Hindman v. First Nat. Bank of Louisville

86 F. 1013, 1898 U.S. App. LEXIS 3006
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Kentucky
DecidedFebruary 15, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 86 F. 1013 (Hindman v. First Nat. Bank of Louisville) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hindman v. First Nat. Bank of Louisville, 86 F. 1013, 1898 U.S. App. LEXIS 3006 (circtdky 1898).

Opinion

BARR, District Judge.

This is a reformed petition hied by order of the court, and there is a motion to strike out part of it, and a general demurrer hied by the First National Bank, one of the defendants. The grounds of the demurrer are that the facts are not sufficient to constitute a cause of action against the bank, and that the matter complained of in the bill is in excess of the powers conferred upon the defendant bank in its charter, and there cannot be a cause of action against it. It seems from the allegations of the bill that the plaintiff purchased from one O. B. Sullivan, who was an officer of the Columbian Fire Insurance Company, 80 shares of the stock of the said insurance company on the 6th day of February, 1893, for the sum of §3 0,000 cash; and the purpose of the bill is to recover from the defendants the First National Bank, Hart, and Sullivan the §10,000 thus paid to Sullivan for the stock sold. The basis of this claim is that Hart and the others combined and confederated together to deceive the insurance commissioner of Kentucky, and did deceive him, and by their deceptions induced him to grant a license to said insurance company to do business. The particular allegations of false rejiresentations, so far as the bank is concerned, are these:

“Tlic plaintiff further states that shortly before or on or about the 1st (lay of January, 1893, certain persons associated themselves together lor the purpose of establishing and organizing a Are insurance company under the laws of the state of Kentucky, to be known by the name of the ‘Columbian Fire Insurance Company of America,’ and for that purpose said persons duly executed and acknowledged articles of incorporation, which were duly recorded and filed with the secretary of state of Kentucky as required by law. * * * Said Colum-bian Fire Insurance Company of America, being so incorporated, applied to the commissioner of insurance for a license to do business in the state of Kentucky as a fire insurance company, and the said eompany purporting to have [1014]*1014a capital stock of two hundred thousand dollars and a surplus of fifty thousand dollars. Said commissioner of insurance for the state of Kentucky, on being so applied to, entered upon an investigation of the affairs and conditions of the said company to ascertain whether or not it was entitled to receive a license to do business as a fire insurance company, as he was so required to investigate by the laws of the state of Kentucky and in the performance of his duty. During the course of said examination the said Columbian Fire Insurance Company of America falsely represented to the said commissioner that its capital stock of .two hundred thousand dollars had been in good faith subscribed fdr and paid up in full in cash, and that in addition thereto it had on hand a surplus of $48,182.90, or a total ■ of $248,182.90, which it claimed and represented to said commissioner that it then had on hand as cash assets, being said capital, stock and surplus paid in, in cash, and that the same was free of' all debts and pecuniary obligations. The said sum of, $248,182.90 was by said insurance company represented to said commissioner to be on deposit to the credit of said insurance company in the First National Bank of Louisville, and subject to the check of said insurance company. The said insurance commissioner, desiring to verify the statements and representations of the said insurance company, applied to the said First National Bank on the 31st day of December, 1892, ^nd through its officers sought to ascertain whether or not the said insurance company had on deposit with said bank the said sum of $248,182.90; and the officers of said bank, knowing the purpose which said commissioner had in view in seeking said information, caused the cashier of said bank to give said commissioner a sworn statement to the effect that the said insurance company had on deposit with said bank on said day the aforesaid sum of $248,182.90, which had been paid in as the capital stock and net surplus of said company; and the said commissioner of insurance, believing and relying on the said statement so given to him by said bank, on the faith thereof issued to said insurance company a license to do business as a fire insurance company in Kentucky; and, on the faith of said license so issued by the insurance commissioner of Kentucky, the said insurance company was enabled to and did acquire license to do business as a fire insurance company in Kentucky, and in various other states of the United States, and at once proceeded to carry on said business and issue policies of insurance against loss by fire in Kentucky and elsewhere, and to advertise and hold itself out as a solvent insurance company, with a paid-up capital and surplus amounting to .$248,182.90. Plaintiff says that the sworn statement made by the cashier of the First National Bank of Louisville on the 31st day of December, 1892 (which was made in the regular course of his duties and with the knowledge of and by the direction of his superior officers .and the directors of said bank), and on the faith of which the insurance commissioner'of • Kentucky issued a license to the said Columbian Fire Insurance Company of America, was untrue, and was given for the fraudulent purpose of enabling the said insurance company to deceive said ihsurance commissioner, and obtain a license to do business when it was not lawfully entitled to one. The plaintiff avers that the officers of said insurance company and said bank, and the said C. B. Sullivan, A. 1Y. Hart, E. L. Butler, and James K. Skinner, fraudulently conspired and confederated together, and co-operated with said bank, in its fraud herein set forth, to deceive said insurance commissioner, and did deceive him, and by their deception induced him to grant a license to said insurance company, and thereby set on foot said fraudulent insurance company.”

It is alleged that the consideration for the making of these false representations by the bank was the agreement of the insurance company to make deposit with the bank of all of its moneys, which deposit would be and was valuable to it. It is further alleged that the insurance company, by reason of not having a full paid up capital stock, became insolvent in the spring of 1894, and the complainant lost his entire stock,, as the assets of the company will pay its creditors only a small percentage of its debts.

There is no allegation in the bill that there was not really at the [1015]*1015time to the credit of the insurance company the sum stated, but it is alleged that the insurance company did not have full and immediate control of these deposits. It is also alleged that §25,000 of the deposit was made up by a certified check issued by a New York bank under an agreement that the money was not to be withdrawn from that bank until after the company was a going concern and had received premiums, and that it was not actually paid until some two months thereafter; and it is alleged that these deposits were made up in part by the bank discounting notes of stockholders given for (he stock itself, which, were indorsed by the insurance company, and that in fact the whole of the capital stock and surplus was not fully paid up at the time; that the capital stock, to the extent of something like §100,000, was never paid np. It is also alleged that the complainant relied upon the fact that the license had been granted to the insurance company to do business by the insurance commissioner of Kentucky. Knowing that the law required the capital stock to be paid up, he relied upon that fact, and was induced thereby to buy (his stock from Sullivan, in February, paying therefor §10,000 cash.

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Bluebook (online)
86 F. 1013, 1898 U.S. App. LEXIS 3006, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hindman-v-first-nat-bank-of-louisville-circtdky-1898.