Lamb v. Laughlin

25 W. Va. 300, 1884 W. Va. LEXIS 137
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 6, 1884
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 25 W. Va. 300 (Lamb v. Laughlin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lamb v. Laughlin, 25 W. Va. 300, 1884 W. Va. LEXIS 137 (W. Va. 1884).

Opinion

Johnson, President :

On February 23,1876, the plaintiff instituted this suit in the circuit court of Ohio county. The summons issued and was served on the defendant on said February 23, 1876. At March rules the bill was filed, which is substantially the same as thatfiled in Lamb, trustee v. Cecil, supra. The answer filed by Laughlin is substantially the same as that filed by Cecil in that cause, except that Laughlin did not claim in his answer, that any dividends had been paid to him by said trustee, and therefore did not raise the defence, raised in the two foregoing cases, on account of dividends having been paid by said trustee. The bill was demurred to as in the other two cases and was overruled; and the plaintiff tendered an amended bill of the same character, as was tendered in each of the foregoing cases, the filing of which was refused by the court. For reasons stated in the opinion in the two foregoing cases the court did not err in refusing to permit the said amended bill to be filed. The original bill charged, that the defendant Laughlin knowing the said institution to be insolvent availed himself of his superior knowledge as director and withdrew by the check of Laughlin Bros. & Co., of which firm he ivas a member, all of the deposits of said firm amounting to $3,783.66, when under the circumstances said fund constituted a trust-fund for the creditors of said institution and ought to have been permitted to remain in said bank for the creditors generally; and that said Laughlin being a director and a trustee for the creditors improperly withdrew said deposit and should be compelled to pay the same to the plaintifi, the trustee for said institution.

[302]*302Tlie cause was heard on the pleadings and proofs on May 31, 1883; and a decree was rendered against said Laughlin for the full amount of said deposits so withdrawn and interest less the amount, which he w'ould be entitled to receive as dividends from said fund. The amount which the decree required him to pay to the said trustee was $5,692.86 with interest thereon from April 23, 1883.

From this decree Laughlin appealed.

This case greatly differs from the two former cases in this, , thatLaughlin received the amount of his checkin currency and not in the discounted bills and notes, the property of the bank. But the peculiar circumstances, under which the check was cashed, are not fully stated in the bill. It is not there intimated, that the check was by an arrangement with the acting treasurer or cashier hold up for a day to enable him to have it paid out of the funds of innocent depositors, who knew not the condition of the bank. Joseph Pauli tells the whole story, although it implicates himself; and he evidently did not realize at the time that what he did was wrong. Mr. Pauli says:

“ Mr. Alexander Laughlin came into the bank a day before the money was drawn, and either presented me a check or a memorandum of the amount which he wished to draw, I don’t remember which ; and I told him I hadn’t that amount of money in the bank; and he told me he wished I would get it for him if I could, and I told him I would. He asked me, if I wouldn’t bring it down to the store and give it to Sam Laughlin in the morning. I got the money and went down to the store the next morning. Neither of them were in; it was early in the morning. I brought the money back to the bank again, and put it in a drawer in a desk, and about nine o’clock, I know it was just about the time the bank opened, to the best of my recollection Alex. Laughlin came in, and I handed him the money, although I am not positive whether it was Alex, or Samuel Laughlin. My recollection is it was Alex.”

Question — “Was that all the conversation you had with him about the money or drawing it out of the institution the day before it was drawn ?”

Answer — “ Well, there was a conversation the day before [303]*303it was drawn that impressed itself upon my mind, but I prefer not to state it.”

Question — “A sense of duty compels me to ask you to state that conversation fully? ”

Answer — “ Mr. Laughlin either asked me, or I told him, that none of the directors had drawn their money at that time; he 'either asked me whether any of them had, or I told him none of them had, I don’t recollect which it was, and he remarked that he and Sam were poor boys, and that they could not afford to lose it, if the others could. That is about all of it, I believe.”

The witness says he paid the money and it was drawn out on Nebruai’y 22, 1871. The witness further states, that the check so paid overdrew Laughlin Bros. & Co’s, account on that day by $570.85. After the failure errors were discovered in balancing the books of $29.60, which would reduce the overdraft to $541.25.

Does the bill show the plaintiff is entitled to relief? What is the relation of a director of an insolvent banking corporation to the creditors? When directors are depositors and know the bank is hopelessly insolvent, may they make a rush for their deposits and delay the closing of the doors of the bank, until they have made themselves safe ?

These are interesting and delicate questions. In answering them we must, if possible, not only do justice to the creditors of such institutions but at the same time avoid injuriously affecting the commercial interests of the country. And we must so lay down the law, if we can, that it can be understood, and its application not depend upon the arbitrary discretion of the judge, who is called upon to administer it. I propose to review a namber of the most pertinent authorities cited by the learned counsel in their elaborate arguments filed.

The counsel for appellant relied upon the following among a large number of authorities cited by him: Poole, Jackson & Whyte’s Case, 9 Ch. Dec. 322 (S. C. 26 Eng. R. 142); Dana v. Bank of the United, States, 5 W. & S. 147; Catlin v. Eagle Bank, 6 Conn. 233; Pondville Co. v. Clark, 25 Conn. 97; Smith v. SIceary, 47 Conn. 47; Whitwell v. Warner, 20 Vt. 425; Stratton v. Allen, 1 C. E. Green 232; Railroad Co. v. [304]*304Clanghorn, 1 Speers 562; Sargent v. Webster, 13 Met. 497; Buell v. Buckingham & Co., 16 Ia. 291; Burr v. McDonald, 3 Gratt. 216; Merrick v. Coal Co., 61 Ill. 472; Addison v. Lewis, 75 Va. 720; Planter’s Bank v. Whittle, 8 Va. L. J. 597, decided April, 1884.

In Poole, Jackson & Whyte’s Case, it appears that three directors oí a private manufacturing company, who had not paid or been called upon to pay anything on their shares, made themselves liable on their personal guarantee for money advanced to the company by a bank. The company being in difficulties, and the bank having recovered j udgment against the guarantors, a resolution was passed by the board of directors, that in order to reduce the debt due to the bank the directors be recommended to pay in advance the amount of their shares. The three directors subsequently paid a sum equal to the amount of their shares,'which was carried to the credit of the company at the bank. .Two days afterwards a petition was presented, on which an order of winding up was made. It was held (reversing the decision of Bacon V.

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Bluebook (online)
25 W. Va. 300, 1884 W. Va. LEXIS 137, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lamb-v-laughlin-wva-1884.