Farmers & Merchants National Bank v. Springmeyer

73 P.2d 825, 58 Nev. 218, 1937 Nev. LEXIS 47
CourtNevada Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 2, 1937
Docket3175
StatusPublished

This text of 73 P.2d 825 (Farmers & Merchants National Bank v. Springmeyer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nevada Supreme Court 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. Springmeyer, 73 P.2d 825, 58 Nev. 218, 1937 Nev. LEXIS 47 (Neb. 1937).

Opinion

*220 OPINION

By the Court,

Coleman, C. J.:

This is an action to recover on a promissory note executed by the defendant. Plaintiff has appealed from an order denying its motion for a new trial, entered after judgment in favor of defendant, and from the judgment.

The parties will be referred to as plaintiff and defendant, as designated in the trial court.

The undisputed facts, so far as material, are:

On April 15, 1931, the defendant executed his note for $3,500, payable to Nevada Savings & Trust Company. On that day the defendant received the sum of $3,500, which was deposited to his credit in the Reno National Bank. At the time of this transaction, the Reno National Bank and the Nevada Savings & Trust Company occupied the same offices and had the same officers; J. Sheehan being at the time the vice president and *221 manager of both of said banks, and president of the plaintiff bank. On the day of the execution of the note in question, this plaintiff had on deposit to its credit in the Reno National Bank a sum greatly in excess of $100,000. On the day of the execution of the note, the original payee of the note, acting through J. Sheehan, its manager, indorsed it in blank, without recourse, and delivered it to the Reno National Bank; and on the same day said last-named bank sent the note to plaintiff bank, accompanied by the following letter:

“The Reno National Bank
“Reno, Nevada
“April 15, 1981.
“Farmers & Merchants National Bank, Eureka, Nevada.
“Gentlemen: We charge your account and enclose note of George Springmeyer dated April 15, 1931, $3500.00, secured by 14,400 shares of H. H. Springmeyer Land, Development & Livestock Company, represented by certificate No. 28, which certificate we are enclosing herewith. This stock we believe to be worth at least $1.50 per share.
“We advised Mr. Springmeyer that in case we desired the note paid, we would give him 30 days .notice.
“Yours very truly,
“JS: W “J. Sheehan, Vice President.
“Reg.”

About June 1931 the defendant transferred an account which he had theretofore kept in the First National Bank in Reno, which has at all times been solvent, to the Reno National Bank, which last-mentioned bank failed to open for business on November 1, Í932, and thereafter a receiver was appointed to take charge of the assets thereof and to liquidate the same. On the 1st day of November 1932 the defendant had on deposit to his credit in said Reno National Bank the sum of $2,044.38, and there was at said time on deposit in said bank to the credit of defendant’s wife the sum of *222 $151.12, which was community property, aggregating the sum of $2,195.50. On November 7, 1932, the defendant interviewed the said Sheehan, in said Reno National Bank’s offices, and demanded that the amount of his and his wife’s deposits be set-off against his said note, and was then informed for the first time that the note in question had been assigned to the plaintiff. It further appears that from time to time the Reno National Bank sent to defendant, upon its regular form, at the top of which is printed “Statement of Interest Due to Reno National Bank, Reno, Nevada,” a statement showing interest becoming due on said note; one of which being a notice showing interest due from June 30, 1932, to December 31, 1932.

The evidence shows without question that at all times mentioned the said Sheehan was an officer of several banks.

In addition to the above undisputed facts, there is certain disputed testimony upon which the court made findings in favor of the defendant, to which we will allude.

The defendant pleaded in his answer several defenses, among which were estoppel. He also pleaded a cross-complaint. The trial court made findings of facts and conclusions of law supporting said plea of estoppel and cross-complaint, and entered judgment accordingly.

The trial court found, inter alia, the following facts:

That all of the transactions relative to said note were had between Mr. Sheehan and defendant; that the Reno National Bank was not a stranger to said transactions, in that on or about June 15, 1931, it demanded payment thereof from defendant; that defendant, “by reason of a conversation with and a demand for payment by Mr. Sheehan as Vice President, Director and Executive Manager of the Reno National Bank, and by reason of said loan and on account of some question or doubt as to the soundness of the loan and of the amount of protection for said Reno National Bank, transferred and changed his account from the First National Bank in *223 Reno and promised he would keep the account sufficiently large to protect the Reno National Bank so that it would be unnecessary to sell the collateral mentioned and described in the note, and in that said Reno National Bank continuously, from April 15, 1931, until it was placed in the hands of a receiver on December 12, 1932, mailed to defendant notices of the Reno National Bank that interest was due, and in that the Reno National Bank accepted from defendant checks made payable to the Reno National Bank” on account of principal and interest upon said note.

The court further found:

“ * * * And defendant transferred his account from the First National Bank to the Reno National Bank solely on account of and in reliance upon the said representations, which were believed by defendant, and that solely as the result of such representations and the reliance defendant placed thereon he was injured and suffered detriment in that otherwise he would not have believed the Reno National Bank was the owner and holder of the note, and he would not have transferred his account from the said First National Bank, which at all times has been and is solvent, to the Reno National Bank, and in that otherwise he would not have kept in said Reno National Bank the deposits amounting to $2,195.50 in his and his wife’s names, which are claimed by him as offsets to the said note upon which this action is brought, and in that otherwise he would have pro.tected himself in the premises either by keeping his accounts as theretofore in the solvent First National Bank, or by making a loan elsewhere, or by keeping his accounts in plaintiff’s bank in order to protect himself in an offset. * * *
“That plaintiff was not an innocent purchaser for value and is not a holder in due course of said note and did not take the said note in good faith but on the contrary-did take it surreptitiously and with the intent and purpose of depriving defendant of his rights to set-off and counter-claim his and his wife’s deposits in the *224

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Related

Strohecker v. Mutual Building & Loan Ass'n
34 P.2d 1076 (Nevada Supreme Court, 1934)
Farmers & Merchants National Bank v. Eureka Land & Stock Co.
49 P.2d 354 (Nevada Supreme Court, 1935)

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Bluebook (online)
73 P.2d 825, 58 Nev. 218, 1937 Nev. LEXIS 47, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/farmers-merchants-national-bank-v-springmeyer-nev-1937.