Glasnapp v. State Banking Board

545 S.W.2d 382, 1976 Mo. App. LEXIS 2311
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 27, 1976
DocketKCD 27806
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 545 S.W.2d 382 (Glasnapp v. State Banking Board) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Glasnapp v. State Banking Board, 545 S.W.2d 382, 1976 Mo. App. LEXIS 2311 (Mo. Ct. App. 1976).

Opinion

WASSERSTROM, Judge.

Appellants applied to the Commissioner of Finance for a charter for a bank to be opened in Raymore, Missouri. The Commissioner denied the application, from which action appellants appealed to the State Banking Board. After a contested hearing, the Board issued its order affirming the Commissioner, from which appellants sought judicial review in the Circuit Court of Jackson County under Sections 361.095(4) and 536.100. (All statutory references are to RSMo 1969.) The Circuit Court affirmed the order of denial, from which ruling appellants take the present appeal. We affirm.

The town of Raymore in which the proposed bank was to be located lies in northern Cass County, south of Kansas City. According to the 1970 census, Raymore counted a population of only 587. In 1972, the town increased its physical size from 306 acres to 8505 acres by annexation, the purpose being to forestall expansion into that area by Kansas City. Partly as a result of that annexation and partly as a result of general population growth in Cass County, the population of incorporated Raymore increased by 1973 to a figure variously estimated to be between 1,600 and 2,500.

The town has approximately 50 business establishments, mostly small service operations. There is however no central business district and there are no national merchandisers, no clothing store, no drug store, no motor car dealer and no high school.

A large percentage of the incorporated town, as well as most of the immediately surrounding trade area, consists of undeveloped agricultural land. The area is frequently described in the evidence as a bedroom community for Kansas City and this characteristic has brought some home building. At the time of the hearing before the Commissioner and that before the Board, building activity had slowed down because of general business conditions. Home building in Raymore is also handicapped by very limited sewer system and water supply-

Raymore finds itself ringed on all sides by a number of much more developed communities, offering among other business facilities a total of nine existing banks within a 12 mile radius of the location of the proposed Raymore bank. Two of those banks are located in Belton, 4V2 miles to the west; one is located in Peculiar, 5½ miles to the south; one is located in Grandview, 8 miles to the northwest; 3 are located in Lee’s Summit, 8½ miles to the northeast; one is located in Hickman Mills, 9 miles to the northwest; and one is located in Pleasant Hill, 11.7 miles to the east.

Of appellants’ points on appeal, their Point No. I reads: “The purpose of the State Banking Board in considering applications for new bank charters is not to prevent new banks from entering the field, but rather to insure the existence of a healthy banking system.” This abstract statement flatly violates Rule 84.04(d) and presents nothing for review. Strake v. R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Co., 539 S.W.2d 715 (Mo.App.1976); Stokes v. Kelly, 537 S.W.2d 562 (Mo.App.1976); Dors v. Wulff, 522 S.W.2d 325 (Mo.App.1975).

The other points made by appellants, in summarized form, are that the trial court erred in affirming the decision of the Board because: 1) the Board failed to make findings; 2) the Board applied legally impermissible standards; 3) the Board’s findings are not supported by the evidence; and 4) the Board failed to consider benefits which would accrue from increase in banking competition. Each of those points will be discussed in order, after disposition has first been made of points raised by two of the respondents.

I.

Grandview Bank and Trust Co., which intervened before the Board in opposition to the application and which now has appeared and filed brief as respondent in this court, challenges the jurisdiction of the circuit court of the petition to review and of *385 this court on appeal, taking the position that the incorporators of the proposed bank are not proper parties and that the petition for review to the circuit court and the appeal to this court should have been taken by the proposed bank. Proceeding on this premise, Grandview further denies that venue lies in Jackson County. In support, Grandview cites Central Bank of Clayton v. State Banking Board of Missouri, 509 S.W.2d 175, 1. c. 181 (Mo.App.1974) in which it was held that the bank, rather than its incorporators, was the aggrieved party, the real party in interest and the one entitled to bring the appeal.

Central Bank of Clayton is not in point. There, the Commissioner issued a charter for the proposed bank and it was only upon appeal to the State Banking Board that the Board revoked the charter. The Central Bank of Clayton opinion holds only that, “[t]he Board does not have the authority, in revoking the proposed bank’s charter, to extinguish the bank’s legal capacity to appeal the Board’s decision.”

In contrast to the situation in Central Bank of Clayton, here the Commissioner did not issue a charter and the proposed Bank of Raymore never came into existence. Under the express provisions of § 362.040, the ones entitled and authorized to appeal from that denial by the Commissioner were the incorporators. By logical extension, when the Board affirmed the Commissioner’s denial, the incorporators were the parties aggrieved entitled to file a petition for judicial review and to pursue an appeal from the decision adverse to them by the circuit court. One of those incorporators resides in Jackson County, which confers venue in the trial court.

II.

Bank of Belton, which also intervened before the Board in opposition to the application and appears in this court as a respondent, has moved to dismiss this appeal on the ground that appellants’ brief fails to contain a fair and concise statement of facts and fails to contain a proper statement of points relied upon, all in violation of Rule 84.04. This motion is well taken insofar as it relates to appellants’ point relied upon No. I, and as already noted in this opinion, that point will not be considered. In other respects, however, appellants’ brief is not so violative of the Rule as to call for the drastic action sought. The motion to dismiss is therefore denied.

III.

Appellants attack the sufficiency of the Board’s findings, relying heavily on Century State Bank v. State Banking Board of Missouri, 523 S.W.2d 856 (Mo.App. 1975) in which this court reversed and remanded an order of the State Banking Board because of the Board’s failure to make proper findings of fact. In Century State Bank, the findings consisted essentially of conclusory facts in the form of the statutory language. Such meager content as appeared in those findings other than the statutory conclusion tended to indicate that the Board had reached its determination on an improper basis. The Century State Bank

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Bluebook (online)
545 S.W.2d 382, 1976 Mo. App. LEXIS 2311, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/glasnapp-v-state-banking-board-moctapp-1976.