Griffiths v. Hamblen Nat. Bank

86 S.W.2d 1099, 19 Tenn. App. 331, 1935 Tenn. App. LEXIS 44
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedMarch 4, 1935
StatusPublished

This text of 86 S.W.2d 1099 (Griffiths v. Hamblen Nat. Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Griffiths v. Hamblen Nat. Bank, 86 S.W.2d 1099, 19 Tenn. App. 331, 1935 Tenn. App. LEXIS 44 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1935).

Opinion

PORTRUM, J.

The complainant, Miss Effie Griffiths, is a lady 69 years of age, living at Greenback, Loudon county, Tennessee. She possessed considerable property, and manages her business affairs in person, buying stock in banks and purchasing Liberty bonds. A short time before the transaction from which this litigation arose, the complainant became acquainted with two promoters, namely, E. Hill Smith and E. A. Swank, who were at Maryville, Tennessee, attempting to organize a bank under the name of Maryville Savings & Loan Corporation, and these promoters induced the complainant to purchase some of the stock. This bank was organized, and the *332 promoters then went to Morristown for the purpose of organizing a bank of a similar nature there, and also one at Jefferson City, Tennessee. They had gained a knowledge of the complainant’s financial affairs, and E. A. Swank called upon her again on March 23, 1931, to induce her to take stock in the banks then being organized, but she declined to take additional stock. On this occasion she told Swank that her Liberty bonds aggregating $5,000 were in the vault of the bank of Greenback, and the bank of Greenback was insolvent and in the hands of the state superintendent of banks for liquidation. Swank represented to the complainant that she might have trouble in recovering her bonds from the receiver, since they were not in a safety deposit bos, but had been left in the bank’s vault without evidence to earmark them as the property of the complainant. He suggested that she recover the bonds and place them in the Maryville Savings & Loan Corporation, a bank in which she was interested.

She did recover the bonds and turned them over to Swank to be deposited in the Maryville Savings & Loan Corporation, and took his receipt, describing the bonds by number and the aggregate amount of $5,600, signed by the corporation, by E. A. Swank, and dated March 23, 1931. On April 9 Swank again returned to the home of the complainant, and represented to her that he had almost completed the organization of the bank in Morristown, having subscribed $19,000 of the $25,000 required subscription, and that he had to have paid in as capital $25,000 before the banking department would permit the opening of the bank. He suggested to her that she loan him $5,000 of her Liberty bonds to be deposited in the coffers of the bank in order to meet the requirement of the law and permit the immediate opening of the bank after an examination by the banking department, and that he, upon the next day after the opening of the bank, would return the bonds to her. He offered to pay her $100 for the use of the bonds for the few days he represented as necessary.' She did not understand how he could afford to do this, and he explained to her that it would require some time to procure sufficient subscriptions to open the bank, and his traveling expenses, gasoline bills, and other incidental expenses would more than consume this amount. She agreed to accept $100 and loan the bonds for the purpose above stated. Swank then pulled the bonds out of his pocket and stated to her that she would have to sign the bonds to show that they were genuine. Until then she did not know that Swank had the bonds in his possession, but she said nothing in protest. And she then, at the suggestion of Swank, signed the bonds in blank and turned them over to him for the purpose of using them as the assets of the bank at Morristown in order that the promoters might open it, but with the expectation that Swank would remove the bonds as assets of the bank immediately after the examiners had opened the bank and return the bonds to her.

*333 Swank took these bonds to Morristown and placed them in his safety deposit box in the Hamblen National Bank, where they remained until they were later hypothecated by Swank. On May 28 Swank wrote this letter from Morristown, Tennessee:

“Dear Miss Griffiths: I am writing in regard to the opening of our bank. Onr bank at Morristown, as yon likely noticed in the paper, was opened on the 20th; but owing to the fact we have had no stockholders meeting, yet, and will not have until the tenth of July; I thought we would plan having you up at that time, as we expect to open at Jefferson City about that time.
“My wife joins me in wishing you good health and hoping you will be with us at that time.
“Yours,
“E. A. Swank.”

Miss Griffiths replied to this letter, stating that she could not come to the opening of the Jefferson City bank, but she made no demand for the return of her bonds, which were then in Swank’s possession in his safety deposit box.

On July 18, 1931, Swank made application to the Hamblen National Bank, the defendant, for a loan of $4,000 to be secured by $5,000 of Liberty bonds, and the bank, having no reason to suspect the good faith of Swank or his ownership of the bonds, agreed to make the loan, but, when the bonds, were produced, it was discovered that they were signed in blank by the registered holder, Miss Griffiths, and that her signature had not been acknowledged as per the instructions printed upon the bonds. The bank declined to make the loan until Swank had secured the acknowledgment of Miss Griffiths in the manner provided in the printed instructions upon the bonds. Swank then went to Maryville and called upon John M. Clark, president of the- Bank of Blount County, and requested him to fill out the acknowledgment as per the instructions. Miss Griffiths was not present, and therefore did not personally appear before him, but he was acquainted with her signature, she being a depositor in his bank, and, after comparing the signature upon the bonds with her signature upon her checks then in the bank, he satisfied himself that the signature was genuine, and proceeded to take the acknowledgment, signing it in his official capacity and attaching the seal of the bank as evidence of the official act.

Swank had represented to Miss Griffiths that he could not negotiate the bonds until this acknowledgment had been taken, and for this reason she was safe in turning them over to him, and she testified that she relied upon this fact as a safeguard and that she could not foresee that any one would be so negligent as to take the acknowledgment in her absence and without her knowledge.

After procuring the acknowledgment, Swank returned to Morris-town and made a loan for $4,000 upon the face of these bonds, which *334 were deposited as collateral, and on the 4th day of August following he procured an additional loan of $1,000 secured by the same bonds, making the aggregate loan $5,000. Swank and his associate, Smith, soon thereafter disappeared, and Miss Griffiths was unable to find them or her bonds, but, after the maturity of the notes which were secured by the bonds and payment being in default, the bank advertised the bonds for sale under the contract agreement appearing in the notes. Then some one notified Miss Griffiths of this fact, and she immediately filed suit to recover the bonds or their proceeds and to enjoin the foreclosure or sale of the bonds by the defendant. The defendant filed its answer averring its ownership and filing a cross-bill or the answer as a cross-bill, making the Bank of Blount County and John M. Clark, its president, parties defendant, and praying for an adjustment of the equity between the parties.

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Bluebook (online)
86 S.W.2d 1099, 19 Tenn. App. 331, 1935 Tenn. App. LEXIS 44, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/griffiths-v-hamblen-nat-bank-tennctapp-1935.