First National Bank v. Chartier

25 N.E.2d 733, 305 Mass. 316, 1940 Mass. LEXIS 803
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedFebruary 28, 1940
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 25 N.E.2d 733 (First National Bank v. Chartier) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court 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. Chartier, 25 N.E.2d 733, 305 Mass. 316, 1940 Mass. LEXIS 803 (Mass. 1940).

Opinion

Donahue, J.

The plaintiff is the holder of a promissory note dated February 7, 1927, which reads as follows: “On demand with interest after date Textile Loan Co. promise to pay to the order of the First National Bank of New Bedford, Thirty-five thousand Dollars. At said Bank. Value received.” It is signed: “Textile Loan Co. By Louis Jean — Trustee.”

The plaintiff has brought a bill in equity which in its amended form names fifty-seven individuals as defendants. It alleges that they are “copartners in a voluntary association under a written instrument or declaration of trust adopted on or about January 25, 1924, as amended from time to time, and that said partnership has engaged in the business of lending money at interest since said date under the firm name and style of Textile Loan Company”; that the defendants by their duly authorized agent and in the prosecution of the partnership business made a promissory note, a copy of which is above set out; that payments on account of the principal sum thereof totaling $11,000 have been made and that the defendants owe the balance of the principal sum with interest. The bill further alleges that the defendants, as partners, are the beneficial owners of ten promissory notes, secured by mortgages of real estate standing in the name of the defendant Balthazar as trustee for the Textile Loan Company, under the terms of the declaration of trust above mentioned, and also three parcels of real estate standing in his name as such trustee.

By the bill the plaintiff seeks to establish the balance due on The notAheldT'yTtV'twthlnferest, as a debt of each defendant, and to reach and apply to such debt the property, above described as held in the name of the defendant Balthazar as trustee. All the defendants were members of the Textile Loan Company when the note in suit was executed. The defendants included in their answers a denial that a partnership relation existed between them, as asserted in the bill.

Upon the motion of one of the defendants two issues [318]*318were framed and tried before a jury. The first issue was, “What is the amount due to the plaintiff on the note dated February 7, 1927, signed ‘Textile Loan Company by Louis Jean, Trustee’?” and the second issue was, “What defendants, if any, are liable for said amount?” Without objection, an interlocutory decree was entered dismissing the bill as to the defendants Seraphine Mathieu, Josephine Varrieur and George Levesque upon whom no service had been made, and as to the defendant Richard Remillard who was found not to be a shareholder in the Textile Loan Company.

At the close of the plaintiff’s evidence all the defendants remaining in the case joined in a motion that the judge direct the jury to return as their answer on the second issue, “None of the defendants are liable.” The motion stated as its “grounds that the plaintiff has not shown any authority on the part of Louis Jean to execute the note in suit in such a manner as to make any of the defendants personally liable to the plaintiff in this action and has not shown ratification of such execution by any of the defendants.” The judge allowed the motion and directed the jury to answer the second issue “None,” that is, in effect, that none of the defendants was liable. The judge also directed the jury to return, in answer to the first issue, “$20,856.18,” that being the amount agreed upon by the parties. The jury returned the answers as directed. The plaintiff excepted to the allowance of the motion and to the direction of the judge that the answer “None” be returned on the second issue.

The Textile Loan Company was organized on or about January 25, 1924. It adopted by-laws, some of which are summarized at this point and some will be referred to later. The purpose of the company was stated to be the lending of money on real estate mortgages. It was provided in the by-laws: “The capital stock of the Company shall be One Hundred and Fifty Thousand Dollars, divided into three hundred shares, of the par value of five hundred dollars, payable in weekly payments of $2.00 . . . until such weekly payments together with the net earnings shall [319]*319amount to said par value of five hundred” dollars. When a member had fully paid for a share he was entitled to a certificate for such share. The shares were transferable and the by-laws provided that shares should “descend in case of death, according to the laws of the Commonwealth the same as any other personal property which the deceased may leave.”

The by-laws further provided: “The Board of Directors shall have all the powers similar to that vested in a Board of Directors of a business corporation, and as a Board or by Committees, shall have, in the management of the affairs of the Company and are hereby invested with all the power which the Company itself possesses, not incompatible with the provisions of these By-Laws.” The trustee was given, under the by-laws, custody of the money and all instruments or papers of the company, was required to collect all money due the company and to disburse the same “pursuant to the contracts and obligations of the stockholders.” He was required to hold the title of the property of the company in his own name as trustee, and all conveyances and mortgages of real estate made for the benefit of the company must be in his name as trustee for the company, and he was given the right and power to make conveyance of real estate of the company free and discharged of all trusts. He was given the power to defend suits brought against the company and to prosecute actions in his own name as trustee for the company. He was given the exclusive right to make, sign and indorse promissory notes and other instruments in the regular course of the company’s business, to determine the rate of interest on loans and “to perform such other duties as the directors may from time to time require.” The by-laws provided: “Under the direction of the Board of Directors he [the trustee] may borrow money from time to time up to any amount, not exceeding in the aggregate an amount equal to the amount paid in dues by the members.”

The plaintiff bank made a series of loans to the Textile Loan Company, on notes payable on demand, as follows: May 21, 1925, $10,000; October 22, 1925, $5,000; Decern[320]*320ber 21, 1925, $5,000; March 20, 1926, $6,000; July 23, 1926, $5,000. On February 7, 1927, the company borrowed a further sum of $4,000. Nothing had been paid on the principal sums of the earlier notes which then aggregated $31,000. The earlier notes were surrendered by the bank and the company gave a new demand note in the sum of $35,000, which represented the total amount of the loans which had been made.

All the amounts that had been borrowed by the company were credited to the checking account of the company at the plaintiff bank, and all the notes given were signed “Textile Loan Company, Louis Jean, Trustee.” The parties agreed at the trial “that the Board of Directors of the Textile Loan Company knew of the various loans made to the Textile Loan Company from time to time, that the loans made by the plaintiff were included in the financial statements of the trustee which were read to and considered by the Board of Directors at its meetings, and that the Board of Directors knew of each loan made by the plaintiff to the Loan Company, sometime after each loan was made.” Louis Jean was trustee during the period in which all the loans were made by the plaintiff. The defendant Balthazar was trustee at the time the bill in equity was brought.

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Bluebook (online)
25 N.E.2d 733, 305 Mass. 316, 1940 Mass. LEXIS 803, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/first-national-bank-v-chartier-mass-1940.