Elliott v. Farmers' Bank of Philippi

57 S.E. 242, 61 W. Va. 641, 1907 W. Va. LEXIS 182
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedApril 17, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 57 S.E. 242 (Elliott v. Farmers' Bank of Philippi) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Elliott v. Farmers' Bank of Philippi, 57 S.E. 242, 61 W. Va. 641, 1907 W. Va. LEXIS 182 (W. Va. 1907).

Opinion

Miller, Judge:

The Farmers’ Bank of Philippi was organized in December, 1875, with a capital stock, then or within a few days thereafter subscribed, of $29,000. April 2, 1886, it ceased to received deposits and- went into liquidation. July 22, 1887, in the suit of Adam M. Woodford against the bank and others, the circuit court appointed a special receiver of its assets and property. Of the original directors elected at the organization, L. C. Elliott and Lewis Wilson continued in office up to the time of the appointment of the special receiver. J. 1ST. B. Crim, one of the original directors, dropped out of the board about September 15, 1884, when he sold his seventy-five shares of stock to A. W. Woodford. He does not appear to have owned stock thereafter until March 10, 1886, when he and Isaac Y. Johnson purchased at a trustee’s sale forty-eight shares previously held by John W. Corder, Crim taking twenty-four shares and Johnson twenty-four. February 21, 1887, after the bank had gone into liquidation, Crim ivas again elected a director to fill the vacancy caused by the resignation of J. H. Glass-cock, and continued in office until the appointment of the special receiver. With the exception of Crim, the officers and directors were then the same as on April 2, 1886 — as follows: James E. Heatherly, president; John W. Bos-worth, vice-president; George W. Gall, Jr., cashier; J. II. Glasscock, Luther C. Elliott, Lewis Walter, C. F. Teter, A. J. Gall, Lewis Wilson. James W. Talbott,'an original stockholder, was cashier of the bank from the time of its organization until about six months prior to April 2, 1886, when he was succeeded by G. W. Gall, Jr. He was also [643]*643secretary of the Philippi M. & M. Co., and with C. R. Oris-lip, a director of that company, and J. H. Glasscock, a director of the bank, indorser of its paper, and to which company large credits were extended by the bank.

The record discloses that the business of this bank was greatly mismanaged, almost from the beginning. It appears that most of the money of the stockholders and depositors was either loaned to the directors, or corporations in which they were interested, upon insufficient or no security, the larger portion of which was entirely lost. After exhausting all the solvent assets and the double liability of the solvent stockholders, there remained at the date of the final decree a deficit of over $5,000 necessary to pay creditors. Although as early as September 5, 1881, the directors called for payment of unpaid subscriptions of stockholders, the resolution provided that if it did not suit the stockholders to pay they should in lieu thereof be permitted to put in their notes with approved security at six months. It does not appear what the unpaid, subscriptions amounted to at the date of this resolution, but Commissioner Kittle in his first report, filed February, 1891, reports among the worthless assets of the bank, then aggregating $41,134.08, notes which we are able to identify with reasonable certainty as the notes of stockholders and their sureties or indorsers, given for unpaid subscriptions on stock aggregating over $22,000, and almost the entire amount of the remainder of these worthless assets is made up of notes of insolvent directors and stockholders of the Philippi M. & M. Co. • As was to have been expected, few of these debts were ever reduced to judgment by the directors, although some of them had been active in suing the bank and obtaining judgment for individual claims of their own, or assigning them to third persons — evidently to avoid, if possible, the payment of their stock liability on their worthless notes given in lieu thereof.

As apropos to the points presented for our consideration on this appeal, the following transactions of the directors are significant: J anuary 23, 1886, a committee of the directors composed of J. H. Glasscock, L. C. Elliott and J. W. Bos-wortli, appointed at a meeting of January 4, 1886, reported the assets as follows — discounted paper $41,815.35, real estate $2,471.21, furniture and fixtures $989.17, current ex[644]*644penses $1,096.88, due from banks or collectors $486.15, legal expenses $486.04, cash, checks and call loans $12,674.97; liabilities, capital stock $20,000, undivided profits $1,220.73, unpaid dividends $294, individual deposits $13,297.72, special deposits $7,689.37, exchange $208.09, profit and loss $29.67, rediscount and commercial paper $7,123.24, bank deposits $8,264.02; total resources and liabilities $60,079.77. Cashier Grail, examined with reference to this statement, makes the following significant admissions: that at the time of this statement the majority of the large stockholders were broken up and insolvent; that of the discounted paper the bank will lose at least $28,000; that included in the item $12,674.97 cash is a $7,300 deed of trust debt of the Philippi M. & M. Co.; that this $7,300 was assigned to him as trustee, and on it he realized about $2,100, which was applied on the so-called L. C. Elliott debt. Commissioner Kittle also reports that of the total assets of the bank only $14,347.84 is collectible, and that the indebtedness is $31,592.96. In the answer of John F. Woodford to the bill he charges that about April I, 1886, after the organization of the Tygarts Valley Bank the officers of the Farmers Bank, without the knowledge or consent of the stockholders except themselves, conveyed the brick bank building to the new bank for a price unknown to him; and he charges that “they have appropriated the proceeds arising from said sale in some manner according to their own desires, and in derogation of the rights of the creditors of the bank to have the proceeds distributed among them upon their said several debts.’’ The final decree reserves this question for further litigation.

January 4, 1886, the directors authorized the president to execute and negotiate two notes of $1,50.0 each, to be indorsed by them individually and secured by the judgment of the bank against J. M. Woodford for $1,496.48; a note of J. A. Williamson, October 3, 1885, at one hundred and twenty days, for $950; a note of J. M. Woodford, December 14, 1885, at one hundred and ten days, for $810; and a note of J. II. Woodford, August 10, 1884, at thirty days, for $500; all to be set aside by Gf. W. Grail, Jr., cashier, and held exclusively for this purpose.

February 1,1886, the directors, after reciting the fact that on January 12, 1880, J. W. Talbott, cashier, had executed a bond. [645]*645with J. E. Woodford, E. D. Talbott, J. E. Heatherly, A. G. Daniels, J. M. Woodford, Henry A. Gall and J. W. Robinson as sureties, who had become liable thereon and who the resolution recites had confessed judgment for some sum not stated, ordered that all liability should be released on account of said bond, “save and except as to two notes of the P. M. & M. Co., one for $1,400 and the other for $1,500, payable to the Farmers’ Bank of Philippi, upon which the said Talbott, as cashier, without authority, indorsed the name of the bank as surety. ”

November 12, 1886, after having gone into liquidation, the directors met and “ordered that the cashier set aside and hold in trust a sufficient amount of the notes and judgments due to and belonging to this bank to secure, indemnify and save harmless the directors who have heretofore, executed their individual notes, to-wit: one note to James Corder for $8,000, one note to Nancy C. Modisctt for $1,928.06, one note to J. C. Woodford for $2,000, and one note to E. W. Post for $1,35^; and to hypothecate a sufficient amount thereof, if possible, upon proper terms, and pay and discharge the above named notes.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
57 S.E. 242, 61 W. Va. 641, 1907 W. Va. LEXIS 182, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/elliott-v-farmers-bank-of-philippi-wva-1907.