Kinnarney v. Corcoran

149 S.W.2d 32, 285 Ky. 702, 1941 Ky. LEXIS 460
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedMarch 14, 1941
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 149 S.W.2d 32 (Kinnarney v. Corcoran) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kinnarney v. Corcoran, 149 S.W.2d 32, 285 Ky. 702, 1941 Ky. LEXIS 460 (Ky. 1941).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Thomas

Affirming.

Appellant and plaintiff below, James W. Kinnarney, by this action filed by Mm in the Jefferson circuit court against appellees and defendants below, sought to recover against all of the defendants — upon certain alleged grounds — the sum of $10,000, and the cancellation of a contract that had been executed by him on November 7, 1938. On separately alleged facts he sought recovery of the same sum against only a part of defendants based upon additional grounds applicable only to them. After filing his original petition, to which the court sustained a demurrer, plaintiff filed a substitute reformed and amended petition which he later further amended and to which the court sustained defendants’ demurrer and dismissed plaintiff’s petition upon his declining to plead further. The correctness of the court’s action in sustaining the demurrer to plaintiff’s petition, as so amended and reformed in Ms efforts to get into and stay in .court, is the sole question to be determined on this appeal. In disposing of it, the petition and its two amendments will be referred to as a single pleading under the designation of “petition.”

Plaintiff alleged therein that certain named defendants were, on the dates of the transactions of which he complains, directors of the Peoples Bank of Louisville, Kentucky, which closed its doors and was taken possession of on May 20, 1939, by Hiram Wilhoit, Director of *705 Banking of the State of Kentucky, and at the time of the filing of this action on November 6, 1939, its affairs were being liquidated by that officer through his proper local deputy. Plaintiff alleged in his petition that on November 1, 1938, he, as owner of more stock in the bank than any other stock holder, then had in his possession a certificate of deposit with the bank to the amount of $30,000, and that on that day he cashed a part of his certificates to the amount of $25,250, and drew out of the bank the latter amount; but before doing so he inquired of one of the defendants, E. L. Eoss, who was a director and cashier of the bank, “whether or not the withdrawal of said sum would impair the condition of said bank,” and that Eoss assured him that it would not. It is then alleged that on the next day, November 2, he surrendered and cashed the remaining portion of his certificates and on the same day made a deposit in the bank of $4,750, which, added to the amount he then had in the bank, made his deposit $5,086.47; that at the time he deposited the $4,750 he thought the bank was solvent, although at that time, as he avers, the affairs of the bank were being examined by a State Bank Examiner, who had progressed with his examination far enough to show that its financial condition, from a legal standpoint at least, was considerably impaired, and that unless some action was taken to rejuvenate and restore such impairment the banking department of the state would be compelled to take it in charge and wind up its affairs under our statutory procedure provided for that purpose. Plaintiff then alleges that on November 6, 1938, the officials and directors of the bank.in some sort of conference — and when plaintiff was present- — -held a meeting and discussed the affairs of the bank and concluded to make a trip to Frankfort on the next day (November 7th) for the purpose of consulting with an attorney and developing some plan to prevent the affairs of the bank from being taken into custody and its affairs wound up under the law, and that he was invited to and did attend that meeting in Frankfort;' that the parties after arriving in Frankfort brought into the consultation their attorney — whose name is never given — and that the final conclusion of the meeting was that stockholders and others financially interested in the bank’s welfare and who were desirous of its continuing to operate should put money into it to be credited to its “undivided profits account;” that to *706 secure the re-payment of the sums so deposited to the ones making them, the future earnings of the bank as so restored would be devoted to that purpose, and the directors of the bank, upon notice to them by such depositors, would make assessments on the stockholders to the extent that might be necessary to pay those making such deposits, and it was agreed that a contract to that effect should be drawn and executed, which was done. It described triplicate parties — the bank being “party of the first part,” the directors “parties of the second part,” and those who made such deposits “parties of the third part.” Its terms were in accord with our above condensed recitation of them.

A number of stockholders — some of whom were, perhaps, directors and among whom was plaintiff— were specially designated as parties of the third part and it was recited the amount of money that each of them proposed to deposit as transfusion of financial blood for the recovery of the bank as the threatened expiring patient. Plaintiff agreed to deposit $10,000 for that purpose, while others agreed to deposit different sums, and it was stipulated that any others who desired to become parties of the third part upon the terms set out in the contract might do so.

Plaintiff sought by his petition to recover the $10,000 deposited by him from the deputy banking commissioner in charge of the bank, and against certain specially named directors and defendants, upon the ground that he was misled by them and through their “fraud and threats ’ ’ he was induced to sign the contract and to make his deposit. He then charged, as an additional reason why he should recover, that the unnamed attorney stated to him that the Court of Appeals had decided that in the circumstances he would be compelled to return to the bank the $25,250 he had withdrawn from it a few days before making the contract, which statement he alleged was false and fraudulent, and made by the attorney to induce him, plaintiff, to enter into the contract as party of the third part. The additional allegation was also made against one of the defendants (D. Lampton) that he, Lampton, stated to plaintiff, in order to induce him to sign the contract and make the deposit which he agreed to and did do, “that he (Lamp-ton) would personally guarantee that this plaintiff would get his money back, and would not lose a cent.” *707 He then concludes, in substance, that by such various acts of “covin and spleen” he was induced to sign the agreement and to deposit his $10,000 in the bank for the purposes stated which he would not have done had he known the condition of the bank and had the facts been truly represented to him instead of fraudulently concealed from him. He, therefore, prayed that he recover judgment against defendants upon the grounds stated against each of them, as well as against the deputy banking commissioner in charge, for the amount of his deposit of $10,000, and that his contract be cancelled so as to relieve him of the payment of an additional $10,000 agreed to be paid by him in the contract within sixty days if requested to do- so, but which request was never made.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
149 S.W.2d 32, 285 Ky. 702, 1941 Ky. LEXIS 460, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kinnarney-v-corcoran-kyctapphigh-1941.