Lawrence v. Stearns

79 F. 878, 1897 U.S. App. LEXIS 3081
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Western Michigan
DecidedApril 13, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 79 F. 878 (Lawrence v. Stearns) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Western Michigan primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lawrence v. Stearns, 79 F. 878, 1897 U.S. App. LEXIS 3081 (circtwdmi 1897).

Opinion

SEVERENS, District Judge.

The hill of complaint in this ease was filed for the purpose of recovering from the defendant the damages resulting from an alleged breach of trust on his part while acting as president and managing officer of the Northern National Bank of Big Rapids. This bank was chartered on llie 19 th day of September, 1870, for the period of 20 years, and its charter was extended by the comptroller of the currency on the 5th day of September, 1890, until the 19tli day of September, 1910. The capital stock of tlie bank at the time of its organization was fixed at the sum of $150,000, but on the 10tli day of January, 1893, its capital was reduced by tlie direction of tlie comptroller. of the currency, to $100,000. The hank failed and closed its doors shortly before the 5th day of August, [879]*8791893, and on that dar tho complainant, Lawrence, was appointed receiver by the comptroller of the currency, and entered upon his duties as such a few days after, and lias since continued in the possession of the assets of the bank for tho purpose of collecting its assets and liquidating its financial affairs. It Is alleged in the bill that tho defendant, Stearns, was president of the bank from its organization to the 3d day of August, 1891, and that La Pora S. Baker, who was a nephew of said Stearns, was cashier of the bank from its organization to about the 11th day of January, 1887: and that after Baker ceased to he cashier substantially the whole control and management of the hank passed into flu1 hands of the president, who afterwards exorcised the powers which fix' two had previously (‘zeroised, it is alleged that on the 22d day of January, 1888, the bank held paper to the amount of §15.090, made by Baker, and indorsed by the Baker Lumber Gompanv, and paper amounting to §15,000, made by the Baker Lumber Company, and indorsed by Baker; that the Baker Lumber Company was a corporation organized in bad faith for the purpose of carrying on tin* business of Baker, and to be used as a cover under which he could obtain loans from the bank in excess of the amount permitted by law; that Baker owned all the slock except one or two shares, and that the organization of said corporation was merely colorable; that ¡8teams knew all of these facts, and loaned to Baker the sum of §30,000, being the aggregate of the two amounts above mentioned. If is further alleged that on the 22d day of March, 1886, Baker sold to Anderson & Griffin certain pine lands for the sum of §50,000, §5,000 of which was paid down, and a note of Anderson & Griffin for the remaining §15,000, payable on or before two years from date, with interest at 7 per cent., was taken for the balance. The note was secured by a mortgage upon the property sold, and Baiun at the sanie time gave to Anderson & Griffin a written guaranty that these lands, together with some other logs therein mentioned, would pi'oduce 13,000,000 feet of pine lumber, and that he would refund the sum of §3.50 per M. for the number of feet it fell short of that amount; and it, is charged that the defendant, Stearns, had full knowledge of all the particulars of this transaction, it is further stated that on the 9lli day of February, 1887, Baker assigned the above-mentioned note and mortgage to Palmer & Brown as security for a loan of §20,000 which they bad made to him upon his note indorsed by Stearns, and that Anderson & Griffin made payments upon this note and mortgage to Palmer & Brown to such an extent that on the 22d day of January. 1888, there remained due to Palmer & Brown §1.508.56, leaving still due and unpaid on the ¿Anderson & Griffin note and mortgage the sum of §23,089.12; that on the 3d day of August, 1887, Stearns, acting for the bank, and by concert with Baker, bought the Anderson & Griffin note and mortgage from Palmer & Brown, but the bargain was not closed up until the 22d day of January, 1888, on which day Stearns, acting for the bank, paid to Palmer & Brown the sum of §1,508.56, beiug the amount still due to them on tin* note of Baker indorsed by Steams, took an assignment of the note and mortgage to himself, and forthwith transferred the note and mortgage of Griffin & ¿Anderson to the [880]*880bank in payment of a note of the Baker Lumber Company, indorsed by Baker, of $7,500, and two notes of $5,000 each, made by Baker and indorsed by the Baker Lumber Company (all of -which were parts of the indebtedness of those persons to the bank, above mentioned), canceled and delivered up the notes, and gave the Baker Lumber Company a credit upon the books of the bank for the sum of $1,080.50, being the balance of the whole sum purporting to be due upon the Anderson & Griffin note and mortgage, which credit of $1,080.50 the Baker Lumber Company afterwards checked out. It is alleged that the defendant, Stearns, in this purchase of the Anderson & Griffin note and mortgage, acted without the knowledge of the directors or other officers of the bank, and that he conducted the same personally. It is charged that the defendant, in making this purchase of the Anderson & Griffin note and mortgage, and parting -with the assets of the bank therefor, knew of the guaranty agreement made by Baker to Griffin & Anderson that the lands should produce 13,000,000 feet of pine, and the contract for indemnity against their producing a smaller amount. It is further alleged that soon after this purchase for the bank, it having turned out that the quantity of pine on the lands which Baker had sold to Anderson & Griffin was very much less than the sum stipulated in Baker’s guaranty, and that the deficiency was nearly half of the stipulated 13,000,000 feet, Griffin & Anderson filed their bill of complaint in the circuit court for Newaygo 'county in chancery against the bank, Stearns, and Baker for the purpose of having the amount of the deficiency in the quantity of lumber charged up against the sum due on the note and mortgage to Baker, which the bank now held; it being alleged that the bank had notice of Griffin & Anderson’s rights when it took their note and mortgage. Personal service upon the defendants in that suit was obtained. Baker made no defense, but Stearns, who was charged in the bill with having had full knowledge of the Baker guaranty when he carried through the transactions above mentioned in purchasing the note and mortgage for the bank, assumed and conducted the defense for the bank, and filed an answer in its behalf, and he also filed an answer for himself. In both these answers it was denied that either the bank or Stearns had any knowledge of the existence of the Baker guaranty at the time of the purchase of the note and mortgage from Palmer & Brown and the taking of the same by the bank. Replications being filed to those answers, proofs were taken, and the parties went to hearing. The court found that Steams did in fact have knowledge of the guaranty, and decreed in favor of the complainants. The bank and the defendant, Stearns, appealed to the supreme court, where, upon a hearing, the supreme court reached the same conclusion upon the facts, and decreed that upon the payment by Griffin & Anderson of the sum which the bank had paid to Palmer & Brown,—who, as the court held (57 N. W. 808), were bona fide holders of Griffin & Anderson’s note, to whose position, to the extent of the amount paid by the bank, the latter succeeded,—Griffin & Anderson were entitled to have the note canceled, and the mortgage discharged; it being found that there was a deficiency of 5,500,000 feet in the quantity of the lumber as guarantied by Baker, for which Griffin & Anderson were entitled [881]*881to a credit of §19,250.

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Bluebook (online)
79 F. 878, 1897 U.S. App. LEXIS 3081, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lawrence-v-stearns-circtwdmi-1897.