Ford v. Taylor

4 S.W.2d 938, 176 Ark. 843, 1928 Ark. LEXIS 815
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedApril 2, 1928
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 4 S.W.2d 938 (Ford v. Taylor) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ford v. Taylor, 4 S.W.2d 938, 176 Ark. 843, 1928 Ark. LEXIS 815 (Ark. 1928).

Opinion

Smith, J.

This suit was brought by the State Bank Commissioner against the directors of the People’s Bank of Ozark. The complaint alleged that the bank had become insolvent, and that the plaintiff commissioner had taken over its affairs, and, through a partial liquidation of its assets, had paid ¡a dividend of ten per cent, to its creditors, and that the bank had become insolvent through the failure of the defendant directors to discharge the duties imposed upon them by law as directors.

The complaint alleged that the directors failed and neglected to discharge their duties in the following respects: At the first meeting of the board in January,' 1925, the directors ordered that the policy of the bank should be to make no further loans except small loans to regular customers in the due course of business, and the directors so instructed F. E. Stockton, the cashier. This order was made because *the bank at the time was in a badly extended condition, with a large amount of frozen assets and past due paper, but, notwithstanding this condition, the directors, through lack of ordinary care and prudence, permitted the cashier to make many new loans, several of them being in large amounts, and without adequate collateral, and to irresponsible persons. A list of these loans, aggregating $42,695.02, was set out. It was further alleged that a number of these alleged loans were evidenced by notes to which the names of the makers had been forged by the cashier, and that this practice could not have, proceeded far if the directors had discharged their duty by examining the notes.

That on February 12, 1925, the board of directors adopted a resolution authorizing the cashier and other officers of the bank to borrow money from the City National Bank of 'St. Louis, the Merchants’ National Bank of Fort Smith, and the Bankers ’ Trust Company of Little Bock, and to pledge the notes held by the bank as collateral therefor, but, instead of this resolution being correctly entered upon the minutes of the meeting of the directors, the cashier entered a resolution giving him authority to rediscount notes held by the bank as security for loans made by it with any of the correspondent banks, and, by reason of the failure of the directors to see that this resolution was properly entered, the cashier was enabled to obtain large sums of money, which he dissipated in reckless and unauthorized loans. At the time of the trial of this cause in the court below litigation was pending in which liability to the St. Louis bank was denied on account of notes rediscounted to the St. Louis bank, but that case was recently determined by this court in favor of the St. Louis bank. Grand National Bank of St. Louis v. Taylor, 176 Ark. 1, 1 S. W. (2d) 818. That the cashier of the bank erected a business house in Ozark in 1925, and paid the contractor for his work by permitting the contractor to overdraw his building account, and that these overdrafts were carried as bills receivable on the books of the bank, and in this manner the bank sustained a loss of $9,-673.07. That the directors were negligent in permitting and approving loans to the president of the bank and to a brother and a son of the president, and testimony was offered tending to show that all these loans were in fact loans to the president, but were made to the president’s brother and son to prevent it from appearing that the loan limit to any one person had been exceeded.

In response to a motion to make the complaint more definite and certain, an amendment to the complaint was filed, in which it was alleged that the nominal assets which came into the hands of the Bank Commissioner amounted to $550,000, but included in this amount was $67,072.38 of old notes which had been previously charged off as being of no value, and $150,000 of other assets which were without value, and $30,000 in duplicated notes, leaving total assets of $302,927.61, of which $90,000 had been collected, and it was estimated that $90,000 more would be collected. The actual liabilities of .the bank were alleged to be $480,499, and the contingent liabilities were $150,000.

,A demurrer to the complaint was overruled, las was also an additional motion to make the complaint more definite and certain.

The answer filed by the defendant directors denied that they had failed to exercise ordinary care in the matter of seeing that the directions given by them to the cashier were obeyed in the matter of making new loans, and they alleged the fact to be that the cashier was a man in whom they and all others had implicit faith and confidence, and whose good character was unquestioned either for business capacity or integrity. That the cashier had forged the resolution increasing his authority to obtain money from the correspondent banks, and had kept the books of the bank, including the note register, in such manner that they did not know of the unauthorized loans or the forged notes which had been used as collateral to borrow money. They were not aware that the cashier of the bank was using the funds of the bank in an unauthorized way in the construction of a business house, and could not by ordinary care have discovered that fact. The loans to the president of the bank were alleged to have been made at a time when his solvency was not questioned, and it was further alleged that he was solvent, and that the loans to the brother and son of the president were made in good faith and in the exercise of an honest judgment as to the solvency of these parties. The testimony appeal’s, however, to show that the president of the bank is not solvent, at least the Bank Cornmis-' sioner has been unable to collect from him the amount due the bank.

All the allegations of the complaint were put in issue, including the allegations as to the value of the assets which the Bank Commissioner had taken over and those in regard to the actual and contingent liabilities of the bank.

A voluminous record was made at the trial from which this appeal comes, and this opinion would be wearisomely protracted if we were to discuss all the notes and transactions upon which the liability of the directors is predicated. We will content ourselves therefore with a declaration of the legal principles which should be applied, and the liability of the directors will be accordingly determined.

We have had frequent occasion to consider the liability of directors of banks to stockholders as well as creditors for inattention to their duties ¡and for the mismanagement of the bank’s affairs, and a late case is that of Muller v. Planters’ Bank & Trust Co., 169 Ark. 480, 275 S. W. 750. This case cited and to some extent reviewed the leading cases in this State on this subject, land in the syllabus in that case it is said: “While bank directors are liable to stockholders as well as creditors for failure to exercise diligence and good faith in managing the affairs of the bank, the mere exercise of poor judgment is not sufficient to form a basis of liability.”

In the body of the opinion in that case it was said:

“The statute, however, in broad terms, as we have seen, places the ‘stock, property, ¡affairs and business of such corporations’ under the care of their board of directors, to be managed by them.

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Bluebook (online)
4 S.W.2d 938, 176 Ark. 843, 1928 Ark. LEXIS 815, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ford-v-taylor-ark-1928.