First National Bank v. Armstrong

198 S.W. 226, 177 Ky. 807, 1917 Ky. LEXIS 672
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedNovember 20, 1917
StatusPublished

This text of 198 S.W. 226 (First National Bank v. Armstrong) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
First National Bank v. Armstrong, 198 S.W. 226, 177 Ky. 807, 1917 Ky. LEXIS 672 (Ky. Ct. App. 1917).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Thomas

— Reversing.

The appellant, First National Bank of Louisville, prior to the year 1909, and prior to tke dates hereinafter mentioned, was a banking corporation chartered and operating under the laws of the United States providing for the incorporation of national banks, with a capital stock of $500,000.00, divided into shares of the par value of $100.00 each. The appellees and plaintiffs below owned together 303 shares of the capital stock of the bank. Some time in the spring of the year mentioned it was discovered by the Comptroller of the Currency that the condition of the bank was very much dilapidated, its assets being greatly impaired, and after investigation [808]*808through the comptroller’s department, it was determined that one of three things must be done, viz., an assessment made upon the stockholders, a reduction of the capital stock to such a sum as would make the bank solvent and sound, or that the bank would be taken charge of by the comptroller and liquidated by him.

This situation produced much discussion among the stockholders and others interested in the bank’s affairs, and resulted finally in a majority of the stockholders placing their stock with the Fidelity Trust Company, the name of which has been changed and is now the Fidelity & Columbia Trust Company, as trustee, for the purpose of selling the stock upon terms to be acceptable to the stockholders of the bank, with the view that the bank might be reorganized so as to meet the requirements of the Comptroller of the Currency, and at the same time to realize for the stockholders all that was possible on their stock. This was followed by a contract entered into between the trustee, to which we shall refer as the Trust Company, and the Kentucky Title Savings Bank & Trust Company, to which we shall refer as the Savings Bank; the date of that contract is September 4, 1909, and it is copied in full in the case of Kentucky Title Savings Bank & Trust Company v. Day, 174 Ky. 105, and neither it nor any of its parts will be copied herein. That contract was a sale by the Trust Company to the Savings Bank of a certain amount of the capital stock of the appellant, to which we shall refer as the Bank, on terms therein specified under which a reorganization of the bank was contemplated, and the stock sold by the Trust Company should be paid for upon the terms and at the times stated in the contract. The Trust Company had in its possession at that time the 303 shares of stock in the bank belonging to the plaintiffs, but upon the special terms that plaintiffs should ratify any disposition of the stock by the Trust Company before it should be binding on them.

After plaintiffs learned of the contract of September 4, 1909, they expressed dissatisfaction with its terms, and would not agree thereto, which resulted in the Trust Company executing to plaintiffs, on November 24, 1909, this writing:

“Louisville, Ky., November 24, 1909.
“The Fidelity Trust Company, the purchaser of 303 shares of the capital stock of the First National Bank of Louisville, Ky., in the names of John A. Armstrong [809]*809and Josephine P. Armstrong, for $40.00 per share and $26.00 per share for the goodwill of the First National Bank, recognizes our holding of the negotiable receipts for said stock with the right of John A.Armstrong and Josephine P. Armstrong to participate in the distribution of the assets of the First National Bank in liquidation for any sum collected in the liquidation of said bank in excess of 40% or $40.00 per share paid for said stock. Fidelity Trust Company, by Jno. W. Barr, Jr., President. ’ ’

In the manner pointed out by the contract of September 4, 1909, it was shown that in order to make the shares of stock in the bank worth 40 cents on the dollar, it would be necessary to collect from its doubtful assets a total sum of $422,264.38, which sum is made up of $200,000.00 for the capital stock of the bank at 40 cents on the dollar, and the balance of $222,264.38 for the purpose of liquidating the liabilities of the bank, which was the amount of liabilities over and above what its known good assets would pay.

After the contract of September 4,1909, was executed, the capital stock of the bank was reduced to $200,000.00, which was afterward increased to $500,000.00 by subscription for new stock, and subsequently the capital stock was reduced to $300,000.00, with $200,000.00 surplus. The bank, after the reduction of the capital stock to $200,000.00, immediately began to collect out of the doubtful assets from which the $422,264.38 had to be realized, and at the time of the filing of this suit and when judgment was rendered it had not collected a suffi- ciency ivith interest from September 4, 1909, as the contract stipulated to realize that sum.

This suit was filed by plaintiffs, first against the Trust Company and the Savings Bank, to whom the former sold the stock, to recover their pro rata of the doubtful assets collected by the bank over and above $200,000.00, the sum necessary to make the stock in the bank worth 40 cents on the dollar, based upon the theory that the writing of November 24, 1909, gave them the right to participate in all the collections made of the doubtful assets of the bank over and above $200,000.00.

As the cause progressed, the bank was made a party-defendant, and it is sought to be made liable to plaintiffs upon the ground that the writing of November 24, 1909, .executed by the Trust Company, was made for the use and benefit of the bank, which necessarily proceeds upon [810]*810the contention that the Trust Company was in some way the agent of the bank to purchase plaintiffs’ stock.

The pleadings of the various defendants, including that of the bank, put in issue all of the contentions of the plaintiffs, and especially denied any liability under the writing or contract of November 24, 1909, and in another paragraph the bank relied upon the United States statute forbidding it to purchase its own capital stock, and further insisted that under the circumstances of its being wholly insolvent at the time, it was incompetent and illegal for it to agree to pay any of its stockholders any sum by way of dividend, or for other purposes as long as its assets were impaired so as to imperil its creditors and to in anywise prefer one stockholder over another. To the latter paragraphs of the bank’s answer demurrers were sustained, to which it excepted.

The case was referred to a commissioner, with directions to ascertain and report certain facts, among which was the amount of collections which had been made from the- doubtful assets of the bank over and above $200,-000.00. The commissioner reported that there had been collected from the list of doubtful assets of the bank up to the time of filing the report with interest, over and above the $200,000.00 necessary to make the bank stock worth 40 cents, the sum of $322,261.22. Various exceptions were filed to the report, but they were overruled, and the court gave judgment in favor of plaintiffs against the bank for 303/5000 of the excess collections above the $200,000.00, totaling the' sum of $19,529.03, and to reverse that judgment the bank prosecutes this appeal.

At the threshold it may be stated that there is a wide divergence between counsel for plaintiffs and defendant as to the meaning and scope of the contract of November 24,1909.

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Bluebook (online)
198 S.W. 226, 177 Ky. 807, 1917 Ky. LEXIS 672, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/first-national-bank-v-armstrong-kyctapp-1917.