First Nat. Bank of Maud v. McKown

1918 OK 634, 176 P. 245, 73 Okla. 310, 1918 Okla. LEXIS 138
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedNovember 19, 1918
Docket8198
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 1918 OK 634 (First Nat. Bank of Maud v. McKown) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
First Nat. Bank of Maud v. McKown, 1918 OK 634, 176 P. 245, 73 Okla. 310, 1918 Okla. LEXIS 138 (Okla. 1918).

Opinion

Opinion by

STEWART, C.

The plaintiff filed petition against the defendants, setting up two causes of action on promissory notes made by defendants and secured by mortgages on real estate belonging to the defendants. The answer of defendants admits the execution of the notes and mortgages, sets up failure of consideration, and alleges that said notes and mortgages were made to Minnie H. Davis, a clerk of R. J. Edwards, president of the plaintiff bank, without consideration, and by the said Minnie H. Davis assigned to- the bank without consideration ; that the notes and mortgages were made in pursuance of an agreement between the defendants and the plaintiff to deceive a bank examiner, who had examined the bank and discovered a cotton overdraft in the sum of $3,000; that the defendant Omer McKown was cashier of said bank, and for a number of years had been buying cotton for the bank, being duly authorized so to do; that, while the account was carried on the books in his name, the cotton transactions had been wholly for the benefit of the bank, and with the knowledge and consent of the directors of such bank; that all profits derived from the purchase of cotton inured to the benefit of the bank, and not to the defendant Omer Mc-Kown, and that for the years 1913 and 1914 there was a loss on the cotton transactions, which appeared in the form of the overdraft named; that at the suggestion of R. J. Edwards, president of the bank, the defendants,- husband and wife, made and executed the notes and mortgages in question, with the understanding that they were to be assigned to the bank; that it was agreed that said mortgages should not be placed of record, and the same were not placed of record for more than seven months, and that the defendant would not be required to pay said notes, but that the overdraft would eventually be taken up out of profits of the bank; that at the instance of the president of the bank, and with the consent of the directors, it was agreed that, in order to increase the deposits of the bank, cotton should be bought by defendant Omer McKown, th“ bank to receive the profits and bear the losses.

There is evidence in the record tending ro prove the allegations contained in the answer, and to show that from the year 1909 to the year 1914, inclusive, the bank, through the agency of the defendant Omer McKown, had engaged in the handling of cotton as alleged, the profits therefor being credited on the books to the bank, and that in the years 1913 and 1914 the loss of $3000 accrued. There is evidence that the *312 profits from the cotton transactions were credited to the bank, and that the bank, through its officers, had knowledge thereof and ratified the same; that, when the shortage in the cotton account was discovered by the bank examiner, at the request of the president of the bank, the notes and mortgages were executed by the defendants under the circumstances mentioned in the defendants’ answer, and for the purpose of deceiving the bank examiner, so that the bank would pass inspection. All of the other material allegations in the answer were sustained by the evidence. While the plaintiff claims that Mr. McKown had' been buying cotton on his own account and without authority from the bank, the testimony being conflicting, we are bound by the jury's finding as to the facts. Such finding was against the contention of the plaintiff.

The plaintiff makes several assignments of error, but the vital question, and the only one necessary to be determined, is whether or not, under the facts in evidence, as a matter of law, the defendants arc under any legal obligation to the bank because of the making of the notes and mortgages in question. Assuming, as we. must, on account of the jury’s verdict, that they were executed in pursuance of an agreement to deceive the bank examiner, and not for the purpose of paying an indebtedness owing to the bank by the defendant Omer McKown, it must follow that there was no sufficient lawful consideration to support their execution. But the plaintiff urges that the bank was without authority to engage in, the cotton business, and that, if Mr. McKown, as cashier and director, together with the other directors, permitted such to be dune, each of the directors, including Mr. McKown, would be individually liable for any damage to the bank resulting therefrom, and that such liability on the part of Mr. Mc-Kown would constitute a valid consideration of the notes and mortgage sued upon. It is urged with equal vehemence by the-defendants that the bank, being a party to such authorized and unlawful transaction, could not. recover. The bank, having urged the reasons named in support of a consideration for the notes and mortgages, must accept the legal consequences of such a position.

Plaintiff calls attention to City National Bank of Mangum v. Crow et al., 27 Okla. 107, 111 Pac. 210, Ann, Cas. 1912B, 647, wherein this court quotes with approval from Stephens v. Overstolz (C. C.) 43 Fed. 465, in which quotation we find the following:

‘‘The officers of a bank are forbidden to do a certain thing because it may tend to the ruin of the Dank. The statute says you shall not do that, and, if you do it, you shall be liable to all persons injured by your wrongful act. Xou shall be liable to the bank, you shall be liable to the stockholders, and you may be liable to the general creditors of the bank, or the depositors of the bank. The extent of that liability is not affected by the circumstnces which misled you, or by your criminal intention, but depends on the fact that the act was done knowingly, and was in violation of the Jaw. The extent of thei liability incurred is the amount of damages you have inflicted upon others.”

The quotation is no doubt a correct statement of the law. Under proper circumstances, an action can be maintained by any one injured — stockholders, creditors, depositors. and by the bank itself. It could hardly be said, however, that a joint tort-feasor, one who had participated in the wrongdoing, could maintain an action. In the City National Bank Case, it appears that the action was instituted by new officers of the bank against -the former officers; ^ reorganization as to officers having taken place. In the instant case, the evidence shows that the action was brought at the instance of the president of the bank, who was a party to the unlawful transactions, and not brought on the part of any interested party, free from participation in the wrongdoing. The effect of enforcing the notes and mortgages would be to make a scapegoat out of one party to the wrong, and to permit another, under whose advice and direction the wrong Was done, to reap an unconscionable advantage. While the courts will leave the parties to any unlawful transaction, whether willfully done or not, where they place themselves, yet the processes of the courts will not be lent to enforce any contract, though nominally not flowing to the wrongdoer, which the evidence shows will in fact redound to the benefit of the primarily guilty party, and to the utter ruin of one shown by the evidence to be less guilty not so much -out of commiseration for the lesser offender, as because of the wholesome policy of the law, which requires litigants to come into court with clean hands. When, because of the cloak of corporate existence, the guilty are permitted by solemn judicial determination to profit by their wickedness, thus accomplishing by indirection what cannot be done .directly,: then we may know that the courts have become powerless to preserve their processes from pollution and the time-honored temples of the law must crumble.

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Related

Noble v. Johnson
1930 OK 179 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1930)
McLain v. Oklahoma Cotton Growers' Ass'n
1927 OK 188 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1927)
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1925 OK 417 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1925)

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Bluebook (online)
1918 OK 634, 176 P. 245, 73 Okla. 310, 1918 Okla. LEXIS 138, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/first-nat-bank-of-maud-v-mckown-okla-1918.