First Bank & Trust Co. v. Whipp

299 N.W. 424, 230 Iowa 911
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedAugust 4, 1941
DocketNo. 45462.
StatusPublished

This text of 299 N.W. 424 (First Bank & Trust Co. v. Whipp) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
First Bank & Trust Co. v. Whipp, 299 N.W. 424, 230 Iowa 911 (iowa 1941).

Opinion

Stiger, J.

— In 1930 Elizabeth Simmons executed a note for $13,000 payable to the First Trust and Savings Bank of Ottumwa. In 1931 she executed two notes to the First National Bank of Ottumwa aggregating $600.

In 1929 W. B. Bonnifield, President of the above-named banks, borrowed $15,000 of Elizabeth Simmons and pledged to her 170 shares of his stock in said banks as security for the loan.

*913 On October 3, 1931, the said banks and two other banks consolidated and merged into the First Bank and Trust Company of Ottumwa, a new corporation, plaintiff herein. In the consolidation agreement plaintiff was called the consolidated bank and the four banks were called contributing banks. At the time of the consolidation, Mr. Bonnifield was indebted to the First National Bank of Ottumwa in the amount of $10,000. At said time the bank owned the note of Will H. Wycoff in the sum of $23,970 and held as collateral security Bonnifield’s $25,000 note to Wycoff which was secured by real-estate mortgage.

Under the terms of the consolidation, plaintiff assumed the liabilities of the four banks and was given selected assets of the banks. Each stockholder received from the plaintiff bank under the consolidation one share of stock for each share of. stock owned in the consolidated banks, par value $50.

In setting up the assets of the plaintiff bank, pursuant to the consolidation, the total indebtedness of Bonnifield to the First National Bank in the sum of $33,728.40, which included his note to Wycoff in the sum of $23,970, held by the bank as collateral security was, at the direction of the examiner in charge, evidenced by a note of Henry Hervey, trustee, to plaintiff in said sum which note listed as collateral the three Bonnifield notes formerly held by the First National Bank. The trustee’s note bore the notation “with no personal liability” and it is apparent that, regardless of this method of transfer, the two notes given by Bonnifield to the First National Bank and his note to Wycoff became assets of the plaintiff bank.

Bonnifield surrendered his stock in the two banks, part of which had been pledged to Mrs. Simmons, and received in lieu thereof an equal number of sháres in plaintiff bank. Mrs. Simmons was a stockholder in the two contributing banks and consented to the consolidation. After the consolidation Bonnifield, on January 2, 1932, executed a new note for $13,000 to Mrs. Simmons, $2,000 having been paid on his $15,000 note to her, and assigned by separate instruments 179 shares of stock in plaintiff bank to her as security which assignment, stock and note were delivered to Mrs. Simmons. No notice of the transfer of this stock or the stock in the consolidated banks *914 as collateral to Mrs. Simmons was ever given as required under the provisions of section 8387, 1939 Code.

Mrs. Simmons died in Mar.ch, 1933, and Mr. Bonnifield and ’ defendant, Leslie H. Whipp, were appointed executors. Bonnifield, who was the active executor, obtained possession of the stock in plaintiff bank which he had pledged to Mrs. Simmons and on January 22, 1936, surrendered his 509 shares, par value $25, of stock to the plaintiff in full settlement of his indebtedness in the sum of $33,000.

The stock surrendered to the bank in settlement of the indebtedness included the 179 shares of stock Mr. Bonnifield had pledged to Mrs. Simmons. As shown above, plaintiff and defendant are creditors of Bonnifield.

Plaintiff claims a prior lien on the bank stock pledged by Bonnifield to Mrs. Simmons by virtue of section 9221.2, 1939 Code, for the amount of Bonnifield’s indebtedness.

Defendant, executor of the estate of Mrs. Simmons, claims his right to the stock under the pledge is superior to any right that the bank may have therein.

Plaintiff also asserts that it did not have notice of the pledge of the stock required by section 8387 at the time it obtained Bonnifield’s stock in full settlement of his indebtedness in 1936, and therefore, acquired the stock free from the pledge lien.

I. We will first consider whether plaintiff had a prior lien for Bonnifield’s indebtedness on the bank stock pledged by him to Mrs. Simmons under the provisions of section 9221.2, 1939 Code, which reads:

“9221.2 Owning or loaning on its own stock — prior lien of bank. No state bank, savings bank, or trust company shall make any loan or discount on the security of the shares of its own capital stock, or be the purchaser or holder of any shares, unless such security or purchase shall be necessary to prevent loss upon a debt previously contracted in good faith, and stock so purchased or acquired shall be sold at public or private sale, or otherwise disposed of, within one year from the time of its purchase or acquisition unless the time is extended by the superintendent of banking.
*915 “State banks, savings banks, and trust companies shall have prior lien on their debtors ’ shares of stock for all obligations to the bank subject, however, to loans against the stock which the bank has acknowledged by written notice.”

Appellant’s first proposition is that plaintiff did not have a statutory lien on the pledged stock as security for Bonnifield’s note to Wycoff in the sum of $23,000 held as collateral security because it was not a direct indebtedness of Bonnifield to plaintiff bank. With this contention we agree.

The second paragraph of the section gives a bank a prior lien on its debtors’ shares of stock for all obligations to the bank. This paragraph limits the lien of a bank on its debtors’ shares of stock to all direct obligations of the debtor shareholder to the bank. An obligation of a shareholder to a third person and subsequently acquired by the bank is not within the'scope of the paragraph.

To give the bank a lien on the stock of its stockholder whenever it acquired his debt to third persons, of which acquirement the stockholder might be unaware, would make the status of his stock as to encumbrances uncertain and prejudice him in a manner clearly not contemplated by the legislature. In the case of Boyd v. Redd, 120 N. C. 335, 336, 27 S. E. 35, 36, 58 Am. St. Rep. 792, 793, the bank’s charter gave the bank a lien on shares of its stockholders to secure any indebtedness by them to the bank. The opinion, in holding that the statutory lien on the stock was intended to secure only the direct indebtedness of a stockholder to the bank, either as principal or surety, and was not intended to secure an involuntary indebtedness to it caused by the purchase of his liability to a third person, states:

“ ‘It is clear that at common law a corporation has no lien upon the shares of its stockholders for debts due from them 'to the company. The policy of the common law has always been to discountenance secret liens, inasmuch as they hinder trade and restrict the safe and speedy transfer of property.’ Cook, Stock & S. §521; 2 Thomp. Corp. §2317; 2 Wat. Corp. 227; Heart v. Bank, 17 N. C. 111. The statute, in such cases, being in derogation of common right, must be strictly construed to the *916 purpose of its enactment. That purpose is thus clearly stated in Bank v. Smalley, 2 Cow.

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299 N.W. 424, 230 Iowa 911, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/first-bank-trust-co-v-whipp-iowa-1941.