Kahmann v. Moberly

77 S.W.2d 858, 229 Mo. App. 346, 1935 Mo. App. LEXIS 149
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 7, 1935
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 77 S.W.2d 858 (Kahmann v. Moberly) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kahmann v. Moberly, 77 S.W.2d 858, 229 Mo. App. 346, 1935 Mo. App. LEXIS 149 (Mo. Ct. App. 1935).

Opinions

TRIMBLE, J.

The question litigated herein is whether plaintiffs as the holders of a time certificate of deposit in the defendant bank for $700. (which matured on January 9, 1933), and one year’s interest at four per cent, are entitled to a preference thereon, amounting to $728 on February 1, 1933, when they demanded, on that date, payment thereof, which was refused?

After trial, the court on the third day of February, 1934, denied plaintiffs’ claim for preference and ordered it classified as a general claim to be paid proratably with the common claims allowed. Whereupon, plaintiffs duly appealed.

The record discloses that when said time certificate of deposit was due, and between January 9 and February 1, 1933, plaintiffs presented said certificate to the bank, and demanded payment thereof which was refused.

Over the objections and exceptions of plaintiff, evidence was introduced showing that on November 21, 1932, the board of directors of said bank adopted a resolution that “a limit of ten dollars per day be placed on all withdrawals of deposits beginning Tuesday morning, November 22, 1932, this action being deemed advisable in order to protect the funds of this institution for the benefit of all depositors,” and after that date the bank put a limit of $10 a day on each account, that is to say, the bank refused to pay any check over $10.

It further was shown in evidence that on January 20, 1933, the cash on hand in the bank was $5447.41 and the “reserve” was $9,-612.50; that on January 27, 1933, the cash was $5443.81 and the reserve $7275.47; on January 28th, the cash was $3286.86 reserve $7563.19; and on February 6th, cash was $15.15 and the reserve was $11,582.66. On redirect examination this witness, the cashier or assistant cashier, said the amount of cash on hand January 7th was $4,041.07 and reserve was $6588.75.

*348 Prior to, and during the period of January, 1933, and continuing up until February 6, 1933, the bank was open for business, receiving deposits and paying checks, which, however, after November 22nd, were limited to those under $10 as heretofore stated, but refusing to pay any cheeks in excess of that sum. The officers and employees were paid their salaries, or at least a part thereof, and the bank officials were in sole charge of: the bank.

Late in the afternoon of Saturday, February 4, 1933, the board of directors of said bank adopted a resolution authorizing its president to notify the Commissioner of Finance to send his examiner to take charge of the bank and it was thereby ordered that the bank be turned over to said Commissioner of Finance, and on Monday morning, February 6, 1933, the bank was, as found by the court, placed in the hands of the Commissioner of Finance of the State of Missouri.

The trial court filed a written finding of facts, which among other things, stated that the court found:

That the bank on November 22nd and 23rd accepted deposits “but refused to permit the withdrawal from any account of a sum in excess of $10;” that a number of checks were refused which were presented for payment on November 22nd or 23rd; and that a copy of the resolution of the board of November 21st placing a limit of $10 on checks, was affixed to cheeks so refused, and a copy of said resolution was posted conspicuously in said bank;

That on November 24th an entry, signed by H. P. Faris and G-. C. Lingle (president and cashier, respectively), was made on the minute book of said bank to the effect that they join the other members of the board “in passing a resolution, calling for and declaring a moratorium thirty dajrs, or failing to get the city council of Clinton, Missouri, to order said moratorium, to vote to close the doors of said trust company, and turn it over to- the honorable Commissioner of Finance.”

The trial court also found that on November 24th, the board, at a called meeting at which all members were present, adopted a resolution requesting “the mayor and city council of Clinton, Missouri, to declare a thirty day holiday or moratorium on banking business in Clinton, Missouri. In case it is necessary to ask for any extension of said moratorium authority, authority is hereby given to anj^ officer of the bank to ask for same.”

That “from November 22, 1932, to February 6, 1933, being the date on which it appears from the evidence the said bank was placed in the hands of the Commissioner of Finance of the State of Missouri, the said bank did not pay its demands in the due course of business and -refused to pay checks drawn upon demand deposits in the bank and failed to function as a bank in the proper and ordinary rule and methods of meeting its demands.”

*349 The court thereupon found and declared the law to be that:

“The failure and refusal of the officials of the Brinkerhoff-Faris Trust & Saving Company to pay all their demands on November 22, 1932, together with the admission of record by them that action was taken to protect the funds of the institution for the benefit of all the depositors was an act of insolvency under the construction of the Supreme Court of the United States in the case of Godfrey v. Terry, 97 U. S. 179.”
‘ ‘ The bank was insolvent by its own act, and that it is unnecessary under the law for it to perform the administrative act in turning its assets over to the Commissioner of Finance to fix the date of insolvency, but it is a question of when the bank through its officials became acquainted with the fact that it could no longer meet its demands in the usual course, and when the directors by resolution refused to meet the demands of the depositors, the bank became insolvent, and the depositors’ rights were fixed. If the condition of the bank did not warrant its staying open and paying all of its demands, then it was as a bank insolvent.
“The presentation of checks or demands made by depositors after November 22, 1932, were unnecessary, and that under the law all of the money on deposit in the bank subject to check became due without demand when the bank became insolvent. The stoppage of payment dispensed with the necessity of a demand and all deposits became due and payable forthwith. A demand made by a depositor against the institution was fruitlessly made after November 22, 1932.
“From and after November 22, 1932, the funds belonging to depositors in said bank became and were in effect trust funds in the hands of the officials and directors to be held intact for the benefit of all of the creditors in which they were entitled to share proratably. No cheeks presented after the public declaration by officials of the bank that checks would not be paid, or presented after officials had recognized in their records the inability of the bank to further meet its demands can be considered as creating preferences.”

The record discloses that after the bank, on February 6, 1933, closed its doors and went into the hands of the Commissioner, plaintiffs, in due time, presented their claim to the said Commissioner but it was allowed merely as a common claim. Thereafter, within the time required, plaintiffs filed their petition in the circuit court praying that theirs be classified as a preferred claim.

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Bluebook (online)
77 S.W.2d 858, 229 Mo. App. 346, 1935 Mo. App. LEXIS 149, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kahmann-v-moberly-moctapp-1935.