First Nat. Bank of Miami v. Vantage Mining Co.

1924 OK 711, 231 P. 266, 105 Okla. 5, 41 A.L.R. 346, 1924 Okla. LEXIS 445
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedSeptember 16, 1924
Docket14908
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 1924 OK 711 (First Nat. Bank of Miami v. Vantage Mining Co.) 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 Miami v. Vantage Mining Co., 1924 OK 711, 231 P. 266, 105 Okla. 5, 41 A.L.R. 346, 1924 Okla. LEXIS 445 (Okla. 1924).

Opinion

Opinion by

RAY, C.

This suit is by a number of judgment creditors of George W. Dixon, former president of the Miami State Bank, for the discovery of assets and an accounting. The Vantage Mining Company, C. W. Clapp, W. W. Ennis, and R. P.. Sharpe were joined as defendants. It is alleged that Dixon entered info a joint adventure with Clapp, Ennis, and Sharpe for the purchase of the controlling interest of. the Vantage Mining Company, and that, as. a result of that adventure, profits had accrued to Dixon which were being held by Clapp and the mining company. Dixon answered admitting the correctness of the judgments, and, by cross-petition against the other defendants, pleaded an oral contract with Clapp, Ennis, and .Sharpe and prayed that he be adjudged to be the owner of 151 shares of stock of the Vantage Mining Company and the dividends accrued and accruing thereon, and that so much thereof as necessary be applied to the satisfaction of the judgments. The other defendants answered the petition, and the cross-petition of Dixon, by general denial and pleaded the statute of frauds. The court, at the request of the' parties, made special findings of fact and conclusions of law. The findings of fact, which are sustained by the evidence, are, in substance, that on the first of July, 1919, C. W. Clapp bought 751 shares (a controlling interest) of the stock of the Vantage Mining Company for which he agreed to pay $18,000 cash, and $28 500 in deferred payments. $3,000 in 90 days and $3,000 each 30 days thereafter except the last payment which was $1.500. Clapp borrowed from Dixon, of the funds of the bank, the $18,000 necessary to make the cash payment for which he executed two notes to the Miami State Bank, one for $8,000 due 90 days from date, secured by 148 shares of stock of the Vantage Mining Company which was carried by the Miami State Bank as a part of its assets. The other note was for $10,200 due 90 days from date, secured by 100 shares of the Moberly, Missouri, State Bank, of the book value of $22,500. This note was immediately indorsed, without recourse, to Dixon, and then indorsed by Dixon and transmitted to a bank in Kansas City, where Dixon had a credit, for discount. At the time the loan was made it was agreed between Clapp and Dixon that if Dixon would make the loan and protect Clapp against call for payment until the dividends accruing upon the 751 shares were sufficient to make the deferred payments of $28,500, interest, and costs of purchase, and sufficient to pay the $18,000 and interest, that Clapp would transfer to Dixon 150 shares of the stock of the Vantage" Mining Company. This agreement between Clapp and Dixon was made without *6 the knowledge of the other officers of the. Miami State Bank. The $10,200 note was-, never carried as a part of the assets of the Miami State Bank but was .renewed from time to time through the Miami State Bank and indorsed by Dixon, or someone for him,, and held by the Kansas Oity Bank for more than a year but, upon the last renewal, was discounted by the Miami State Bank to a bank in Muskogee which required Clapp to pay the note in January, 1921. The $8,000 note was renewed from time to time and carried by the Miami State Bank until about April, 1921, when Dixon, who was then no longer connected with the bank, for the purpose of carrying out his agreement with Clapp, induced his wife to buy it. She carried this note until paid by Clapp through the Miami State Bank where she had placed it for collection. In this manner Dixon substantially complied with his agreement with Clapp. The accumulated dividends upon the 150 shares, which Clapp agreed to transfer to Dixon, are sufficient to satisfy the judgments against Dixon.

The trial court concluded as a matter of law that the contract between Clapp and Dixon contravened public policy and was, therefore, unenforceable, .and entered judgment for the defendants Clapp, Ennis, and the Vantage Mining Company. Prom this judgment the plaintiffs, interveners, and the defendant and cross-petitioner, Dixon, have appealed.

It is argued by plaintiffs in error that this was a completed contract, and numerous authorities are cited which hold that where an illegal contract has become a completed contract that one of the parties will not be permitted to hold the profits to the exclusion of the other. With the contention that this is a completed contract, we cannot agree. While Dixon had substantially complied with the contract, Clapp had complied with no part of it but, on the contrary, had refused i,o do so. If Clapp had transferred the shares of stock as he had agreed to do it would have b.een a completed contract. In such case, after a transfer of the shares, he would not have been permitted to withold the profits but would have been required to account, for the reason that it would not have been necessary to prove the illegal contract. These creditors stand in the shoes of Dixon. Their right to recover depends upon Dixon’s right to recover. They cannot recover simply because) dividends have accrued sufficient to pay the judgment. Dixon’s suit on his cross-petition is, in effect, a suit for the specific performance of the contract, and, in an action for specific performance, the whole contract is before the court for consideration. For this reason we think the authorities cited are not applicable.

Is this an enforceable contract? We think pot. In seeking the source of public policy, as it affects this ease, it is unnecessary to look beyond the banking law of this state. In the public interest' banking in this state is regulated by law with a bank commissioner to see that the laws are complied with. The law provides that no bank shall employ its monies, directly or indirectly, in trade or commerce, by buying or selling goods, chattels, wares, or merchandise. No active managing officer of any bank is permitted to borrow, directly or indirectly, money from the bank with which he is connected. It is the duty of the board of directors to remove any officer of the bank found by the bank commissioner to be dishonest, reckless, or incompetent. The managing officers of every bank are required to make at least four reports each year to the bank commissioner, and making false reports is made a felony. It is contended by plaintiffs in error that, in making the loan to Clapp, Dixon did not agree to lend the money of the bank but only agreed to secure the money for Clapp by the use of his credit; but the fact remains that he secured the money directly from the bank of which he was president and at least $8,000 of the money lent is conceded to have been the money of the bank. The other $10,200 was first advanced by the bank and reimbursed by discounting the note to a bank in Kansas City. That note finally came back to the bank, and, after Dixon was no longer connected with it, was discounted to a bank in Muskogee and by that bank finally collected. When Dixon, as an executive officer of the bank, in carrying out his agreement with Clapp to lend him the money and, as a consideration therefor, in addition to the interest to be received by the bank, was to receive 150 shares of the Vantage Mining Company for his personal profit, he was., in effect, employing the monies of the bank in securing for himself, as his personal profit, the 150 shares of stock and the dividends that might accrue. It is clear to us that this transaction could not have stood the test of being reported to the bank commissioner in one of the bank’s reports.

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Bluebook (online)
1924 OK 711, 231 P. 266, 105 Okla. 5, 41 A.L.R. 346, 1924 Okla. LEXIS 445, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/first-nat-bank-of-miami-v-vantage-mining-co-okla-1924.