Farmers' State Bank v. Northern Trust Co.

270 P. 163, 39 Wyo. 46, 1928 Wyo. LEXIS 81
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 11, 1928
Docket1465
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 270 P. 163 (Farmers' State Bank v. Northern Trust Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Farmers' State Bank v. Northern Trust Co., 270 P. 163, 39 Wyo. 46, 1928 Wyo. LEXIS 81 (Wyo. 1928).

Opinion

*49 Blume, Chief Justice.

This is an action to cancel a certain guaranty agreement signed by E. H. Luikart and Oscar W. Nicholson, and to declare their rights and those of plaintiff bank arising out of that transaction and related ones. The court refused plaintiffs any relief and dismissed the petition. From this judgment an appeal has been taken to this court. *50 The only point argued is the failure of the court to cancel the guaranty agreement hereinafter mentioned. The Farmers State Bank of Riverton, one of plaintiffs in the court below, will be referred to herein as the “Bank;” the Northern Trust Company, defendant, as the “Trust' Company;” the Investors Guaranty Corporation, defendant, as the “Guaranty Corporation.” Only the salient facts will be set forth.

The Guaranty Company is an investment company and at one time owned the Bank, a banking institution at Riv-erton, Wyoming, but was separated from the latter in June, 1921, at which time the plaintiff Nicholson bought all of the capital stock of the Bank, later, in September, 1921, transferring half of it to the plaintiff Luikart. When this sale of the capital stock to Nicholson was made, certain notes then held by the Bank were guaranteed by the Guaranty Company, as mentioned more fully in the case of Farmers State Bank v. Haun, et al., 30 Wyo. 322, 222 Pac. 45; 31 Wyo. 201, 224 Pac. 856. In the spring and summer of 1922 suits were instituted by the Bank against the Guaranty Corporation upon this guaranty. The suits were aided by attachment levied upon the lands of the Guaranty Corporation in Fremont County, Wyoming. Among the lands levied on were about 1000 acres, known as the Earle-Glennie ranch, which will be again referred to later. These suits involved close to $100,000. Judgments were duly recovered therein, in about the amount just stated.

Prior to June, 1921, the Guaranty Corporation had made a loan of about $55,000 to one Souter, secured by a mortgage on livestock and real estate in Fremont County, Wyoming. This loan was negotiated and sold to' the Trust Company, a banking institution in Chicago, Illinois, the payment of the loan being guaranteed by the Guaranty Corporation. The Bank also held a further loan made to the same Souter in the sum of about $10,000. Neither of these loans were adequately secured. The *51 Trust Company further held a note of the Guaranty Corporation for $17,400. Becoming dissatisfied with the condition of the Souter loan held by it, and of the Guaranty Corporation note above mentioned, the Trust Company sought to strengthen its security and through the defend- and Cuscaden, its vice president, arranged for a conference, to be held in Cheyenne, Wyoming, with the principal stock-holders of the Guaranty Corporation and other interested parties. The conference met in the latter part of May, 1922. Cuscaden represented the Trust Company; McNish and one Kingery represented the Guaranty Corporation, the former also speaking for defendants Keating and RohUf; Luikart and Nicholson represented themselves and the Bank. The latter was interested only indirectly and merely because the Trust Company was its correspondent in Chicago and had borrowed money from it from time to time upon negotiable paper. Nor were Nicholson or Luikart, or for that matter, the other persons, legally responsible for the notes held by the Trust Company. But Cuscaden desired all of the persons mentioned, excepting himself, to guaranty this indebtedness, because of their connection, past or present, with the Guaranty Corporation, proposing to extend the time of payment for three years. Kingery refused to sign such guaranty. The outcome of the conference was that McNish, Keating, Rohlff, Luikart and Nicholson agreed to sign the guaranty, which they subsequently did. As part of the transaction it was agreed that the Bank should release its lien upon the Earle-Glennie ranch; that the same should be conveyed to Cuscaden, to be held by him, or his successor, in trust for the benefit of the individuals signing the guaranty-agreement; that the Trust Company should take over from the Bank the Souter loan of about $10,000 held by it, and to make a loan of about $4,000 to the Guaranty Corporation for the purpose of paying taxes on the lands, and, perhaps, for other purposes. These matters were carried out. The guaranty was evidenced in writing, recites *52 the amounts just mentioned, namely the two Souter loans, the note of the Guaranty Corporation of $17,400, and the additional loan of $4,000, and then continues:

“Now, therefore, in consideration of the premises and in further consideration of One ($1) dollar in hand paid, the receipt of which is hereby acknowledged, the undersigned, each to the extent of one-fifth of the entire amount involved guarantee to The Northern Trust Company that all of the above indebtedness, together with interest thereon, will be fully paid within three years from this date and if any of such indebtedness is not paid within such time then each of the undersigned agree to pay to said The Northern Trust Company one-fifth of the balance thereof. During said period of three years The Northern Trust Company may make such renewals of said indebtedness or any of it from time to time that it thinks best without notice to or consent of any of the undersigned and further may make substitution of collateral from time to time or may sell the collateral or take any action that it thinks wise in and about said indebtedness, provided the same is approved by a majority of the undersigned, and in ease all of the collateral is sold prior to the expiration of the three year period above mentioned and sufficient funds are not realized thereby to pay the indebtedness of The Northern Trust Company in full, then immediately upon the sale of said collateral and the ascertainment of the balance due The Northern Trust Company the undersigned shall each pay immediately one-fifth of said balance. ’1

To induce Luikart and Nicholson to sign the guaranty and to cause the Bank to release its lien on the Earle-Glennie ranch, it was further agreed that the Trust Company should extend a “line of credit” to the Bank by discounting bankable notes sent by the latter, in an amount of $40,000 to $50,000 outstanding at any one time. This agreement was carried out until January 1, 1924, or shortly previous thereto, and no complaint exists as to that period. In the fall of 1923, however, the Bank received notice that the Trust Company would, commencing with January, 1924, adopt a different policy from that previous *53 ly followed, accepting only notes for discount which were guaranteed by the discounting bank, and not, as theretofore, notes guaranteed only by individuals, claiming that the latter method theretofore pursued was fraught with dangers — a danger mentioned by this court in the case of Webb v. Cash, 35 Wyo. 398. A number of letters were interchanged between the Bank and the Trust Company, the net result of which was that the Trust Company claimed that the Bank could not, under its charter, and in view of its capital stock, guarantee, and hence discount, more than $25,000 outstanding at any one time, and that in view of the fact that the Bank had also a correspondent in Omaha, the Trust Company would not accept more than one-half, namely, $12,500, of the notes which the Bank was able to discount under the new method adopted by the Trust Company.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
270 P. 163, 39 Wyo. 46, 1928 Wyo. LEXIS 81, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/farmers-state-bank-v-northern-trust-co-wyo-1928.