Erhard v. Boone State Bank of Boone

65 F.2d 48, 1933 U.S. App. LEXIS 2915
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedApril 21, 1933
DocketNo. 9609
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 65 F.2d 48 (Erhard v. Boone State Bank of Boone) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Erhard v. Boone State Bank of Boone, 65 F.2d 48, 1933 U.S. App. LEXIS 2915 (8th Cir. 1933).

Opinion

KENYON, Circuit Judge.

This is an action by the executor of the estate of Genevieve Erhard (plaintiff in the trial court, appellant here) to impress an equitable lien upon certain assets of the Farmers’ State Bank of Boone, Iowa (hereinafter called the Farmers’ Bank), conveyed by it to the Boone State Bank of Boone, Iowa (hereinafter called the Boone Bank), and J. H. Roberts and T. I». Ashford, trustees of an express trust (herein called the trustees).

Genevieve Erhard, who died February 12, 1932, was a resident of Wichita, Kan., and, had for many years maintained a savings deposit in the Farmers’ Bank, which at the time of the transactions in question amounted to some $6,000.

In July, 1930, an arrangement was made whereby assets of the Farmers’ Bank were turned over to the Boone Bank and to the trustees, the Boone Bank assuming liability as to the depositors in the Farmers’ Bank.

The deposits assumed by the Boone Bank did not include the account of Genevieve Erhard. In the negotiations leading up to the transfer of assets certain bonds held by the Farmers’ Bank known as the Ground Gripper Bonds were objected to by the officers of the Boone Bank, who refused to take them over.

Carl Roberts, cashier of the Farmers’ Bank, whose wife was a sister of Genevieve Erhard, by some legerdemain arranged the books of the Farmers’ Bank so as to show that Genevieve Erhard had purchased the Ground Gripper Bonds out of her deposit. This act of Roberts was without any authority or knowledge of any kind on the part of Genevieve Erhard. As a result thereof on July 11, 1930, immediately prior to the transfer of assets, the account of Genevieve Erhard disappeared from the books of the Farmers’ Bank as a liability, and the Ground Gripper Bonds likewise disappeared from the assets.

As we shall discuss the facts very fully hereinafter, it is not necessary at this point to enter into extended specification thereof. Sufficient has been said to show the general situation out of which this case arose.

Plaintiff, as executor of the estate of Genevieve Erhard, asked judgment against the Farmers’ Bank for $6,085.36, and that the same be impressed as a lien upon the assets received by the Boone Bank and by the trus[50]*50tees. No judgment was asked against the Boone Bank.

The defense of the Boone Bank was that what it did was merely to purchase in the ordinary course of business and for full consideration certain assets of the Farmers’ Bank, and that it carried on the transaction in good faith without fraud; that the account of Genevieve Erhard had not been certified by the proper banking officers of the state as part of the liabilities of the Farmers’ Bank, and that it had not assumed the same; that it had no knowledge of the method by which the Erhard account had been charged off; and that it held the assets taken by it as protection against the liabilities assumed.

Judgment was entered against the Farmers’ Bank for $6,085.36, and the relief asked as against the Bank of Boone and the trustees was denied.

The trial court made certain findings of fact, which it embodied in its opinion, to wit: (a) That the Farmers’ Bank was not insolvent on July 11, 1930, the date of the contract; (b) that the entire assets of the Farmers’ Bank were not transferred to the Boone Bank; (e) that the officers of the Boone Bank knew of the Genevieve Erhard account and the Ground Gripper Bonds being the-property of the Farmers’ Bank prior to the transfer of the assets to the Boone Bank, and that they also knew that Carl Roberts canceled the Erhard account and withdrew the Ground Gripper Bonds from the assets of the Farmers’ Bank; (d) that in September, 1930, Mr. Ashford, president of the Boone Bank, had a conversation with appellant in which Ashford told him that the bank greatly appreciated the Erhard account, and that it was not necessary to change the pass book to a Boone Bank pass book, and that Ashford at that time knew that the actions of Carl Roberts in canceling the Genevieve Erhard account were without authority.

The court in its opinion (3 F. Supp. 463) stated that in view1 of the testimony of Carl Roberts and the statements of his father that this action on the part of Carl Roberts was done with authority made the testimony as to the conversation of Ashford and plaintiff of little force or effect in establishing that the officers of the Boone Bank knew that the actions of Carl Roberts were unauthorized. The court held that the burden was on plaintiff to show that the officers of the Boone Bank knew that Carl Roberts had no authority to dispose of the Erhard account by using it to buy Ground Gripper Bonds. It held that Ashford’s knowledge of the transaction in September, 1936, did not relate back to July, 1930, and that Ashford’s knowledge prior to July 11, 1930, of the mere existence of the Erhard account did not put him on inquiry as to the facts surrounding its disappearance and thus make the Boone Bank through him a party to the fraud. The general conclusion of the court seems to have been that this sale was one of a part of the assets, was an authorized corporate act made in good faith on the part of both parties to the transaction for value, and that it could not be assailed by a depositor of the selling ban]?:. The court suggested that Genevieve Erhard had been very badly treated by Carl Roberts, and that his acts were responsible for the loss of her account, but that the evidence was not sufficient to connect the officers of the Boone Bank therewith, and that the remedy of the plaintiff was to proceed against the Farmers’ Bank and secure an assessment on the stockholders.

We are unable to accept some of the findings of fact and conclusions Of law of the trial court. As this is an appeal in an equity action resulting in a trial de novo, we are not compelled to accept as correct findings of fact which in our judgment in part are erroneous, or conclusions of law drawn therefrom which we think result in an unjust decree. Central Improvement Co. v. Cambria Steel Co. (C. C. A. 8) 210 F. 696; New York Life Ins. Co. v. Simons (C. C. A. 1) 60 F.(2d) 30.

Appellant’s claims may be stated as follows:

(1) That when the assets of the Farmers’ Bank were transferred to the Boone Bank and the trustees, and the Farmers’ Bank practically ceased to exist, it having no assets left out of which the Erhard deposit could be paid, the assets passed to the Boone Bank and the trustees, subject to an equitable lien in favor of Genevieve Erhard.

(2) That the acquisition of the assets of the Farmers’ Bank by the Boone Bank in consideration of the assumption of its liabilities, as shown omits books, amounted in law to a merger of the two banks and rendered the Boone Bank liable for any existing liability of the Farmers’ Bank at the time of the transfer.

(3) That as the Boone Bank had actual knowledge of the Erhard deposit it took the assets of the Farmers’ Bank sub ject to Genevieve Erhard’s equitable right to a lien on the same pro rata basis as other depositors.

(4) That there was an actual fraud perpetrated upon Genevieve Erhard by the offi-[51]*51eers of the Farmers’ Bank and the Boone Bank through its president, Ashford.

Proposition No. 2 advanced by appellant is in our judgment unsound and we shall give it no further attention.

There is no necessity in view of our conclusion of discussing proposition 4, and we refrain from so doing.

We deal therefore with propositions 1 and 3, which are so interrelated that they may be discussed together.

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Bluebook (online)
65 F.2d 48, 1933 U.S. App. LEXIS 2915, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/erhard-v-boone-state-bank-of-boone-ca8-1933.