Federal Deposit Ins. Corp. v. Cloonan

222 P.2d 553, 222 P.2d 533, 169 Kan. 735, 1950 Kan. LEXIS 413
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedOctober 7, 1950
Docket37,938
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 222 P.2d 553 (Federal Deposit Ins. Corp. v. Cloonan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Federal Deposit Ins. Corp. v. Cloonan, 222 P.2d 553, 222 P.2d 533, 169 Kan. 735, 1950 Kan. LEXIS 413 (kan 1950).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Wedell, J.:

Two replevin actions were consolidated for trial in the district court. They were instituted by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation against H. J. Cloonan and Helen M. Cloonan, his wife, on two chattel mortgage notes and to obtain possession of the chattels pledged as security. The action against Helen M. Cloonan was dismissed. The jury answered special questions, rendered a general verdict for plaintiff giving plaintiff possession of the chattels which secured the smaller note and a money judgment for the balance due on the larger note. Cloonan appeals.

On a former appeal of the same case we reversed the judgment against appellant and by reason of trial errors remanded the case for retrial. (Federal Deposit Ins. Corp. v. Cloonan, 165 Kan. 68, 193 P. 2d 656.) The pleadings are set forth at length in our former opinion, are made a part hereof and will not be restated.

The pleadings clearly set forth the capacity in which appellee instituted the actions, appellant’s defenses and appellee’s reply thereto. The substance of appellant’s defenses was (1) the subject notes were not delivered to the failed Exchange State Bank of Parsons by appellant and when appellee acquired them on the closing of the bank it obtained no better title than the failed bank had; and (2) appellant had fully paid the failed bank all obligations he owed it notwithstanding that neither the three old notes nor the two subject renewal notes in the same total amount reflected their payment. Appellee’s reply, in substance, alleged: The renewal notes had been delivered to the failed bank; if the renewal notes were conditionally delivered the conditions were unknown to appellee; appellant had waived any conditional delivery and was estopped to assert it; the notes had not been paid.

Touching appellant’s first defense the undisputed testimony discloses: The bank was declared insolvent June 21, 1941; at that time the failed bank had possession of three old notes of the appellant in the total sum of $11,850 although the old notes were not then listed as assets of the bank; none of these three old notes was due before the bank closed; only one of them, a $4,000 note, was secured; when *737 the bank closed there were listed among the bank’s assets the two new subject notes in the same total sum as the old notes with separate chattel mortgages securing each of them.

With respect to the circumstances under which the renewal notes, the subject of this litigation, were executed appellant, in substance, testified: On or about June 1, 1941, the cashier of the failed bank advised him appellee’s agent was examining the Exchange State Bank for the purpose of determining whether it was solvent; the bank was in hard straits and unless it could obtain additional assets in the form of security on its loans to appellant and some other customers the bank would be closed; appellant advised the cashier he did not know why he should pledge additional security for the old notes if the bank was in danger of being closed; that if he pledged such security and the bank was closed he would have no security for a line of credit elsewhere; that the bank’s records were wrong and that he, in fact, did not owe the bank; the cashier advised him if the bank closed, he, appellant, could not hope to establish his alleged claims against the bank, that the old notes did not show they were paid; the cashier advised the thing for him to do was to make the renewal notes and to secure each of them and if he did so the renewal notes would not be put into the bank unless the bank were kept open as a going concern and if the bank were kept open appellant could then assert his claim of payment; appellant took the matter under advisement, discussed it with his wife and upon further assurance from the cashier that the notes would be handled just as he had agreed, appellant and his wife signed the two notes undated and gave them to the cashier.

The testimony of the cashier, appellant’s witness, corroborated that agreement. The cashier also testified he dated the notes on June 9, made them payable within thirty days thereafter, the same as the old ones had been, and placed them in the assets of the bank on June 14, 1941. The special findings of the jury were:

“1. Were the notes and chattel mortgages undated at the time they were left with Deb Smith? A. Yes.
“2. Were the notes and chattel mortgages dated and placed in the assets of the bank without the knowledge of H. J. Cloonan? A. Yes.
“3. On what date were the dates inserted in said notes and chattel mortgages by Deb Smith? A. June 9, 1941.
“4. On what date did Deb Smith place the notes and chattel mortgages in the assets of the bank? A. June 14, 1941.
“5. Were the notes and chattel mortgages left with Deb Smith with the *738 understanding that they were to be dated and placed in the assets of the bank only in the event that the bank was kept open? A. Yes.
“6. After the notes and chattel mortgages were signed by H. J. Cloonan, where were they kept until they were dated and placed in the assets of the bank? A. Were left in custody of Deb Smith.
“7. Do you find that on May 16, 1941, H. J. Cloonan gave his check for $2505.00 to the bank and directed Rarold Reece, officer of the bank, to apply $2500.00 thereof on the $6900.00 note? A. No.
“8. Do you find that on May 17, 1941, H. J. Cloonan gave his check for $4,000.00 to the bank and directed Harold Reece, officer of the bank, to apply the same on his $6900.00 note? A. No.
“9. Do you find that on May 20, 1941, H. J. Cloonan gave his check for $3207.00 to said bank and directed Harold Reece, officer of the bank, to apply the same on his $4,000.00 note? A. No.
“10. If you find for the plaintiff, in Case No. 5439, please state the amount you allow by way of principal, and by way of interest, as follows:
“Principal: .......................................... $5468.18
“Interest: ........................................... $2650.96
“Total: .................'............................ $8119.14”

Appellant contends answers one to six inclusive establish nondelivery of the notes and the general verdict cannot stand. It will be observed the jury was not asked to find whether appellant was later advised the cashier had placed the subject notes among the assets of the bank and if so what appellant did concerning that fact. Appellant testified the old notes had not been returned to him and he did not know the subject notes had been placed among the bank’s assets until after the bank was closed. With respect to this last statement the testimony of the cashier, appellant’s witness, differed from that of appellant. The cashier admitted he had not returned the old notes to appellant but testified he had informed appellant on June 14, two or three days thereafter, or at least before the bank closed, that he had placed the notes among the assets of the bank on June 14.

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Related

Herl v. State Bank of Parsons
403 P.2d 110 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1965)
Blakey v. Zirkle
358 P.2d 758 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1961)
Steck v. City of Wichita
295 P.2d 1068 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1956)

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Bluebook (online)
222 P.2d 553, 222 P.2d 533, 169 Kan. 735, 1950 Kan. LEXIS 413, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/federal-deposit-ins-corp-v-cloonan-kan-1950.