Liquidators of State Nat. Bank v. Hart

58 So. 636, 130 La. 843, 1912 La. LEXIS 947
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedApril 22, 1912
DocketNo. 18,648
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 58 So. 636 (Liquidators of State Nat. Bank v. Hart) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Liquidators of State Nat. Bank v. Hart, 58 So. 636, 130 La. 843, 1912 La. LEXIS 947 (La. 1912).

Opinion

Statement of the Case.

MONROE, J.

Defendant appeals from a judgment rendered against him on a promissory note for $25,000, with interest, less certain credits amounting to $17,500. He filed several exceptions, which were overruled, and which are not here insisted on, after which he answered, admitting that he executed and negotiated the note sued on, but alleging that he pledged 30 first mortgage bonds of the Consumers’ Electric Company, of $1,000 each, to secure payment of the same, and that plaintiffs pretended to sell said bonds on the floor of the Stock Exchange and buy them in at a vile price, after which they converted them to the use of the bank of which they are. liquidators, and sold them for a much higher price, all illegally and without the notice to which he was entitled. He alleges that plaintiffs or their assigns also converted three matured coupons on each of said bonds, amounting, [845]*845in tbe aggregate, to $2,250, and that he is entitled to restitution in the sum of $32,250, with interest, for which he prays judgment.

The note bears date March 15, 1906, is made payable, on demand, to the order of the maker at the State National Bank, and bears upon its face the stipulation:

“This note is secured by pledge of the securities mentioned on the reverse hereof, and, in case of its nonpayment, on demand, or, should the drawer hereof, when called on, refuse or fail to keep the margin hereon good, the holder is hereby authorized to sell the said securities, at public or private sale, without recourse to legal proceedings, and to make any transfers that may be required, applying the proceeds of sale towards the payment of within note. [Signed] Samuel J. Hart.”

On the reverse, there appears:

“Secured by thirty (30) one thousand dollar first mortgage, 5%, gold bonds of the Consumers’ Electric Company, Nos. 701 to 730, inclusive. [Signed] Samuel J. Hart.
“Interest paid to April 30th.
“Interest paid to May 31st, 1906.
“Interest paid to February 28th, 1907.”

The affairs of the bank were placed in the hands of a committee of the clearing house as early as January 9, 1908, and the members of that committee were, later in the month, elected liquidators. On the date mentioned, the chairman of the committee addressed a letter to plaintiff, as follows:

“Dear Sir: Referring to your demand note for $25,000, which has been protested for nonpayment, we beg to notify you that, if this note is not paid by 10 o’clock Monday morning next, we will be obliged to sell the collateral, holding you for the balance due on the note after the amount realized from the collateral has been applied thereagainst.”

Defendant paid no attention to the notice thus given, and the committee, through a broker, offered the bonds for sale on the Stock Exchange, day after day, for several days, and at lowering prices, but received no bid. They then instructed the broker to sell them for wfiat they would bring, and at the same time employed another broker, whom they instructed to buy the bonds in, unless some third person should offer more than 25 cents on the dollar for them; and, there being no other offer, the broker so employed, on January 16, 1908, bid in the bonds, for the committee at 10% cents on the dollar. On January 21st following the vice president of the bank addressed a letter to defendant, reading:

“Dear Sir: Referring to your demand note dated March 15, ’06, for $25,000, secured by $30,000 bonds of the Consumers’ Electric Co., for which legal demand was made upon you, we beg to advise that, under the terms of the pledge, the said $30,000 bonds have been sold, at public sale, at 10% less % brokerage, and the proceeds, $3,037.50, have been credited on your obligation, designated above. We now call on you for payment of the balance due on said obligation, with interest.”

Plaintiff paid no more attention to the notice thus given than he had to the other; the fact being that there had been something of a panic in the business world during the last few months of the year 1907, and that the bond and stock market was still very, weak, while money was in demand and not easy to get. The bank was regularly placed in the hands of liquidators on January 30, 1908. The Consumers’ Electric Company went into the hands of a receiver in April following; and on April 9, 1909, the liquidators of the bank sent a written notice to the defendant that, unless he arranged for the payment of his obligations held by them, they would be put in the hands of an attorney for collection; and in May, 1909, this suit was brought.

Thereafter the bonds in question became more valuable, bringing 88 in December, 1909, and 90 at a later date.

Opinion.

The judge a quo was of opinion that the bidding in of the bonds by the broker employed by the clearing house committee operated no change in the title, but that the sale of December 8, 1908, was valid, and held that, for the purposes of this case, plaintiff should account for the $15,000 received [847]*847as the price, and also for $2,250 of interest collected; and we are of the same opinion. The bonds continued to be the property of the defendant, notwithstanding the stock exchange transaction of January 16, 1908; hut they were still subject to the conditions of the pledge, and the pledgee, not having done so, had the right to make a valid sale of them, which it did some 11 months later, after having made another demand (on January 21, 1908) for the payment of the debt for which they were pledged.

Counsel for defendant argue that:

“By reporting the pretended sale on the Stock Exchange to the defendant, and by leading him to suppose that they had made a valid sale of his securities under the terms of the contract of pledge, the bank disentitled itself to the right to make another sale of the securities, without notice to him that it still held his bonds as pledgee, and without making a new demand on him for the payment of the note.”

The argument would be entitled to serious consideration, if there had been any attempt to show that defendant was misled, to his prejudice, by the notice of January 21st, and that, if he had known that the bonds had not actually been sold, he could, and would, have redeemed them. But there has been no such attempt; and it is not even suggested that he was any more able to pay the debt due the bank in December, when the bonds were really sold, than he had been 11 months before, when they were said to have been sold. The notice of January 9th informed him that the bonds would be sold, unless he paid by the next Monday; and the bank had the right to sell them at any time after the expiration of that delay. If it had, of its own motion, or upon advice of its counsel, concluded that there was no sale on January 16th, and had then, without further notice to defendant, made the actual sale which was made on December 8th, following, it could hardly be contended that defendant would have any cause of complaint. What he complains of, therefore, is, not that a demand for the payment of the debt was not made, and not that the bank went through the idle form of selling the bonds to itself, but that it gave him notice that it had sold them, when, in law, it had not, but still held them.

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Bluebook (online)
58 So. 636, 130 La. 843, 1912 La. LEXIS 947, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/liquidators-of-state-nat-bank-v-hart-la-1912.