Kaufman v. Marquette Nat. Bank

289 F. 295, 1922 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1044
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Michigan
DecidedDecember 28, 1922
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 289 F. 295 (Kaufman v. Marquette Nat. Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Michigan primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kaufman v. Marquette Nat. Bank, 289 F. 295, 1922 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1044 (W.D. Mich. 1922).

Opinion

SESSIONS, District Judge.

The facts essential to the decision of this case, except as to property values, are not in dispute, and an ex-, tended-or detailed recital thereof would serve no good purpose A' brief summary of the salient features of the transaction involved in this controversy will suffice:

The charter of the Marquette National Bank expired at the close' of the 6th day of October, 1921. At that time its deposits amounted to upwards of $2,100,000. Its loans and bills discounted and other: investments were correspondingly large and of an unusually high grade. It was very prosperous, its net earnings amounting to up-' wards of $40,000 per annum. Its capital was $100,000, its surplus' $100,000 and its undivided earnings approximately $27,000; thus making the book value of its shares about $227 per share. The actual market value of such shares was approximately $300 per share. For more than a year before the expiration of the bank’s charter, the in- ‘ dividual defendants, who constituted its entire board of directors, acting in their official capacity as officers and directors of the bank, had been seeking to devise some plan or scheme whereby plaintiffs.’ and those represented by them might be eliminated as shareholders and,' at the same time, the business of the bank continued without interrup-: tion or loss. To this end, committees of their own number made trips! to Washington, Cleveland, Chicago, and other cities, partly, at least,'. at the expense of the bank, and there was also an extended correspon-! dence with bankers and bankers’ agents located in different places. ’ Two plans were suggested, discussed and considered; the one to re- . new and to extend the charter of the bank, possibly with a change of ' name, and the other to organize a new bank. The latter plan was finally selected and adopted early in August, 1921.

[296]*296During August and September and the first six days of October, this •plan was secretly, but actively and successfully, carried out and executed. The defendant Union National Bank was organized and incorporated, with a capital of $100,000 and a surplus of $100,000. All of the stock in the new bank was subscribed for and taken by the individual defendants, who became its,directors. For appearance sake, two of the individual defendants, who had not been directors of the old bank, became directors of the new. Formal meetings of the boards of directors of the old and new banks were held at the same time and place, and resolutions were adopted authorizing and directing the sale and transfer to the new bank of the business and all of the assets and property of the old bank, except a small amount of slow and doubtful bills and notes receivable. Written conveyances were made accordingly. No meetings of stockholders were called or held, and no notice of what was transpiring was given to plaintiffs or their sister, Mrs. Hudson. As to them, the entire transaction was conducted with the utmost secrecy.

The .consideration paid by the Union National Bank to the Marquette National Bank for the latter’s business, assets, and property was $75,000 for the bank building, fixtures, and real estate, $5,000 for bank furniture, the assumption by the Union National Bank of the liabilities of the Marquette National Bank to its depositors and other creditors, and a balance in cash. Tangible assets, other than the bank building, furniture, fixtures, and lot, were taken at their face value. Nothing was paid for the “good will” of the Marquette National Bank. Plaintiffs concede that full value was paid for the assets and property so sold and transferred, except as to two items—the bank building, together with the lot upon which it is located, and the “good will” appertaining and belonging to the business.

1. Value of Bank Building, Fixhires, and Lot.—Plaintiffs contend that, at the time of the transfer on the 6th day of October, 1921, the fair value of the bank building and lot was approximately $150,000. Defendants claim that the $75,000 paid therefor was all that the property was worth. Plaintiffs’ witnesses, except one called in rebuttal, based their estimates of value upon the cost of reproducing the building plus the value of the land; while defendants’ witnesses arrived at their valuations by capitalizing the net rental income upon a 6 per cent, basis. It is obvious that, in determining the value of the property, both of these theories must be considered, and neither can be adopted to the exclusion of the other. The building, in both its old and new parts, has been kept in good repair, and is constructed of such materials that little depreciation has occurred. It is thoroughly equipped for and adapted to its use as a banking office. The rental theory entirely ignores the value of that part of the lot fronting on Washington street, which is not covered by the building and can be used for other purposes. The location, while not as good as that diagonally across the streets, is, for banking purposes, one of the best in the city of Marquette. Defendants’ witnesses assumed that a fair rent for that part of the building occupied by the bank itself would be $300' per month, including heat and janitor service. It is certain that such [297]*297assumed rental is at least $100 per month too small. ^ This building-was constructed and designed for and is used as a banking house. Its value cannot be determined alone by the income which might be obtained from its use -for other commercial purposes.

Op the 6th day of October, 1921, before the Union National Bank took formal possession, one of the plaintiffs "made a written offer of $150,000 in cash for the property, coupled with an agreement to permit the Marquette National Bank to occupy the bank offices, rent free, during the period required for the' liquidation of its assets. This offer was rejected by defendants, for no other apparent reason than that its acceptance would have interfered with their plan to take the property for themselves. At the hearing of this case and during his cross-examination by defendants’ counsel, the same plaintiff offered to pay $100,000 for this property. The last offer still holds good. While these offers are not conclusive and controlling, because they may have been induced by motives having little or no relation to actual values, still they are entitled to consideration and weight in determining the price which defendants ought to have paid for the property. A careful review and examination of the evidence upon this subject compels the-conclusion that the bank building, fixtures, and lot, which were conveyed to the Union National Bank for the sum of $75,000, were fairly worth, at the time of such conveyance, at least the sum of $100,000.

2. Good Will.—However difficult it may be to define accurately and to 'determine with exactness what is included in the “good will” ordinarily incident to the sale and purchase of a business, in the situation and under the conditions presented by this record, it cannot be successfully denied that the “good will” of the business of the Marquette National Bank which was appropriated by the other defendants was of large value.

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Bluebook (online)
289 F. 295, 1922 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1044, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kaufman-v-marquette-nat-bank-miwd-1922.