Exchange Bank of Novinger v. Turner

14 S.W.2d 425, 321 Mo. 1104, 1929 Mo. LEXIS 724
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedFebruary 25, 1929
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 14 S.W.2d 425 (Exchange Bank of Novinger v. Turner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Exchange Bank of Novinger v. Turner, 14 S.W.2d 425, 321 Mo. 1104, 1929 Mo. LEXIS 724 (Mo. 1929).

Opinions

This is a suit on a fidelity bond for $10,000 executed by the defendant Turner as principal and the defendant Aetna Casualty Surety Company as surety. The bond was to indemnify the Union State Bank of Novinger in Adair County against official misconduct of Turner, its president. The bank failed, and while in the hands of the State Banking Department the Exchange Bank of Novinger was organized and took over its assets and liabilities. It is this latter bank which sues as plaintiff, claiming the benefit of the bond by succession or assignment under the foregoing arrangement.

Sixteen transactions breaching the bond are separately alleged (not in separate counts, however) and evidence was introduced on fourteen of them. A jury was waived and the cause tried to the court — in Putnam County where the case was sent on change of venue. Plaintiff got judgment for the full amount, with interest, and for $1000 damages, and $2000 attorney fee for vexatious delay. Both defendants answered, defended and have appealed jointly. There are fifteen assignments of error attacking the proceedings from various angles — the amendment of the petition, the insufficiency of the petition and evidence, the refusal of declarations of law, the admission and exclusion of evidence and the form and size of the judgment. In addition the respondent has filed a motion in this court to dismiss the appeal, because of certain alleged shortcomings in appellants' *Page 1113 abstract and brief; and appellants object to respondent's additional abstract.

Three banks are mentioned in the evidence. All were state banks organized under the law of Missouri. The first was the Union Bank of Novinger, which failed and went into the hands of the State Banking Department in September, 1920. The appellant Turner at that time was a state bank examiner and was placed in charge. In October certain stockholders of this Union Bank and other persons, among whom was the appellant Turner, organized a new banking corporation called the Union State Bank, to take over the business and assets of the Union Bank.

The appellant Turner was elected president of the Union State Bank and was active in its business. The surety bond sued on was dated December 23, 1920, but the term thereof was expressed to begin on November 25, 1920, and to run until cancelled or terminated as therein stipulated. The bank continued in business for just about a year, until October 15, 1921, when it became insolvent, and was voluntarily placed in the hands of the State Finance Department. A deputy commissioner named Frees was put in charge. He remained for about three months, until January 14, 1922, when the respondent Exchange Bank of Novinger was organized to take over the assets and assume the liabilities of the expiring Union State Bank. Forty-four thousand dollars of fresh money were put into the enterprise, making sufficient assets to meet all outstanding liabilities, according to the evidence.

The facts attending the transfer of assets from the Union State Bank to the Exchange Bank are important. After the closing of the former in October, the appellant Turner went to California the latter part of December and was gone until the following February. During this interval (and even before Turner left, for that matter) there was talk of organizing a new bank. Mr. Hughes, the State Bank Commissioner, went to Novinger and advised a reorganization, and later, it seems, twelve of the fifteen stockholders met at the bank and approved the plan. A public meeting was held at the opera house, which was largely attended, and the same sentiment was expressed there. Several meetings were held at lawyers' offices in Kirksville, and finally, as a result of it, all the directors of the Union State Bank, except Turner, had a meeting on January 11, 1922, and unanimously voted to sell and transfer all assets and liabilities to the Exchange Bank in accordance with a contract referred to and set out in the minutes of the meeting, but not preserved in the record here. However, the purport of it is stated several times. It was that the Exchange Bank assumed all liabilities of the Union State Bank, and took over all its assets, including choses in action. The record shows that the board of directors of the Exchange Bank also authorized the contract, and that both banks and the individual directors thereof (except Turner) signed it. *Page 1114

For a better understanding of what is to follow, we must here anticipate the legal discussion by saying the appellants made strenuous objection to all this evidence, contending, as they do here, that the whole transaction was void: (1) because the board of directors had no authority to transfer all the property of the corporation without the consent of the stockholders, and that such consent was not obtained; (2) because the transaction was at variance with Article I, Chapter 108, Revised Statutes 1919, governing the liquidation of banks by the State Finance Commissioner, in that: (a) the transaction amounted to a voluntary general assignment in violation of Section 11701; (b) no bond was exacted by the Commissioner from the Exchange Bank as a liquidating agent (if it was that) under Section 11706, Revised Statutes 1919; (c) no circuit court order authorizing the sale was obtained as required by Section 11713; (d) no meeting of stockholders was called by the Commissioner to authorize the sale, under Section 11723; (e) and that the transaction contravened the spirit and purpose of the whole article, which lays down a complete and exclusive scheme for the handling and liquidation of insolvent banks. In other words, appellants contend the Exchange Bank did not legally acquire title to the cause of action sued on, and hence is not the proper party to maintain the suit. Bearing on this question, the evidence does not show that there ever was a formal meeting of all the stockholders of the Union State Bank at which the transfer of assets and liabilities to the Exchange Bank was authorized or ratified, but it does show that all of the stockholders except three were present at one informal meeting; and that two of these three were told of the plan afterward and one of them said he couldn't afford to buy stock in the new bank, but then added, "I wish I could be with you." Both of these stockholders had accounts in the Union State Bank which were carried over into the Exchange Bank without objection. The remaining one of these three stockholders was the appellant Turner, and as to him it was brought out that when he was informed of the proposed reorganization before he went to California in December, he replied that "he did not propose to have anything to do with it and that they could go ahead and do what they wanted with it as far as he was concerned." After his return from California, Turner said, according to some of the testimony, that he was glad they had reorganized.

Regarding the attitude of the State Finance Department, the facts developed were that the Commissioner, Mr. Hughes, went to Novinger and urged a reorganization which would take care of depositors and creditors. When the contract between the two banks was approved at a directors' meeting of each on January 11 the deputy commissioner, Mr. Frees, was present. He sent a copy of it to the State Finance Department and after a day or two had elapsed he and Mr. Winn, one of the incorporators of the Exchange Bank, called up Mr. Hughes, the Commissioner, at Jefferson City, and asked him if it *Page 1115 would be all right to go ahead. The Commissioner gave his consent, and that night Mr. Winn and Mr. Frees began checking off the assets. They finished about midnight, and Mr. Frees took a receipt from Mr. Winn therefor. This was on Saturday.

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Bluebook (online)
14 S.W.2d 425, 321 Mo. 1104, 1929 Mo. LEXIS 724, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/exchange-bank-of-novinger-v-turner-mo-1929.