Ex Parte Hernlen

153 S.E. 133, 156 S.C. 181, 69 A.L.R. 443, 1930 S.C. LEXIS 109
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedApril 17, 1930
Docket12898
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 153 S.E. 133 (Ex Parte Hernlen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ex Parte Hernlen, 153 S.E. 133, 156 S.C. 181, 69 A.L.R. 443, 1930 S.C. LEXIS 109 (S.C. 1930).

Opinions

April 17, 1930. The opinion of the Court was delivered by This is an appeal from an order of his Honor, Judge Dennis, awarding the petitioner, Mrs. Hernlen, priority over all other general creditors of the defunct People's Bank of Anderson, in the distribution of its assets, under the circumstances which will be detailed.

The petition alleges in substance:

That in June, 1921, Mrs. Hernlen had upon deposit with the bank approximately $8,000; that on June 21, 1921, Lee G. Holleman, president of the bank, committed suicide, a fact which caused her to become apprehensive of the safety of her deposit; that she immediately notified E.P. Vandiver, who had succeeded to the presidency, that she wished either to remove her deposit, or to have him invest it in a safe loan secured by a mortgage of real estate; that Vandiver agreed to so invest it, and she allowed the deposit to remain in the bank upon such assurance; that thereafter, and prior to January 6, 1922, Vandiver notified her that he had an application from one McCarley for a loan of $10,000.00, which she might obtain under the arrangement referred to; that she, with her brother and a representative of the bank, made an *Page 196 inspection of the real estate which McCarley proposed to mortgage as security for said loan; that she declined to make a loan in excess of $8,000 upon the security offered, but was willing to make it for that amount, which she agreed to do, "the same to be advanced from the deposit in said bank", that the agreement then with Vandiver was that he would negotiate the loan for her of $8,000 and take from McCarley an additional note to the bank for $2,000, all to be secured by the mortgage, but the $8,000 note to Mrs. Hernlen to have priority over the $2,000 not to the bank, in the mortgage; that hearing nothing from Vandiver as to the loan in the meantime, on January 6, 1922, she gave a check to her husband for the full amount of the deposit and directed him to withdraw it from the bank unless he found that the loan had been perfected; that he presented the check for payment to the bank, but upon the representation of Vandiver that the papers were being prepared, and would be completed that day, she allowed the deposit to remain in the bank to be drawn upon by Vandiver in perfecting the loan; that on January 17, 1922, the bank closed it doors and was taken over by the state bank examiner; that she then demanded of those in charge of the bank the papers in the McCarley loan, but "was advised that no loan had been made in her name, and that her money still remained a deposit;" that Vandiver had made a loan to McCarley for $10,000, in two notes of $8,000 and $2,000, executed on January 6, 1922, secured by the mortgage, referred to, duly recorded, "which papers remained in the hands of the People's Bank of Anderson,as unpledged assets; that subsequently the notes were paid in full to the liquidating agents of the bank on July 17, 1923, and the mortgage canceled of record; the petition further alleges:

"That although the Eight Thousand Dollar ($8,000,00)-note was made payable to said bank, it was taken pursuant to the agreement aforesaid to wit: that it was to be the property of the petitioner and it was held by the said bank as *Page 197 trustee for the petitioner, with the intention or obligation to transfer it to her in accordance with the agreement, and was at all times so held."

And further:

"Petitioner alleges that in law and equity the Eight Thousand Dollar ($8,000.00)-note given by the said L.P. McCarley, as aforesaid, and secured by the said mortgage, was her property and under the facts stated she was entitled, upon the payment of the said Eight Thousand Dollar ($8,000,00)-note, by L.P. McCarley to receive the proceeds thereof in preference to any claim of the said The Peoples Bank of Anderson, or any creditor thereof, and she alleges that the receiver of the said The Peoples Bank of Anderson has failed and refused to account to the petitioner for the proceeds of said payment, and that, instead, the proceeds of said payment went into the general corpus of the said bank's estate succeeded to by the receiver herein, the assets of the said corporation being increased to the extent of the amount of the proceeds of such payment. Petitioner alleges that there are assets of the said The Peoples Bank of Anderson in the hands of the receiver, out of which she can be reimbursed for the amount of the proceeds of the said note which was her property as aforesaid, and which assets she alleges are unpledged, and belong to her to said extent, and she alleges that a lien should be declared as against the proceeds of payment of said note by said McCarley, and that in equity she has a lien thereon, and that it is the duty of the receiver in this action to account to her out of the assets remaining in his hands for such sum of money."

The petition, in the main, is abundantly sustained by the evidence; in fact, as counsel for the appellant states in his printed argument: "There is little controversy as to the facts."

Upon learning of the suicide of the president of the bank, in June, 1921, Mrs. Hernlen, naturally, became apprehensive of the safety of her deposit, which at that time was *Page 198 over $7,000, and communicated to Vandiver who had succeeded Holleman as president, her purpose either to withdraw her deposit or to have him invest it in a note secured by a mortgage upon real estate.

Vandiver, the helmsman of the vessel in a storm, if not in an actually sinking condition, was naturally anxious to retain the deposit of such a considerable amount, to enable him, if possible, to weather the storm; he needed it also to avoid the effect upon other depositors, of a withdrawal by Mrs. Hernlen — the possibility of a banker's greatest dread — a "run" on the bank. He checked her impulse to withdraw the deposit, by agreeing to her alternative suggestion ofinvesting that deposit in a loan for her, upon a note secured by a mortgage of real estate.

In the fall of 1921, Vandiver notified Mrs. Hernlen that he had an application from one McCarley, for a loan of $10,000.00, upon a real estate mortgage, which he recommended, and stated that, if she approved it, he would makethe loan for her.

In response thereto, Mrs. Hernlen, who lived at McCormick, went to Anderson, and, in company with her brother and a representative of the bank, inspected the tract of land offered as security for the loan. As the result of such inspection, she told Vandiver that she would lend only $8,000,00 on the security offered. Vandiver explained that McCarley needed $10,000.00, and that the bank would lend him $2,000.00 and would lend him $8,000.00 for her, take one mortgage securing both notes, and assign the $8,000.00 note and the mortgage to her, giving her preference as to lien.

In this connection Vandiver testified: "I intended to lend eight thousand dollars for Mrs. Hernlen, and I promised her the note and mortgage for this amount. We (the bank) wanted to take a ten-thousand-dollar note because we thought then that the property would secure that much. And the agreement was that the bank would take an `eight' and a `two' and that they (the bank) would assign the `eight' to *Page 199 Mrs. Hernlen and make it a preference over the two thousand."

Mrs. Hernlen agreed to this arrangement which was to be consummated by recourse by Vandiver to her deposit. She did not have at that time sufficient funds on deposit with which to make the proposed loan of $8,000.00, and on January 3, 1921, she made a deposit of $1,891.26; her deposit thus supplemented then amounted to $8,989.54.

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Bluebook (online)
153 S.E. 133, 156 S.C. 181, 69 A.L.R. 443, 1930 S.C. LEXIS 109, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ex-parte-hernlen-sc-1930.