Dr. Darden a letter to the effect that, notwithstanding the maturities of said notes, Dr. Diarden should have the privilege of paying them at any time at their face value, without bonus. On the same day there was also, delivered to Dr. Darden another letter reading as follows:

"The American Bank & Trust Company
“Vicksburg, Mississippi.
“March 28, 1917.
“Dr. G. T. Darden, Blanton, Miss. Dear Doctor : In reference to the agreement heretofore had with this Bank, made while Mr. Thos. Bose was in control, and with him, to the effect that this Bank would redeem from you at any time you demanded it, the Hurricane Bonds for twenty-five thousand dollars, purchased by you from this Bank, I beg to state that it is now understood that you have the privilege, whenever you demand it, to turn in these bonds with accrued interest as so much cash against the debt owed by you for purchase money on Catalpa Plantation.
“Yours very truly,,
“W. G. Paxton, Manager.”

On July 19, 1917, Dr. Darden sold Catalpa plantation to North and wife, who assumed the purchase-money notes due to the bank, and Mr. North on or about May 20, 1919, paid the said notes in full with interest. Prior to the deal and quoted letter of March 28-, 1917, Mr. Bose, on account of failing health, had retired from the bank, and was succeeded as manager by Mr. Paxton, who, as a witness on the trial, stated in effect that he had no *747 present recollection of these transactions-sufficient to enable him to give any dependable, material testimony concerning them. Dr. Darden died in 1923, and Mr. Rose is also dead. Mr. McLaurin is therefore the only person who could testify positively to the facts. The matter has found its way into litigation by reason of the fact that the interest on the Hurricane bonds was not paid on the due date, May. 31, 1929, and appellant as the sole legatee under the will of Dr. Darden, on July 13, 1929, demanded of the bank that- the said bonds be redeemed by it, which demand, was refused.

It is insisted by appellee in the first place, and as its main contention, as we understand it, that the agreement made between Dr. Darden and the bank, to the effect that the bank would redeem the Hurricane bonds at any time demanded, was made after the contract of purchase of the bonds had been completed, after the instrument evidencing the sale had been executed and the check for the purchase money had been delivered; and that therefore the particular stated agreement was without consideration. After a careful review of this record and a deliberate consideration of all the surrounding facts and circumstances, we are of the opinion that the conclusion is inescapable that the agreement mentioned was a part and parcel of the main transaction, and, being integral, cannot now be separated.into disconnected parts. From which it follows that the consideration of this integral part is supported by the consideration present in the support of the contract as a whole.

Appellee’s next contention is that, conceding the consideration, the memorandum of agreement executed on April 29, 1912, evidencing the sale of those bonds was complete in itself, and cannot be added to or varied by oral evidence, so that it follows that the rights of appellant cannot be shown to be any other or further than conferred by the language of the letter of March 28, 1917. We will, for the purposes of this ease, accept the latter *748 statement as correct, supplementing' it, however, witli the further statement that in interpreting’ the meaning of the expressions used in a letter or other writing’ the court must look to all the surrounding facts and circumstances. 13 C. J. pp. 543-544.

The letter in its opening statement refers to the agreement theretofore had with the bank. There is no sort of suggestion in the record that there had in the meantime been any agreement with the bank in respect to this matter other than the one made on April 29, 1912, and we have already mentioned that, so far as the record discloses, or even intimates, there was no other transaction of sale and purchase between the bank and Dr. Darden from April 27, 1912, to the date of the Catalpa plantation purchase on Marrh 28, 1917.

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Bluebook (online)
130 So. 507, 130 So. 508, 158 Miss. 742, 1930 Miss. LEXIS 68, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/darden-v-american-bank-trust-co-miss-1930.