Iglehart v. Todd

178 N.E. 685, 203 Ind. 427, 1931 Ind. LEXIS 62
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 8, 1931
DocketNos. 26,138, 26,139, 26,140.
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 178 N.E. 685 (Iglehart v. Todd) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Iglehart v. Todd, 178 N.E. 685, 203 Ind. 427, 1931 Ind. LEXIS 62 (Ind. 1931).

Opinion

Martin, J.

The appellants are receivers, appointed by the probate court of Marion County, of The J. F. Wild & Co., a bank incorporated under the laws of the State of Indiana (hereinafter referred to as “the bank” or “the Wild bank”). Among the assets of the bank coming into the hands of the receivers were three promissory notes, payable to the order of the bank, one for $25,000 executed by Robert I. Todd, one for $25,000 executed by John J. Appel, and one for $50,000 executed by Frank M. Millikan. These three actions were brought by Todd, Appel and Millikan against the receivers, each alleging that his note was executed without consideration and solely for the accommodation of the Wild bank *430 and asking that the receiver be enjoined from asserting the same to be valid and enforceable and for thé surrender and cancellation thereof. Subsequently, upon maturity of the notes, appellants by cross-complaints sought recovery thereon. Todd died before the trial and Appel died before judgment and their legal representatives were substituted as parties.

The causes were tried simultaneously by the court and judgments were rendered in favor of the several plaintiffs (appellees) and against the cross-complainants (appellants). From these judgments, the receivers of the bank have appealed, and the three appeals have been consolidated for briefing and decision, the issues, •facts and questions of law involved in each being substantially the same. The error assigned is that the court erred in overruling appellants’ motion for a new trial, wherein it is alleged that the decision is not sustained by sufficient evidence and is contrary to law, and that the court erred in admitting and refusing to admit certain evidence.

Briefly stated, the evidence shows the following undisputed facts: In November 1926, Liberty bonds in the amount of $271,000 were stolen from the Wild bank at Indianapolis. Two or three weeks thereafter (November 29-December 3), an examination of the bank was made by the state banking department, which revealed a shortage—an impairment of capital—of about $80,000. (The capital stock was only $100,000, while the deposits were about $5,000,000.) The bank commissioner thereupon told Mr. J. F. Wild, the president of the bank, and his associates that it would be necessary for them to levy a 100 per cent assessment, or that there would be required $100,000 in money (to guarantee the impairment).

Mr. Wild informed the bank commissioner that the question of increasing the capital stock was under con *431 sideration, but probably could not be accomplished before a period of 10 to 30 days; that he had some influential friends who had plenty of wealth and would respond to any request he would make. The commissioner required (as the condition upon which the bank be allowed to continue operation) that Government bonds or high grade securities worth at least $100,000 be delivered to him to hold and that then the matter could rest until the new stock could, in the near future, be subscribed. Mr. Wild named Frank M. Millikan as one man from whom he expected to obtain bonds or money to deliver to the bank commissioner.

Mr. E. C. Fisher, vice-president of the Wild bank, had called on Mr. Millikan in his office on December 1, 1926, and asked him to subscribe for some capital stock in the Wild bank. Millikan, who had been president of the Columbia National Bank, vice-president of the National City Bank, and director of the Irvington State Bank and the Farmers Trust Company, told Fisher he was not in position to do so and was not anxious to become a stockholder in any bank, due to unpleasantness he had gone through in the past in banking circles, but said.: “If I can be of any assistance to you or can help you I will be glad to have you call on me.” Fisher told Wild of this. On December 9, Fisher telephoned Millikan to come to the bank as Wild wanted to see him. Millikan came and Wild asked him if he (Millikan) would give him (Wild) accommodation paper for' $50,000 temporarily, while he could get his stock subscribed. Wild did not tell Millikan what he was going to do with the note and Millikan did not ask him. Milli-' kan said he did not want to give anything that would be a liability that he would have to pay, and Wild said there would not be any liability on it. Wild said that Mr. John J. Appel and Mr. Robert I. Todd would give him similar paper and Millikan signed the $50,000 note *432 payable to the order of the bank without any further conversation.' Millikan knew about the bond theft from the Wild bank, from what he had read in the newspapers. He owed the Wild bank more than $100,000 (secured by collateral) at the time he signed the accommodation note for $50,000, and he owed the bank more than $100,000 at the time of its failure, exclusive of the note in litigation.

Mr. Wild, on the same date, saw Mr. Todd and asked him if he would sign a note for $25,000. Todd said he would, signed the note, made payable to the order of the bank, and gave it to Wild who delivered it to the bank. Wild did not tell Todd about the examination of the bank a few days previous. Todd did not ask Wild what the note was to be used for and Wild did not tell him what the bank was going to do with it. Wild made no promises to Todd.

Mr. Wild, on the same day, called Mr. Appel on the telephone and told him that Mr. Millikan was going to sign a note for $50,000, that Mr. Todd was going to sign one for $25,000 and that he (Wild) wanted Appel to sign one for $25,000. Appel said, “All right, Frank, I will do it,” and he signed a note in the amount stated, payable to the order of the bank. ’ A few days previous to this, Wild had talked to Appel and had asked for some financial help, but did not say in what amount. He said he might want Appel to sign a note, that he wanted some accommodation notes to use in the bank, and wanted them given to the bank. Wild did not tell Appel that there had been an examination of the bank or that the bank commissioner had required him to get more money into the bank, nor did he explain how he wanted to use the notes, or what for—simply that he wanted to use them in the bank. Appel did not know that the capital of the bank was impaired at the time, but testified that “when Mr. Wild told me he wanted to use *433 this note in the bank, my notion was he wanted to use it.” Wild testified that he might have said to both Appel and Todd that he desired their notes for the purpose of building up the undivided profits account of the bank.

Mr. Appel, who was in the insurance, real estate and loan business, and was a director in the Indiana National Bank, the Union Trust Company and the Railroadmen’s Building and Savings Association was a close business associate of Mr. Wild. He knew of the bond theft from the Wild bank but did not know the amount thereof. He was a director of the Majestic Building Company (owned largely by the Wild bank), and was an officer of “Gregory and Appel,” which had issued its notes, indorsed by Appel personally, to the extent of several million dollars, which had béen delivered to (and sold by), the bank.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
178 N.E. 685, 203 Ind. 427, 1931 Ind. LEXIS 62, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/iglehart-v-todd-ind-1931.