First Nat. Bank of Silverton v. Mercantile Nat. Bank of Pueblo

273 F. 119, 1921 U.S. App. LEXIS 1429
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedMay 4, 1921
DocketNo. 5609
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 273 F. 119 (First Nat. Bank of Silverton v. Mercantile Nat. Bank of Pueblo) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit 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 Silverton v. Mercantile Nat. Bank of Pueblo, 273 F. 119, 1921 U.S. App. LEXIS 1429 (8th Cir. 1921).

Opinion

SANBORN, Circuit Judge.

The First National Bank of Silverton, Colo., the plaintiff below, complains of many alleged errors in the trial of an action which it brought to recover of the Mercantile National Bank of Pueblo, the defendant below, the value of certain bonds and other securities of the par value of $97,000, which the plaintiff alleged it deposited with the defendant for safe-keeping and collection on February 13, 1915, 'and the defendant had refused to account for or return after due demand and had appropriated to its own use. The defendant answered in effect, so far as the trial here in question is concerned, that no such deposit was made with it, that C. C. Slaughter was at that time the vice president of the plaintiff, and as such he took and misappropriated the bonds and securities in question. The case was tried to a jury. At the close of the trial the court below granted a motion of the defendant to instruct the jury to return a verdict in its favor, and this ruling is the chief of the numerous alleged errors specified.

[1] The main question in the case therefore is: Was the evidence at the close of the trial so conclusively in ffpvor o.f the defendant that, if it had been submitted to the jury under proper instructions and they had found a verdict for the plaintiff, it would have been the duty of the court below to set it aside because there would have been no substantial evidence to sustain it ? In other words, was the evidence such that reasonable men in the exercise of an honest and impartial judgment could properly draw from it no other conclusion than that the defendant was not liable to the plaintiff on account of the securities and bonds, which for convenience will hereafter be termed the bonds. The evidence established these facts without substantial conflict: W. B. Slaughter and C. C. Slaughter, his son, from 1911 to April, 1915, owned a controlling part of the stock of the defendant, and were re[121]*121apectively its president and cashier. They, with Robert Grant, vice president, W. E. Grant, teller, and W. D. Grisard, assistant cashier, were its board of directors. Robert Grant lived in California, owned some stock in the bank, and his son, W. E. Grant, owned 10 shares and was paid a salary of $100 to $125 per month, while Mr. Grisard’s salary was small, and he and W. E. Grant were minor employes, subject to the control, direction, employment and discharge of C. C. Slaughter, the cashier. W. B. Slaughter went to Texas to live in the early part of 1914. For a year and a half prior to March, 1915, those who sat at and attempted to act as the board of directors of the bank were C. C. Slaughter, W. E. Grant, and W. D. Grisard. No committee or members of the* board, other than C. C. Slaughter, made any examination or investigation of the latter’s acts or account with the bank during the two years prior'to March, 1915, and he alone had and exercised the absolute management and control of its business during that time. So that when, in February, 191-5, the transaction to be considered was had. he was for all business purposes the bank itself in all his acts, sayings, and writings as its cashier, which were within the general scope of the powers of a cashier of the bank, or of any other ministerial officer of such a bank. Hence, in a transaction between C. C. Slaughter as the defendant’s cashier and other banks and parties, the defendant may not he heard to deny that the acts and knowledge of this cashier, within the scope of the customary and apparent powers of such an officer of a hank, were its acts and its knowledge. Auten v. United States Nat. Bank, 174 U. S. 125, 148, 19 Sup. Ct. 628, 43 L. Ed. 920; Rankin v. Tygard, 198 Fed. 795, 802, 119 C. C. A. 591.

[2] Prior to February 6, 1915, M. D. Thatcher was the president, and John H. Werkheiser was and until May, 1917, continued to be, the cashier, of the plaintiff. Mr. Thatcher and other members of his family, who followed his direction and advice, owned practically all the stock of that bank, and he controlled the course of action of these members with reference to their stock and directed the management of the business of that bank. On February 6, 1915, C. C. Slaughter, for himself and his father, W. B. Slaughter, made an agreement to buy from Mr. Thatcher and his associates their'stock in that bank. Thereupon the parties proceeded to carry out this agreement of purchase; 460 of the 500 shares of stock of the plaintiff were assigned to W. li Slaughter, and 20 shares of it to C. C. Slaughter; and on February 11, 1915, Ml 1). Thatcher, president, and John H. Thatcher, vice president thereof, resigned, and W. B. Slaughter was elected president and C. C. Slaughter vice president of the plaintiff. They made a partial payment for the stock of this bank, and in April, 1915, after the transactions to be considered, and after the failure on March 29, 1915, of the defendant, they resigned these positions, and the Thatchers again took control and became the officers of the plaintiff. On February 7, 1915, the day after the sale of the stock of the plaintiff was agreed upon, C. G. Slaughter, over his signature as cashier of the defendant, sent a letter to Mr. Werkheiser as cashier of the plaintiff, which contained these statements and requests:

[122]*122“I was present yesterday afternoon when Mr. M. D. Thatcher wrote you riegarding our purchase of the stock of the First National Bank, which letter I presume you will receive in the next three or four days, and he stated it was up to me to write giving instructions in reference to the future handling of this account. I desire to state, naturally, having become the sole owner of the bank, we are very anxious to obtain any benefits possible out of this purchase. Hence I would request that upon receipt of this letter you transfer all of your account you have in the First National Bank [of Pueblo] to the Mercantile National Bank. * * * Hence, do this immediately; also draw your drafts in the future on the Mercantile National Bank. * * * Furthermore, it was the understanding that the last four certificates of deposit of $5,000 you have issued, should be sent to the First National Bank {of Pueblo] and they would pay them, and we would issue our certificates in lieu thereof. Furthermore, about the 21st or 22d of this month you will have another certificate of the First National Bank due, and I would request you send same to us and we will issue our certificate in lieu thereof.”

The First National Bank mentioned in this letter was the First National Bank of Pueblo, which had been and was- the correspondent in that city of the plaintiff, and had held its commercial paper, promissory notes, and bonds for safe-keeping, collection, and remittance, and its moneys on deposit with the First National-Bank of Pueblo subject to the plaintiff’s order. When this letter was written the First National Bank of Pueblo held for the plaintiff subject to its checks or drafts about $30,000, and it was the money in this account that C. C. Slaughter in the letter quoted above requested Werkheiser, the cashier of the plaintiff, to cause to be transferred to the defendant. The plaintiff also held twelve certificates of deposit of the First National of Pueblo, of $5,000 each, representing $60,000, six of which are referred to in that letter.

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Bluebook (online)
273 F. 119, 1921 U.S. App. LEXIS 1429, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/first-nat-bank-of-silverton-v-mercantile-nat-bank-of-pueblo-ca8-1921.