Klein v. Funk

84 N.W. 460, 82 Minn. 3, 1900 Minn. LEXIS 694
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedDecember 14, 1900
DocketNos. 12,361—(123)
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 84 N.W. 460 (Klein v. Funk) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Klein v. Funk, 84 N.W. 460, 82 Minn. 3, 1900 Minn. LEXIS 694 (Mich. 1900).

Opinion

START, C. J.

This is an action upon a $3,000 promissory note dated June 30, 1899, payable six months after date, to the order of the Germania Bank, and executed by the defendant. The complaint alleged that before the maturity of the note it was duly indorsed, transferred, and delivered to the plaintiffs for a valuable consideration. The answer denied that the note was ever indorsed or delivered to the plaintiffs, or owned by them, and - alleged that the defendant was induced to execute the note by reason of certain false and fraudulent representations made to her on behalf of the bank. The reply put in issue the new matter alleged in the answer.

When the plaintiffs rested, the defendant moved the court to dismiss the action upon the ground that plaintiffs’ only remedy was in equity, and not at law; and that the plaintiffs were not the owners of the note, and it was never legally transferred to them. The trial court denied the motion, and the defendant excepted to the ruling. The defendant then offered evidence tending to prove the allegations of the answer, and rested. Subsequently, during the progress of the trial, she moved the court for permission to reopen her defense and introduce further evidence. Thereupon counsel for plaintiffs opposed the motion, and moved the court for permission to amend the reply to conform to the evidence already before the court, and suggested that he would present a formal draft of the proposed amendment. The court granted the defendant’s motion, and stated that a liberal view would be taken as to the plaintiffs’ motion when the proposed reply was presented. The defendant then called other witnesses in her behalf, and introduced further evidence tending [5]*5to prove the allegations of her answer, and then again rested her case. The plaintiffs then presented the proposed amended reply, which the trial court allowed, and the defendant excepted. The plaintiffs then offered further evidence tending to prove the allegations of the amended reply, and both parties rested. Whereupon the court, at the request of the plaintiffs, the defendant excepting, ordered a verdict for the plaintiffs for the amount of the note.

The defendant then caused a bill of exceptions to be settled and signed, which contains, as certified by the trial judge, all the evidence received on the trial up to the time when plaintiffs rested their case in chief, and the defendant moved to dismiss the action, but none of the evidence thereafter received. The defendant moved the court upon four separate grounds for a new trial, and appealed from an order denying the motion.

The defendant urges that the trial court erred in denying her motion to dismiss the action when the plaintiffs rested their case in chief, for the reason that the evidence did not show that the plaintiffs were the owners of the note. The record contains all of the evidence before the court at the time the motion was made and denied, and the ruling excepted to, and none other. But we cannot infer on this appeal that any other evidence was introduced to obviate the exception. G. S. 1894, § 5399. We have examined the evidence, and reached the conclusion that it conclusively shows as a matter of law that the legal title to the note was in the- plaintiffs, and that as against the defendant they had the legal right to prosecute the action in their own names. The question is whether they had the legal title to the note, and not necessarily whether, as against the bank or its creditors, they were entitled to retain the proceeds of the note for their own benefit or otherwise.

The uncontradicted evidence establishes these facts: The payee of the note, the Germania Bank, desiring to receive by way of deposits money belonging to the city of St. Paul, executed a depositary's bond in the sum of $100,000 to the city, as required by law, and procured the plaintiffs, with others, to sign the bond as sureties upon an agreement that the bank should indemnify and secure them for so doing. Thereupon the president and cashier of the bank were authorized by its board of directors, of which the plaintiffs [6]*6were members, to transfer and deliver to the plaintiffs such bills receivable of the bank, not exceeding $25,000, as might be agreed upon as security to protect and indemnify them against liability on the bond; and, further, that such bills and security be transferred on such terms and conditions as the president and cashier might deem advisable. Pursuant to such authority, the bank, by its president and cashier, entered into a written agreement with the plaintiffs, whereby a note of $4,000, executed by the defendant to the bank, and of which the note in suit was a renewal, with other bills receivable, was transferred and delivered to the plaintiffs. It was expressly stipulated in this agreement that the plaintiffs should hold and collect the bills receivable, and apply the proceeds to the payment of any sum they might be required to pay on account of the bond signed by them, and, when fully released from liability on account thereof, they were required to transfer to the bank such bills receivable, or any proceeds thereof which they might then hold under the agreement.

The bank failed on July 17, 1899, and a receiver was appointed for it, who has ever since acted as such. When the bank failed, the note in question was in the actual possession of the plaintiffs’ agent, and was produced by them on the trial of this action, but it was not indorsed by the payee bank. There was due to the city of St. Paul on the bond, when a receiver was appointed for the bank, the sum of $21,736.13, which had been reduced, at the time of the trial of this action, by payments made thereon by the plaintiffs from the proceeds of bills receivable so transferred and delivered to them, to the sum of $8,986.13. This balance had not been paid at the time of the trial.

The defendant assigns as error the rulings of the trial court in the admission of the evidence by which the facts we have stated were established, and also as to the sufficiency of the facts to support .the conclusions that the legal title to the note was in the plaintiffs. It is urged that proof of the action of the board of directors authorizing the officers of the bank to transfer the bills receivable and the agreement executing the authority was incompetent, because such facts were not alleged in the complaint. The complaint alleged the ultimate fact that the note was indorsed, [7]*7transferred, and delivered to the plaintiffs. It would have been vicious pleading to have set out the evidence by which the transfer of the note was to be established. The evidence objected to was for the purpose of proving the transfer of the note to the plaintiffs, and was competent, although not set out in the complaint. There were some of the items .of the evidence which were incompetent, and it was technical error for the court to receive them; but they were immaterial, and the error harmless, for there was other ample, competent, material, and undisputed evidence to establish the facts.

But it is the contention of the defendant that the action of the board of directors and the agreement executed by the president and cashier thereof to the plaintiffs were void because the latter were directors of the bank, and practically dealing with themselves. The directors-of a corporation sustain a fiduciary relation to it, and they are inhibited from purchasing its property for their own benefit. If they do so to the injury of the corporation or its creditors, the transaction is voidable, and equity will set it aside at the suit of the parties injured. Janney v. Minneapolis Exposition, 79 Minn. 488, 82 N. W.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
84 N.W. 460, 82 Minn. 3, 1900 Minn. LEXIS 694, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/klein-v-funk-minn-1900.