Knox v. First Security Bank of Utah, N.A.

206 F.2d 823, 1953 U.S. App. LEXIS 2802
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedAugust 5, 1953
Docket4587
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 206 F.2d 823 (Knox v. First Security Bank of Utah, N.A.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the First Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Knox v. First Security Bank of Utah, N.A., 206 F.2d 823, 1953 U.S. App. LEXIS 2802 (1st Cir. 1953).

Opinion

MURRAH, Circuit Judge.

When this case was here in 196 F.2d 112, Knox v. First Security Bank, we held the complaint with the attached 1909 contract and 1924 letter legally sufficient to show that by the 1924 letter A. C. Milner accepted and adopted the 1909 contract as president and on behalf of the Milner Corporation; and that his actual authority to do so was an issue for determination on the merits. As against the contention that the original contract was ultra vires for lack of consideration to the corporation, we thought the allegations to the effect that Knox suffered a detriment and the corporation derived a benefit in furtherance of its pecuniary interest not open to attack on a motion to dismiss. In short, we thought the complaint, liberally construed, showed an acceptance and adoption by A. C. Milner in 1924 on behalf of the corporation, and that the contract was not fatally defective on its face for failure of consideration. We accordingly reversed and remanded that part of the court’s judgment which dismissed the asserted cause of action against the corporation.

After remand the corporation answered, specifically denying the authority of Milner *824 to bind it to either the original contract or the subsequent letter of adoption, or that it ever consented, ratified or approved such instrument. It further specifically denied that the conveyance of the property to the corporation was caused in any manner by the original contract or that the corporation ever received any consideration from Knox for such conveyance.

On the trial of the issues thus joined it developed that subsequent to the letter of November 4, 1924, and on November 4, 1925, George Knox wrote to A. C. Milner calling attention to the original agreement and urging payment. On the following November 7, A. C. Milner replied acknowledging the obligation but informing Knox that the “net profit stage” contemplated by the contract “has not been reached.” At the time both of the letters were written, A. C. Milner was president and director of the Milner Corporation and J. S. Milner was its secretary and director. The 1924 letter came to the attention of J. S. Milner soon after it was written but he took no action to repudiate it o.n behalf of the corporation. At this time the Milner brothers were the owners of a majority of the stock of the Milner Corporation.

A receiver was appointed for the, Milner Corporation in 1941. No claim was filed by the plaintiffs in the receivership proceedings and no direct contact was made with the corporation or the Milners by any of the Knox family until the death of A. C. Milner in 1950 when further inquiry resulted in this litigation.

The trial court made extensive findings based primarily upon documentary evidence from which it concluded that the 1924 and 1925 Milner letters were unauthorized by the board of directors; were not intended for the benefit of the Milner Corporation and were entirely without consideration to it; that neither of the letters bound the corporation to pay the $25,000.00 or any other sum to the plaintiffs, or any of them. The court further concluded alternatively that even if the Milner letters, or either of them, constituted an acknowledgment binding upon the Milner Corporation, then the cause of action upon the obligation arose on August 31, 1929, when the corporation was held to have realized its first “net profits”, and the cause of action, if any, is therefore barred by the statute of limitations. The court went on to hold that if the plaintiffs had any claim against the Milner Corporation arising out of the obligation of the contract or otherwise, it is barred for failure of the plaintiffs to file a claim against the receiver or the Milner Corporation during receivership; that the receiver was discharged and the assets of the receivership estate returned to the Milner Corporation free of any claim of the plaintiffs. And the court was also of the opinion that by failure and neglect to assert their claim’ against the corporation from 1925 to 1950 the plaintiffs were guilty of laches barring recovery on their claim now asserted.

On appeal it is conceded that Á. C. Milner had no actual authority to bind the corporation to the 1909 contract by his 1924 letter, but it is argued that the 1909 contract was intended for the benefit of the Milner Corporation and that it received consideration therefor. And it is suggested that the issue of consideration was resolved in favor of the plaintiffs on the former appeal. Indulging in factual inferences fairly deducible from the pleadings, we observed that if the 1909 contracts between A. C. Milner and Knox was related to the release of the bank’s claim against the Stanley B. Milner estate and the corporation’s acquisition of its property in the sense that Knox suffered’a detriment and the corporation received a benefit or an advantage thereby, the contract was not barren of consideration even though no consideration passed directly from Knox to the corporation. But our indulgence in factual hypothesis fairly deducible from a liberal interpretation of the pleadings does not foreclose inquiry into the very issue the determination of which the case was remanded for trial.

On the trial of the case it developed that before releasing its claims against the Stanley B. Milner estate, Frank Knox, acting for the National Bank of the Republic, exacted a definite agreement from Truth A. Milner, the sole beneficiary and executrix *825 of the estate, to the effect that she would cause the Milner Corporation to be organized and all of the assets of the Milner Estate transferred to it, and would immediately execute promissory notes to the bank, payable six months from their respective dates with interest at 8% per annum; and in the event of the failure to do so, Truth A. Milner agreed to be personally liable for the amounts owing the bank by the estate. And on the same date the National Bank of the Republic by Frank Knox, its president, procured an agreement from Truth A. Milner and her three sons, A. C. (also known as Archibald), Clarence, and J. S. (also known as Jay), to the effect that in consideration of the release by the bank of its claims agrainst the Stanley B. Milner estate the Milners, and each of them, bound themselves to sign any and all of the promissory notes from the Milner Corporation to the bank, cither as sureties or guarantors at the bank’s sole option.

The controversial Knox-Milner agreement was executed on the same date (March 16, 1909), and appellants argue that it was part and parcel of the whole transaction and is supported by the same consideration to the corporation, namely the release of the claims by the bank and the acquisition of the property of the estate by the corporation. The asserted theory is that A. C. Milner’s contractual obligations to Knox obligated him to cause the corporation to he formed and the assets of his father’s estate to he transferred to it. To that end he participated in the organization of the corporation as an incorporator and director and pledged his personal credit to the hank for the benefit of the corporation to enable the estate to be closed and the property to be transferred to the corporation; and that the corporation received the benefit of Milner’s performance of his contractual obligations to Knox as a sort of third party beneficiary.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Tool Box, Inc. v. Ogden City Corp.
419 F.3d 1084 (Tenth Circuit, 2005)
Bengar v. Clark Equipment Co.
506 N.E.2d 147 (Massachusetts Appeals Court, 1987)
Cooper v. Shumway
780 F.2d 27 (Tenth Circuit, 1985)
E. F. Corp. v. Smith
496 F.2d 826 (Tenth Circuit, 1974)
Commonwealth v. Superior Court of Puerto Rico
96 P.R. 822 (Supreme Court of Puerto Rico, 1969)
Estado Libre Asociado v. Tribunal Superior
96 P.R. Dec. 843 (Supreme Court of Puerto Rico, 1969)
Bates v. Cottonwood Cove Corporation
441 P.2d 622 (Nevada Supreme Court, 1968)
United States Fidelity & Guaranty Co. v. Perkins
388 F.2d 771 (Tenth Circuit, 1968)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
206 F.2d 823, 1953 U.S. App. LEXIS 2802, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/knox-v-first-security-bank-of-utah-na-ca1-1953.