Gate City National Bank v. Bunton

296 S.W. 375, 316 Mo. 1338, 1927 Mo. LEXIS 647
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedApril 11, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 296 S.W. 375 (Gate City National Bank v. Bunton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gate City National Bank v. Bunton, 296 S.W. 375, 316 Mo. 1338, 1927 Mo. LEXIS 647 (Mo. 1927).

Opinion

*1342 RAGLAND, J.

This case comes to the writer for opinion on reassignment. It is a suit by the payee of a promissory note against the maker and accommodation endorsers. The maker and three of the five endorsers suffered judgment by defardt. This controversy is between the payee and the remaining endorsers, O. W. Moorman and I. M. Taylor.

The evidence and the instructions to the jury were well within the issues made by the pleadings. As no question is raised with respect to the pleadings they will not be further noticed.

*1343 As stated by appellant’s counsel, tbe following facts were disclosed by tbe evidence at tbe trial:

“W. B. Planck is and was president of the Gate City National Bank, appellant. B. A. Bunton was president of tbe Exchange Bank of DeKalb County. On tbe 23d day of September, 1922, Mr. Bunton applied to Mr. Planck for a $25,000 loan, stating that the reserves of his bank were running low and be needed that amount. He offered bis own note, which be stated would be endorsed by respondents, Moor-man and Taylor and also by bis wife, A. D. Bunton, Thomas G. Riffle and Alfred Kelley. He also offered collateral security in tbe way of customers’ notes from tbe Exchange Bank in tbe sum of $25,000., He presented to Mr. Planck bis financial statements of respondent Taylor and of all tbe other endorsers, with tbe exception of respondent Moorman, which he promised to furnish. This was Saturday. Tbe discount board met at the noon hour, approved tbe loan to tbe Exchange Bank on tbe conditions named. Mr. Planck called bis stenographer, Mrs. Smith, filled out on the regular blank a $25,000 note and delivered it to Mr. Bunton to be executed and returned, together with tbe financial statement of Moorman as promised. Mr. Bunton left the bank with the note at two o’clock.
‘1 On Monday, September 25,1922, Mr. Bunton wrote a letter to Mr. Planck enclosing the note endorsed agreeably to arrangements, by Moorman, Taylor, A. D. Bunton, Riffle and Kelley ; also the financial statement of Moorman. He had left with Mr. Planck on Saturday before the $25,000 of collateral notes. In his letter he requested that credit be given to the Exchange Bank for the face of the note, less proper discount, which was done, and which amount was subsequently cheeked out in due course by the Exchange Bank.
“Moorman’s financial statement bore the same date as the $25,000 note — September 23, 1922. It showed that he had a total worth of $157,280 and a net worth of $105,480.
“Taylor’s financial statement was dated February 27, 1922. It showed that he had total assets amounting to $203,000, and a net worth of $170,737.
‘ ‘ The $25,000 note sued on was on the regular printed form of the Gate City National Bank; and when it was returned, together with the financial statement of Mr. Moorman, it was in the same condition as when delivered to Bunton, the Saturday before, with the exception of the endorsements and signatures.
“In December following, the Exchange Bank failed.”

On behalf of himself, defendant Moorman testified in part as follows :

“I have lived in DeKalb County for forty-nine years and am fifty-two years old. I operate a little over eight hundred acres, and am stock-raising. I first knew E. A. Bunton when he was county treasurer and *1344 afterwards he became a banker. He ran the Exchange Bank of DeKalb County. I have been doing business with him ever since I have been doing business for myself, and even before that. I did some business with him while I was living with my father. I have done business with him for thirty years. I have borrowed money from his bank and kept my money there. I signed the note sued on.
“I went into the bank one afternoon just about four o’clock to transact a little business. I was standing in the position I am sitting, facing north, and Mr. Bunton had a little office to the northeast of where I ivas standing, and he came out of there, and as I turned to leave, he said, ‘ Oscar, I would like to get you to endorse a little note for me. A little note — I would like to get you to endorse a little note, ’ ’ just the words he used, and he said, ‘How about it?’ I said, ‘Let me see the note.’ I just hesitated a little, and said, ‘Well, let me see the note,’ and he went back to his desk somewhere and secured the note, and I was standing then at the little gate that enters his little corner, and he showed it to me, and I read the note. It was for $5,000, made payable to the Gate City National Bank, signed by E. A. Bunton, I said, ‘ That will be all right. ’ He said, ‘ Come in, then, ’ and we went in that little office and he fussed around over on his desk and got a pen and dipped it in the ink, and laid the papers down there. He didn’t sit down, nor did I sit down, and he just laid it on the corner of the desk, and I signed it right there, and I turned and left the bank.
‘ ‘ Q. Now, at the time you signed your name on the paper that he turned over for you did you believe it was a note for $5,000, or what did you believe it was ? A. I read it. It was a note for $5,000.
“Q. Did you know you were signing a note for $25,000? A. I knew that I was not.
‘ ‘ Q. Did you intend to sign a note for $25,000 ? A. I did not.
“Q. Would you have signed a note for $25,000? A. I certainly would not.”

On cross-examination he further testified:

“ Q. So that you did actually read this note ? A. I read the note, the -face of the note, so that I knew what was in it, what it was.
‘‘Q. Now after you read the note — Mr. Bunton gave it to you when you read it, is that right ? A. That is right.
‘ ‘ Q. Did you give it back to him ? A. I did.
“Q. Then you’went over to his desk, is that right ? A. Yes.
“Q. And you came in through the gate? A. You come into the gate first.
“Q. You were through the gate when you looked at the note? A. No.
‘‘Q. You had come in through the gate when you looked at the note? A. No, I looked at the note in the corridor.
*1345 ‘ ‘ Q. And then you came in ? A. I followed him — I returned the paper to him and followed him into the little office.
“Q. And that is out in front of the bank, isn’t it, just separated from the lobby or corridor, as you say, by a railing? A. Yes.
“Q. You went right back with Bunton, when he went back there? A. Yes.
“Q. And he laid the note down on the table and said,‘Sign’? A. He fussed around and got the pen and ink and held the note in his hand.
“ Q. From.the time you handed it to him ? A. Yes.
“Q.

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Bluebook (online)
296 S.W. 375, 316 Mo. 1338, 1927 Mo. LEXIS 647, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gate-city-national-bank-v-bunton-mo-1927.