Hansbrough v. D. W. Standrod & Co.

286 P. 923, 49 Idaho 216, 1930 Ida. LEXIS 94
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedApril 5, 1930
DocketNo. 5147.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 286 P. 923 (Hansbrough v. D. W. Standrod & Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hansbrough v. D. W. Standrod & Co., 286 P. 923, 49 Idaho 216, 1930 Ida. LEXIS 94 (Idaho 1930).

Opinion

BRINCK, District Judge.

The respondent is a practicing attorney at law who, in November, 1921, was employed by D. W. Standrod & Company, a banking institution, to bring a suit against a firm known as Swauger Brothers and others. After the suit was commenced a settlement was made between the plaintiff and defendants therein, whereby the bank received certain notes of the defendants and, as collateral security for their payment, received 81,999 shares of the capital stock of Swauger Land & Livestock Company, a corporation. Upon learning of the settlement, respondent obtained an agreement from Standrod & Company that his fees should be credited .upon notes he had given to the bank and which were then held by the appellant Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco. In February, 1923, respondent and the law firm of Thomas & Andersen were *223 employed by Standrod & Company to bring suit upon the Swauger notes which had been obtained in the previous settlement. This suit, after it was commenced, was likewise settled before trial, this time with the consent of counsel, and in this settlement Standrod & • Company became the owner of the shares of stock that had previously been pledged to it, and received in addition notes of the Swaugers aggregating some $22,000. In this connection it was again agreed that the attorneys’ fees earned by respondent and his associates in the second suit should be credited upon notes they had given to Standrod & Company, which notes were also in the hands of the Federal Reserve Bank as pledgee. On November 28, 1923, the bank of Standrod & Company closed its doors, and was taken in charge by the appellant commissioner of finance of the state of Idaho; and the attorneys’ fees of respondent and his associates were never credited upon their notes to Standrod & Company, these notes having been at all times herein involved in the possession of the Federal Reserve Bank as collateral securing notes to it of Standrod & Company.

After the Standrod & Company bank closed, respondent and his associates filed with the commissioner of finance claims for their attorneys’ fees and for preference thereof as trust funds, which preference was disallowed. They appealed from said ruling to the district court which denied the preference, but alldSved them attorneys’ liens upon the massed assets of Standrod & Company. On appeal to this court the judgments of the district court allowing liens upon the massed assets were reversed, but, the record and briefs indicating that the certificates of stock were then in the hands of the commissioner, the district court was directed to enter judgments declaring attorneys’ liens upon the stock and ordering its sale to satisfy the liens. (Hansbrough v. D. W. Standrod & Co., 43 Ida. 119, 249 Pac. 897, 899; Thomas v. D. W. Standrod & Co., 43 Ida. 157, 249 Pac. 900.)

It now appears, however, that in October, 1923, Standrod & Company had transferred the Swauger notes and the *224 stock owned by it in the Swauger company to the Federal Reserve Bank as collateral to secure its own notes to that bank, for which it had been given credit, and that the Swauger notes and stock were never in the hands of the commissioner of finance as assets of Standrod & Company. It is shown that the Federal Reserve Bank accepted these securities without knowledge of the-lien of plaintiff and his associates, and that it was first advised thereof after it had in September, 1924, received from J. AY. Swauger an offer to purchase the Swauger notes and stock for $15,000, and had notified the commissioner of finance that the offer would be accepted in the absence of objection within a specified time. At this time, before the stock was sold, plaintiff notified appellant Federal Reserve Bank of his claim of lien, and warned it not to sell the stock. The offer was accepted, and the sale of the collateral made.

After the decisions in the former cases by this court, which were rendered in September and October, 1926, the respondent, in his own right and as assignee of his associates, brought this suit against the appellants Federal Reserve Bank and the commissioner of finance and his surety, to recover the amount of the attorneys’ fees of himself and his assignors as damages for the alleged conversion of the stock upon which respondent and his assignors had an attorney’s lien. The trial court found that the appellants had, by a sale of the property to Swauger, converted it; that the liens of respondent and his assignors had not been affected by the pledge of the property to the Federal Reserve Bank; that they were not guilty of laches and had not waived their liens upon the property; and awarded the respondent judgment against the appellants for $7,000 and interest, from which judgment this appeal is taken.

The evidence fails to establish any cause of action against the commissioner of finance. He never had possession of the property, and did nothing injuring plaintiff’s security. It is true that in 1924, the Federal Reserve Bank, with the consent of the commissioner, had new certificates issued for the stock, a portion of the stock being reissued in *225 its name and a portion in the name of the commissioner. This was done so that the Federal Reserve Bank, as a stockholder of the corporation, could have access to its books. The commissioner indorsed the new certificate so made out to him to the Federal Reserve Bank. This transaction was a mere change in the form of the stock certificates, without any intention on the part of the bank to release its lien, and the commissioner did not thereby have or become entitled to the possession of the certificates, which at all times remained subject to the pledge agreement under which the Federal Reserve Bank had received them from Standrod & Company. The commissioner’s act in this connection was entirely innocuous and in nowise affected the rights of the parties; and as to him it is clear the judgment must be reversed. For convenience, the Federal Reserve Bank will hereinafter be referred to as the appellant.

It is urged that the plaintiff, having brought this action as for the conversion of the certificates of stock, is not entitled to recover because he was not entitled to possession thereof; but it is well settled that where one has a lien on property injured, he may maintain an action for damages where the injuries complained of diminish the value of his security or operate to make it ineffectual, although he has neither the possession nor the right to possession. (11 C. J., p. 9, see. 19; Hugo State Bank v. Hugo Nat. Bank, 96 Okl. 135, 220 Pac. 868; Hahn v. Sleepy Eye Milling Co., 21 S. D. 324, 112 N. W. 843; Rew v. Maynes, 147 Iowa, 15, 125 N. W. 804.) And it seems clear that a sale of property in derogation of the rights of a lienholder, or an appropriation of the property to one’s own use, is an injury within the meaning of this rule. (First Nat. Bank v. Sorenson, 30 Wyo. 136, 217 Pac. 948; Fouts v. Ayres, 11 Tex. Civ. App. 338, 32 S. W. 435; McCown v. Kitchen, (Tex. Civ. App.) 52 S. W. 801; Forbes v. Parker, 16 Pick. (Mass.) 462; Hugo State Bank v. Hugo Nat. Bank, supra.) The complaint sufficiently states a cause of action as against this objection.

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Bluebook (online)
286 P. 923, 49 Idaho 216, 1930 Ida. LEXIS 94, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hansbrough-v-d-w-standrod-co-idaho-1930.