Hamburg Bank v. Ouachita Nat. Bank in Monroe

78 F.2d 100, 1935 U.S. App. LEXIS 3647
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedJune 12, 1935
DocketNo. 10175
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 78 F.2d 100 (Hamburg Bank v. Ouachita Nat. Bank in Monroe) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hamburg Bank v. Ouachita Nat. Bank in Monroe, 78 F.2d 100, 1935 U.S. App. LEXIS 3647 (8th Cir. 1935).

Opinions

FARIS, Circuit Judge.

This is an appeal by the Hamburg Bank, a banking corporation organized and operating in the state of Arkansas, and pursuant to the laws thereof, and one Lizzie Blanks, from a decree in equity which adjudged the lien of the bank on certain lands to be inferior to the lien of appellee, a national bank, located, as its name indicates, at Monroe, La. For brevity, we shall refer to the banks as the Hamburg Bank and the Ouachita Bank.

The facts are long and somewhat complicated. But enough of these facts to make clear the questions of law which are up for judgment, run thus: In March, 1925, one W. L. Blanks died intestate, leaving surviving him three adult sons, and a widow, Lola G. Blanks, who on April 10, 1925, was duly appointed by the probate court of Ashley county, Ark., administratrix of his estate. Decedent had in his lifetime numerous business interests. He seems to have been a physician and an undertaker. He operated a garage and a mercantile business. He owned, and rented to tenants or operated on shares, some 3,400 acres of farm lands. He owned live stock and shares of corporate stock, among others and important here as an incident in this action, 310 shares of the stock of the Flam-burg Bank. His brother, president then and now of the Hamburg Bank, and his sister-in-law, appellant Lizzie Blanks, wife of the president, together owned 790 shares; while his three sons owned 490 shares, or a total of 1,590 shares out of 2,000, the then capital stock of the bank.

Defendant’s estate was indebted to numerous persons in about the aggregate sum of $53,000. Of this sum $37,646.67 was owed to appellant Hamburg Bank, whose claim was allowed, or the last of whose claims was allowed, about October 21, 1925, by the administratrix. Shortly after the appointment of Lola G. Blanks as administratrix, she was by an order of the probate court permitted to take charge of all of the numerous properties of the estate and run, carry on, and operate them for the purpose of paying the debts thereof. By April, 1927, she had paid all of the allowed claims, except the claim of the Hamburg Bank, and on this claim she had paid current interest.

Early, in the year 1927, Lola G. Blanks (in her personal capacity) and her three sons, who together constituted all of the heirs of decedent, organized a corporation under the laws of the state of Arkansas, called the Blanks Company, and on March 29, 1927, Lola G. Blanks, Aubry G. Blanks, Frederick P. Blanks, and Lane W. Blanks, being all of the heirs of decedent having interests in such lands, conveyed all lands of the estate to the Blanks Company. The consideration for this conveyance was all of the capital stock of the Blanks Company, which was divided among the heirs, in the proportion of one-third to the widow and two-thirds to the sons. Later, Lane W. Blanks turned his stock back to the company, and so he disappears from this case.

Some time in January, 1928, the Blanks Company procured a loan of $50,000, from the predecessor of appellant, the Ouachita National Bank of Monroe. This loan was negotiated by J. P. Blanks, then and yet president of the Hamburg Bank, and at the time the salaried manager of the Blanks Company, and Frederick P. Blanks. This note was not secured, but made solely on the then financial standing of the Blanks Company, which agreed, as did also the Hamburg Bank, through its president, to maintain deposits in appellee, Ouachita Bank. This loan was to be used, and was largely used, by the Blanks Company, to finance itself in making a crop in the year 1928. Some $30,000 were paid on this note in the fall of 1928, leaving a balance due of $20,000, which forms the major part of the money on which this action primarily rests.

In January, 1930, the Blanks Company, by warranty deed, sold and conveyed to Lola G. Blanks, personally and not as administratrix, the 640 acres of land and certain town lots, here in controversy. These lands formed a part of the 3,400 acres of land of which decedent was seized in his lifetime. The grantee paid no cash for the lands so conveyed to her, but gave therefor her six notes, amounting in all to the sum of $51,000, and payable to the Blanks Company. In these notes a vendor’s lien was duly retained for the purchase price of the lands so sold.

Shortly thereafter and early in the year 1930, appellee’s predecessor, the Ouachita National Bank of Monroe, began pressing the Blanks Company for payment of the [102]*102$20,000 balance due on the note made by the Blanks Company to it. The Blanks Company, through A. 'G. Blanks, then a director of the Hamburg Bank, as also a stockholder and an officer of the Blanks Company, and J. P. Blanks then president of the Hamburg Bank, as also the manager of the Blanks Company, proposed to the Ouachita National Bank of Monroe that if it would advance an additional $5,000 in new money, the Blanks Company would evidence the latter sum as well as the balance of $20,000 (then $23,000, interest included) by new notes and secure these new notes by the six notes of Lola G. Blanks, which retained a vendor’s lien on the lands in controversy here. Though assured by the president of the Hamburg Bank (though then, as contended by appellants, acting as manager for the Blanks Company,) that all claims against the estate of decedent had been paid except the claim of the Hamburg Bank, and that the latter was proscribed by the statute of limitations, it was deemed a matter of precaution by the attorney for the Ouachita Bank to have a resolution passed by the board of directors of the Hamburg Bank .subordinating its lien, as the holder of allowed claims against decedent’s estate, to that of the Ouachita Bank. On March 17, 1930, a special meeting of the board of directors of the Hamburg Bank was held, at which all of the directors were present. These directors were three in number, namely one W.. E. Foote, and said J. P. Blanks, and A. G. Blanks. At this meeting a resolution o~f the board of directors of the Hamburg Bank was unanimously adopted, approving and ratifying all of the terms and conditions of a letter which had been written by J. P. Blanks, president of the Hamburg Bank, to the Ouachita Bank on March 14, 1930. This letter, so far as concerns the allowed claim of the Hamburg Bank, and the resolution of approval and ratification, read as follows:

“Ouachita National Bank,
“Monroe, Louisiana.
“Gentlemen:
“In reference to a conversation that I had with Mr. Millsap over the telephone about a deed of Blanks Company to L. G. Blanks for land described in the deed, regarding an administration lien held against the lands described in the above dee'd" in Book 1 Page 12, abstracts of claim in the County of Ashley,- State of Arkansas, which your bank is making a loan on.
“We agree, and this letter is your authority, to our claim coming second to your claim against this land, if you will loan Blanks Company the $25,000.00 as agreed upon. Our claim will come second to your $25,000.00 loan, plus the interest. * * *
“The above named is all the claims filed in Book 1 Page 12, abstract of claims against the Estate of the late W. L. Blanks, and this letter is for the purpose as above stated to clear the records so your claim will be first and our claim will be second to the $25,000.00, plus the interest.
“Yours truly,
“Hamburg Bank,
“J. P. Blanks,' President.
“R. W. Baird, Cashier.”

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Bluebook (online)
78 F.2d 100, 1935 U.S. App. LEXIS 3647, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hamburg-bank-v-ouachita-nat-bank-in-monroe-ca8-1935.