Farmers & Merchants National Bank v. Foster

129 S.E. 629, 132 S.C. 410, 1925 S.C. LEXIS 238
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedSeptember 23, 1925
Docket11836
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 129 S.E. 629 (Farmers & Merchants National Bank v. Foster) 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
Farmers & Merchants National Bank v. Foster, 129 S.E. 629, 132 S.C. 410, 1925 S.C. LEXIS 238 (S.C. 1925).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Justice Cothran.

These were nine separate actions brought by the plaintiff bank against the defendant J. C. Foster and eight others, upon several notes signed by them, executed under the circumstances hereinafter detailed. The plaintiff made a motion before his Honor, Judge Shipp, to consolidate the nine actions, and to refer them to the Master of Florence County. Judge Shipp passed an order consolidating the actions, but refusing to refer them, upon the ground as stated in his order:

“An accounting is neither asked, nor áre there allegations appropriate to an accounting in either pleading. In short, no matter of equitable cognizance is presented by the pleading, but only purely legal issues.”

The plaintiff has appealed from so much of the order as refused a reference, and the defendants from so much of it as ordered a consolidation of the actions.

The circumstances, under which the controversy has arisen, are as follows:

Oh October 20, 1920, the Bank of Lake City was found by the State Bank Examiner to be in an insolvent condition *413 and its doors were about to be closed. To prevent this, an agreement was entered into between the Lake City Bank and the Farmers’ & Merchants’ National Bank of the same place by which the national bank agreed to take over the assets of the Lake City bank and assume its liabilities to depositors and creditors, upon certain conditions, as follows : That the defendant Foster and a number of other officers, directors, and stockholders of the Lake City bank would enter into a written contract of guaranty, indemnifying the national bank against loss in the event that the assigned assets should prove insufficient to liquidate the liabilities assumed by the national bank; the limit of this guaranty was to be $88,000, and the liability of each guarantor was to be limited to the amount of a promissory note to be given to the national bank, representing his liability. Accordingly a written contract was executed by the proposed guarantors and promissory notes executed as indicated. Under the terms of said contract of guaranty, the national bank agreed to assume the liabilities of the Lake City bank to its depositors, to collect all the assets as soon as possible, to pay the depositors from the proceeds of said assets, to liquidate and wind up the affairs of the bank without profit to itself, and to account to the defendant and his coguarantors as soon as practicable after the affairs of the bank should be liquidated. (The foregoing is practically quoted from the answer of the defendant.) The note of the defendant Foster, in pursuance of the contract of guaranty, was for $1,000, dated on or about October 20, 1920, and was renewed from time to time until April 2, 1923, when a new note was executed by him, for the same amount, due October 1, 1923, with interest after maturity at 8 per cent, and 10 per cent, attorney’s fees. The record for appeal does not describe the several notes executed by the other guarantors.

The complaint in the case against the defendant Foster is in the usual form of an action upon a promissory note. The complaints in the other several eight actions are not *414 described, but we assume that they are in the same form.

The answer sets forth the foregoing facts and alleges that the notes are part and parcel of the original contract of guaranty, and were given in pursuance of it to show the respective liabilities of the several guarantors. It also alleges by way of defense, as follows:

“That since the 20th day of October, 1920, plaintiff has had exclusive charge and control of all the assets of the Bank of Take City and has managed them in such a careless and negligent manner that losses have been sustained which would not have been sustained if it had properly and diligently handled them; that it has wholly failed and refused to perform its obligations assumed to the defendant and his coguarantors as agreed upon; and that by reason of all this this defendant and his coguarantors are not liable to the plaintiff in any sum whatsoever.”

With regard first to the refusal of the Circuit Judge to order a reference in the causes consolidated: It appears settled by the decisions of this Court, that a compulsory reference may be ordered only in cases coming within the equitable cognizance of the Court (Newell Contracting Co. v. Blankenship, 130 S. C., 131; 125 S. E., 420), and “even if the cause of action be deemed equitable, the Court has no power to compulsorily order a reference except under the circumstances detailed in Section 593 * * * and even then it is a matter for the exercise of the Court’s discretion, and is not reviewable, except in a case of abuse of that discretion.”

The “circumstances detailed in Section 593”. are “where the trial of an issue of fact shall require the examination of a long account on either side.”

We are of the opinion that the motion for a compulsory reference was supported by the essential elements for the exercise of the Court’s discretion, a matter clearly cognizable on the equity side of the Court, and the examination of a long account, and that for the reason that the pleadings *415 disclose a matter within the equitable cognizance of the Court, his Honor the Circuit Judge based .his refusal upon an erroneous legal conclusion, which renders his action reviewable by this Court.

The defense of the guarantors is that their notes are not evidence of an absolute liability to the national bank; that they were given for the purpose of fixing the individual liability of each guarantor upon the contract of guaranty, part and parcel of which they are; that this liability was •conditioned upon the faithful execution by the national bank of the duties it assumed in taking over the assets, namely, “to collect all the assets of said bank as soon as possible, to pay the depositors from the proceeds of said assets, to liquidate and wind up the affairs of said bank without profit to itself, and to account to the defendant and his coguarantors as soon as practicable after the affairs of said bank were liquidated” (quoting answer), which can only mean:

“We do not owe you anything until you have made an accounting to us as you agreed to do, showing that you have faithfully complied with your engagements.”

The answer proceeds to allege that the national bank has failed in its trust; that it has negligently handled the assets so that losses have been sustained which otherwise would not have been; that it has wholly failed and refused to perform its obligations assumed to the defendant and his co-guarantors ; allegations which could not possibly be sustained or refuted but by a full accounting by the bank of its conduct in connection with the assets, consisting probably of hundreds of items.

The guarantors, as directors or stockholders, were directly interested in the prompt and full collection of the assets; they surrendered their interests, under the agreement, to the national bank, which assumed certain duties in connection with them.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
129 S.E. 629, 132 S.C. 410, 1925 S.C. LEXIS 238, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/farmers-merchants-national-bank-v-foster-sc-1925.