Kinney v. Channel State Bank

288 S.W. 590
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 29, 1926
DocketNo. 8869. [fn*]
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 288 S.W. 590 (Kinney v. Channel State Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kinney v. Channel State Bank, 288 S.W. 590 (Tex. Ct. App. 1926).

Opinion

PLEASANTS, C. J.

This proceeding was instituted in the court below by Mrs. T. G. Kinney, joined by her husband, T. G. Kinney, against the American State Bank, -the Channel State Bank, successor to the Central State Bank, Charles O. Austin, commissioner of banking for the state of Texas, and Byron Smith, liquidating agent for the commissioner of banking, to require Byron Smith, liquidating agent in charge of the affairs of the American State Bank to bring suit in behalf of said bank and its creditors to set aside an alleged unlawful preference by which the Central State Bank and its successor, the Channel State Bank, obtained $30,000 of the funds of the insolvent American State Bank, or, in the alternative, to authorize appellants to bring and prosecute such suit under the direction of the court and by an attorney appointed by the court.

The application or petition filed by appellants in the court below, after naming the defendants and their domicile or place of business, alleges, in substance, that on February 21, 1925, Charles O. Austin, banking commissioner, declared the American State' Bank insolvent and took charge of its assets and business for the purpose of liquidating the same; that the said commissioner subsequently filed a statement of the assets and liabilities of the bank, showing it to be wholly insolvent, and that it was insolvent many months prior to its being declared insolvent by the commissioner; that petitioner Mrs. Kinney was a depositor of said bank and had on deposit therein as a time deposit the sum of $2,000, upon which interest was payable semiannually at the rate of 4 per cent, per annum, and as such time depositor she was not protected from loss by the guaranty fund of the banking board of the state of Texas, and that petitioner and a large number of other depositors who are not secured by the guaranty fund of the state banking board have suffered serious injury and damage by reason of the acts of said Charles O. Austin, commissioner of banking, and his agents and employés; that S. D. Simpson was, on the dates hereinafter stated, the t president of the American State Bank and *591 of the Central Bank, and had intimate knowledge of the affairs of hoth, owning a majority of stock in each bank. This petition further alleges as follows:

“That the said R. J. James was a director and officer of each and likewise fully conversant with the affairs of both institutions. That on or about February 12th the said banking commission sent an examiner,-Swain, to make a periodic examination of said American State Bank and found the same hopelessly insolvent. Said examiner made drastic demands on the officers of said American State Bank to restore its solvency, which said examiner and officers knew could not be met, and that said bank would be ordered closed. That at that time and until the 20th day of February, 1025, the American State Bank had on deposit and was carrying as a deposit $30,000 of the funds of the Central State Bank, a banking corporation, doing business at Magnolia Park in the county of Harris and state of Texas; that said deposit was one not guaranteed by the guaranty fund of the banking board of thq state of Texas, but was a time deposit similar to and of like character as the deposit of this petitioner.
“That said Charles O. Austin and his servants, agents, and employés, being bank examiners of the said commissioner of banking, each, every, and all well knew that said American State Bank was insolvent and was wholly unable to pay its depositors in full, and they and each of them likewise knew that the said Central State Bank of Magnolia Park was organized to do business under and by virtue of the laws of the state of Texas, and that its depositors, whose accounts were subject to check, and which were not interest-bearing obligations, and who were not municipal corporations or corporations whose deposits were not guaranteed, were subject to be paid out of the guaranty fund of the banking board of the state of Texas, and that, for the purpose of procuring a preference for the said Central State' Bank and said S. D. Simpson and R. J. James as officers thereof, to the detriment and injury of your petitioner and other depositors likewise situated, and while said American State Bank was insolvent and un-. der the domination, control, and direction of said bank examiner for said banking commissioner, Charles O. Austin, the said banking commissioner, through his said examiner and said S. 13. Simpson and R. J. James, just before closing said bank and in contemplation thereof, compelled, forced, and required the American State Bank to deliver to the said Central State Bank in discharge of said interest-bearing deposit, $25,000 in Liberty bonds of the United States of America, together with sufficient cash to discharge said $30,000 time deposit, and thereby took from the assets of the said American State Bank cash and securities of cash value in excess of $30,000, and thereby depleted and depreciated the assets subject to distribution among the depositors of the character of' this petitioner to the extent of said $30,000, and that such act and conduct on the part of said commissioner was willful, wrongful, and was an effort and was intended to extend to said Central State Bank, a banking corporation, a preference to the extent of its debt exceeding the sum of $30,000, and thereby made said bank examiner and his bondsmen responsible for any damage to the extent of their bond, as well as the banking commissioner responsible to those injured for such wrongful act to the extent of the liability of his bond.
“That demand has heretofore been made upon said banking commissioner and said Central State Bank by the city of Harrisburg, who is a creditor of like character as your petitioner, that suit be filed and said preference be set aside, but that said banking commissioner and his liquidating agent have failed and refused to bring such suit or to require said Central State Bank to refund said money to said insolvent corporation.
“That -on the 7th day of April, 1925, the said commissioner of banking took charge of the Central State Bank, declaring the same to be insolvent, and on the same day, by petition filed in this honorable court, requested the permission and authority of this court to convey its assets to the Channel State Bank, a corporation chartered fQr thd purpose of taking over the .assets and assuming the liabilities of the said Central State Bank. That the said Channel State Bank was thereafter on the same day, by order of this court, permitted to purchase said assets and said commissioner entered into a. contract in writing, a copy of which is on file in cause No. -, styled Ex parte Central State Bank,1 pending in this court. That by the terms of said contract with the said banking commissioner of the state of Texas, the said Channel State Bank pssumed all the liabilities and contracted and agreed to pay all of the liabilities of the said Central State Bank.

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Bluebook (online)
288 S.W. 590, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kinney-v-channel-state-bank-texapp-1926.