Lake Harriet State Bank v. Venie

165 N.W. 225, 138 Minn. 339, 1917 Minn. LEXIS 923
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedNovember 23, 1917
DocketNo. 20,477
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 165 N.W. 225 (Lake Harriet State Bank v. Venie) 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
Lake Harriet State Bank v. Venie, 165 N.W. 225, 138 Minn. 339, 1917 Minn. LEXIS 923 (Mich. 1917).

Opinion

Taylor, C.

Defendants appeal from a judgment in favor of plaintiff. The findings of fact upon which the judgment is based cover 20 printed pages, and we shall not attempt to give a summary of them, but merely to outline the situation sufficiently to indicate the questions presented. The only exhibits returned to this court are those contained in a supplemental record printed by plaintiff, and consequently we must assume that the findings, so far as they are based upon the exhibits not returned, are sustained thereby. Beginning in January, 1913, defendant F. J. Yenie sought to interest various parties in the project of establishing a state bank in the vicinity of Lake Harriet in the city of Minneapolis, and continued his efforts until they resulted in the organization of plaintiff bank on May 13, 1914, with Yenie as its president. After he had induced several parties to join with him in the project and to agree to take stock in the proposed bank, an arrangement was made between them by which he purchased, as a site for the bank, a corner lot 128 feet in length by 58 feet in width with a dwelling house thereon, known as the Peck lot, for the sum of $6,500, of which $5,000 was secured [341]*341by a mortgage upon tbe land bearing interest at tbe rate of five and one-half per cent per annum, $960 was to be paid by issuing to the vendors stock of that value in the bank when organized, $400 was to be paid on the delivery of the deed, and $140 on execution of the contract for deed. The contract bore date February 37, 1913, and the deed •to Yenie was received April 3, 1913. In July, 1913, Yenie, on behalf of the bank and himself, made a contract by which he sold the rear or east 68 feet of the lot to the Tri-State Telephone Company, and by which the telephone company agreed to pay $3,410 therefor, and also agreed to remove the dwelling house then on the lot to another lot, and to pay a further sum of one-half the net amount realized from the sale of the dwelling house. This contract was carried out, and $1,500 was realized from the sale of the dwelling house, one-half of which, or $750, was paid to Yenie in September, 1914, as hereinafter stated. On August 3, 1913, Yenie purporting to act “for and on behalf of the Lake Harriet State Bank then organizing,” contracted for the erection of a bank building on the west 60 feet of the lot, the building to be completed by December 1, 1913. The building was constructed but was not completed until the following spring, and the sum of $191 was deducted from the contract price as damages for the delay. In December, 1913, Yenie conveyed the west 60 feet of the lot, including the bank building, to the Harriet Loan & Eealty Company, a corporation which he managed and controlled. On April 34, 1914, Yenie caused the Harriet Loan & Eealty Company to give a note secured by a mortgage upon the portion of the lot occupied by the bank building to the Minnesota Loan & Trust Company for $5,500, and satisfied the original purchase money mortgage of $5,000 above mentioned out of this loan and credited the remainder thereof to plaintiff bank. On May 9, 1914, the Harriet Loan & Eealty Company executed a note and mortgage to Yenie for $1,500, the mortgage covering all that part of the west 60 feet of the lot not actually occupied by the bank, building. Shortly after the bank was opened for business, Yenie, without indorsing it, placed this note in the bank and withdrew the amount of it from the bank funds. He also assigned the mortgage to the bank, and placed the assignment on record. Before the bank had opened for business, Yenie caused the Harriet Loan & Eealty Company to execute a deed, of date May 11, 1914, to [342]*342the hank for that part of the west 60 feet of the lot, and only that part thereof, actually occupied by the bank building, and placed this deed on record without the knowledge or consent of any of the other bank officials. In September, 1914, and while he was president of the bank, Venie rendered an account to the bank in which he charged the bank with the contract price of the Peck lot, with the contract price for the erection of the bank building, and with all other expenditures made by him on account of either the lot or the building, including the interest paid upon the mortgage given for the deferred part of the purchase price of the lot. In addition to the interest actually paid upon this mortgage, Venie charged the bank with the further sum of $255.06 as interest upon the purchase price of the lot, being the difference between the amount of interest actually paid by him and the interest upon $6,500, the entire purchase price of the lot, at the rate of 7 per centum per annum. Venie credited the bank with the $3,410 received from the telephone company and with various other items, but did not credit the bank with the $750 due from the telephone company as one-half the net proceeds from the sale of the dwelling house, nor with the $191, deducted from the contract price for erecting the bank building. This statement of account was the only thing ever presented by him to the bank in support of his claim to the sum of $7,500 which, without authority from the directors, he had credited to himself upon the books of the bank at the time it opened for business, and subsequently withdrew from its funds. \

The trial court held that the bank was the owner of the west 60 feet of the Peck lot, and directed a conveyance to the bank of all that part thereof not already conveyed to it. The court further held that the bank was entitled to recover from Venie the $1,500 which he had withdrawn from its funds for the note executed by the Harriet Loan & Eealtv Company, and directed that upon payment thereof the note, but not the mortgage securing it, be returned to him. The court further held that the bank was entitled to recover from Venie the $750 received by him from the proceeds of the sale of the dwelling house removed from the lot, ¡the $191 allowed as damages for failure to complete the bank building on time, and the $255.06 which he had charged as interest over and above the amount which he had paid as interest.

[343]*343In his answer and at the trial, Yenie took the position that he had purchased the Peck lot and erected the bank building on his own account and at his own expense; that all of the lot not included in the deed to the bank and all the profits derived from the deal with the telephone company belonged to him personally, and that he had sold the building and the ground upon which it stood to the bank for $13,000, of which $5,500 was represented by the mortgage upon the property and $7,500 by the credit to- him upon the books of the bank. His principal contention upon this appeal is that the arrangements and agreements between himself and the other prospective stockholders of the bank in respect to the selection and purchase of the Peck lot, in respect to the part thereof that should be sold, in respect to the deal with the telephone company, and in respect to the erection of the bank building, were not binding upon the bank after it was incorporated and organized, and consequently were not binding upon him; and that the evidence offered to prove these arrangements and agreements should have been excluded and can be given no effect. Conceding that these agreements would not be binding upon the bank unless ratified and confirmed by it after its incorporation, yet the evidence is ample to show that after its organization both the bank and Yenie acted upon the theory that these agreements were valid and binding and thereby assented to and ratified them.

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

Related

Sundberg v. Lampert Lumber Co.
390 N.W.2d 352 (Court of Appeals of Minnesota, 1986)
In Re Dissolution of E. C. Warner Co.
45 N.W.2d 388 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1950)
Kilgore v. Kilgore
19 So. 2d 305 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1944)
Diedrick v. Helm
14 N.W.2d 913 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1944)
Worth v. Worth
68 P.2d 881 (Wyoming Supreme Court, 1937)
General Motors Truck Co. v. Phillips
254 N.W. 580 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1934)
Veigel v. O'Toole
236 N.W. 710 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1931)
Wallace v. Wallace
279 P. 374 (Montana Supreme Court, 1929)
Burns v. Essling
203 N.W. 605 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1925)
Seitz v. Union Brass & Metal Manufacturing Co.
189 N.W. 586 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1922)
Venie v. Harriet State Bank of Minneapolis
178 N.W. 170 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1920)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
165 N.W. 225, 138 Minn. 339, 1917 Minn. LEXIS 923, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lake-harriet-state-bank-v-venie-minn-1917.