Lawhead v. Lazzelle

170 S.E. 172, 113 W. Va. 896, 1933 W. Va. LEXIS 269
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedMay 16, 1933
DocketCC 479
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 170 S.E. 172 (Lawhead v. Lazzelle) 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
Lawhead v. Lazzelle, 170 S.E. 172, 113 W. Va. 896, 1933 W. Va. LEXIS 269 (W. Va. 1933).

Opinion

KeNNA, Judge:

C. E. Lawhead, as receiver designated by the banking commissioner for Union Bank & Trust Company, exhibited a bill of complaint in the circuit court of Monongalia County against Luther Lazzelle, in which it was alleged that the bank on September 4, 1931, was found bjr the banking commissioner to be insolvent and plaintiff named on that day as its receiver *897 and that on that day he qualified; that on the same day, the hanking commissioner laid the full constitutional and statutory assessment of 100% of the par value of their stock on the stockholders of the Union Bank & Trust Company and directed his receiver to collect' it; that on September 4, 1931, the entire outstanding capital stock of said bank was 1450 shares of a par value of $100.00 per share; that on that day, the defendant, Luther Lazzelle, owned fifteen shares of said stock acquired by him on and prior to September 4, 1921, and owned by him from that date until September 4, 1931; that on the date of said assessment being laid the bank was insolvent and was indebted to its creditors upon liabilities accruing after the defendant became the owner of the stock in a sum of money greatly in excess of the full par value of its outstanding capital stock; that the requirements concerning notice, demand, etc., of the amount of the said assessment have been complied with and that the defendant has failed and refused to pay it. The exhibits showing the steps by which the formalities leading up to the filing of the bill of complaint were complied with are filed with the bill. The sufficiency of the bill and its exhibits is not challenged.

The defendant, Luther Lazzelle, appeared and filed an answer in which he challenges the right of the banking commissioner to lay the assessment against his stock in the Union Bank & Trust Company and relies upon the following circumstances to sustain that position; That on the 2nd day of August, 1930, with the approval of the banking commissioner, the Union Bank & Trust Company assigned and transferred all of its real estate, personal property and assets of every kind and character to the Bank of Monongahela Valley; that the Bank of Monongahela Valley took over all of the assets of the Union Bank & Trust Company and that the latter bank thereby became merged and consolidated with the former. Thereupon, the Union Bank & Trust Company ceased to do business, surrendered its certificate of authority and passed out of existence as a bank and trust company; that owing to the said assignment and transfer respondent from and after August 2, 1930. ceased to be a stockholder of the selling bank and that any contingent liability to pay the assessment imposed by law upon the stockholders of banks found to be insolvent was *898 thereby wholly extinguished; that the selling bank had not before the assignment been found to be insolvent by any competent authority; that its existence as a banking institution ceased on the date of the assignment, and that consequently the subsequent declaration of insolvency by the banking commissioner is wholly illegal; that at the date of the assignment, the selling bank was entirely solvent; that the Bank of Monongahela Yalley, on December 30, 1930, when it was closed by L. R. Charter, Jr., the banking commissioner, and declared to be insolvent, had entirely taken over the affairs of the Union Bank & Trust Company which had ceased to control its own affairs after the date of the assignment; that on December 22nd and long prior thereto, the said Bank of Monongahela Yalley was hopelessly insolvent; that after December 22, 1930, the affairs of the Bank of Monongahela Yalley were entirely in' the hands of the banking commissioner; that the assignment of August 2, 1930, was consented to and acquiesced in by all the depositors and creditors of Union Bank & Trust Company and was ratified and confirmed by them, as well as by the stockholders of the selling and purchasing banks; that the depositors’ of Union Bank & Trust Company drew their checks on their respective accounts in that bank and deposited them to their credit in the Bank of Monongahela Yalley; that such acquiescence and ratification on the part of the creditors and depositors of the selling bank amounted to a novation, the effect of which is to estop the depositors and creditors of Union Bank & Trust Company from pleading lack of notice or knowledge of the contract of August 2, 1930; that on December 31, 1930, plaintiff receiver had in his charge and under his control all of the records and property of the Bank of Monongahela Valley as well as of the Union Bank & Trust Company; that on September 4, 1931, when the Union Bank & Trust Company was declared to be insolvent by the banking commissioner, it had gone out of business by virtue of the contract of August 2, 1930, and that all of the conduct and proceedings of the banking commissioner therefore are invalid as to it and as to its stockholders; that plaintiff had no duties to perform as to the Union Bank & Trust Company; that the defendant had ceased to be a stockholder on August 2, ] 930, when the sale and transfer of the assets of Union Bank *899 & Trust Company took place, ancl that the conduct of the banking .commissioner, as it affects the Union Bank & Trust Company and its stockholders, is in all respects void and without legal force and effect.

This answer sets up as an exhibit the contract in writing of August 2, 1930, between Union Bank & Trust Company, selling bank, and Bank of Monongahela Valley, purchasing bank.

The banking commissioner, through his receiver, filed his demurrer to this answer, pointing out the reasons for his assertion that it does not constitute a defense to his bill of complaint. The court below sustained the demurrer to the answer, and, upon joint application of the parties, certified to this court the questions arising thereon.

The salient features of the contract of August 2, 1930, filed as an exhibit with the answer, are (1) that Union Bank & Trust Company, the selling bank, transfers its cash on hand, United States Bonds, clearances, balances due from banks and overdrafts, in the aggregate of $59,718.71, to the Bank of Monongahela Valley, the purchasing bank; (2) that the purchasing bank undertakes to pay all of the liabilities, including deposits, of the selling bank amoiinting to $1,016,291.52; (3) that the aggregate in dollars of the assets transferred is subtracted from the aggregate of the liabilities and found insufficient to meet the liabilities by the sum of $956,572.81, the selling bank agreeing to make its collateral note in that amount to the buying bank; and (4) that the selling bank does “file and pledge with said note as collateral to secure the payment of said note or any renewal or renewals thereof, all of its remaining assets of every kind and character, including all bills receivable, with any security attached”, the purchasing bank to collect the collateral, with the assistance of a committee of five of the officers and directors of the selling bank named by the selling bank, apply the amount collected to the collateral note, and if there is more collected than is necessary to retire it, pay the balance to a committee of selling bank to be in turn paid to the stockholders of the selling bank, pro rata.

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Related

Indemnity Insurance Co. of North America v. Federal Savings & Trust Co.
174 S.E. 783 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1934)

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Bluebook (online)
170 S.E. 172, 113 W. Va. 896, 1933 W. Va. LEXIS 269, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lawhead-v-lazzelle-wva-1933.