Livingston County Bank v. First State Bank

121 S.W. 451, 136 Ky. 546, 1910 Ky. LEXIS 469
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedFebruary 4, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 121 S.W. 451 (Livingston County Bank v. First State Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Livingston County Bank v. First State Bank, 121 S.W. 451, 136 Ky. 546, 1910 Ky. LEXIS 469 (Ky. Ct. App. 1910).

Opinions

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Carroll —

Affirming.

On the 1st day of November, 1906, the First State Rank and the Livingston County Bank entered into a written contract, by the terms of which the state ■ bank purchased all the assets and property of the Livingston Bank. So much of the contract as is material to the issues here involved is as follows:! “ This contract and agreement made and entered into this 1st day of November, 1906, by and between the Livingston County Bank, * * * and the First State Bank, [548]*548* * * Witnesseth: That for and in consideration of $140 per share of $100 each, the Livingston County-Bank has this day sold and does hereby sell and convey unto the First State Bank the entire capital stock of $15,000, of the said Livingston County Bank, together with all notes, papers, bills of discount, cash and accounts which belong to the party of the first part which may be on hand January 1st,* 1907; and its banking house and lot in the town of Smithland, Kentucky, together with all its furniture, safe, vaults and banking fixtures, books, papers, and property of every kind and character belonging to the said Livingston County -Bank. The Livingston County Bank, in addition to the $140 per share of $100 each, shall have all earnings of said Livingston County Bank up to and including the 31st day of December, 1906. The Livingston County Bank by virtue of the above sale and conveyance agrees to turn over to the First State Bank on the 1st day of January, 1907, the $3,000 surplus fund it now has oh hand, and all cash that may be on deposit in the said Livingston County Bank, and due from its correspondent banks of which after said date the party of the second part shall hold the same for its depositors and persons entitled thereto and for which it shall be responsible. The Livingston County Bank shall continue its business as a banking institution up to the 1st day of January, 1907, and no longer; and its stockholders shall have all the earnings of said bank up to and including the 31st day of December, 1906.”

In April, 1907, the First State Bank filed its petition in equity against the Livingston County Bank, in which, after setting up the contract, it averred that the Livingston bank refused to deliver to it two judgments, aggregating $2,600 it had obtained against [549]*549parties upon notes executed by them to the bank. It further averred that between July 14, 1906, and the 1st day of January, 1907, the Livingston bank had discounted a large number of notes and bills that did not fall due until after January 1, 1907, and it failed and refused to pay over to the state bank any part of the discount received and collected on these notes, although it was entitled to such proportion of the discounts as was represented by the time the bills and notes ran after January 1, 1907, until maturity. With the petition was filed a statement showing- each note that did not mature until after January 1, 1907, and the amount of interest or discount which should Lave been paid by the Livingston bank between January 1, 1907, and the maturity of the paper. The answer of the Livingston bank was substantially a traverse of the averments of the petition, and a denial that the state bank was entitled to recover from it anything on account of the matter set up in the petition.' The ease having been submitted in the lower court upon the pleadings and evidence, it was adjudged that the state bank was not entitled to recover anything on account of the claim for interest, but was entitled to have transferred to it the two judgments, or, if this could not be done to recover the amount received for the judgments from the persons to whom it sold them in December, 1906.

Taking up first the matter of the judgments, we agree with the lower court in its conclusion respecting them. These judgments were obtained by the Livingston bank long before it entered into the contract with the state bank, and at that time they were regarded as practically worthless, as the bank had made a number of efforts, but without success, to collect them, but in December, 1906, it sold these judgments [550]*550for $260. That these judgments were embraced in the contract we have little doubt. At the time the contract was entered into these judgments, although considered uncollectible, were the property of the Livingston bank and a part of its assets. The fact that they were treated as practically worthless does not affect the question. That they were not entirely worthless is evidenced by the fact that the bank received for them in December, 1906, $260. With the single exception of the earnings of the Livingston bank between November 1st and December 31st, all the property and assets of every kind and character that it had or owned on November 1, 1906, passed under the contract to the state bank, to be delivered to it on January 1, 1907. The language of the contract, by which the Livingston bank sold its banking-house and lot, together with all its furniture, safe, vaults, banking fixtures, books, papers, and property of every kind and character belonging to the Livingston bank, makes it plain that it was intended by the parties that every species of property owned by or in which the Livingston bank had an interest was transferred to the First State Bank. Nor was -the $260 received by the Livingston bank for these two judgments a part of its earnings within the fair meaning of the contract. The word “earnings” contemplated the earnings of the bank in the usual and ordinary course of its business transacted between November 1 and January 1, 1907. If the bank after November 1, 1906, had collected the full amount of these judgments, we have no doubt that the money so collected would have passed under the contract to the state bank. Although the Livingston bank had the right under the contract to carry on its business until January 1, 1907, all of its assets and property passed to [551]*551the state bank on November 1st, subject to the right of the Livingston bank to carry on business in its own name the same as before the contract was made, and retain whatever money it earned after November 1st.

The point is made by counsel for the Livingston bank that it was to deliver to the state bank all notes and bills of discount, cash, and accounts which belonged to it, and which should be on hand January 1, 1907; and it is argued that the $260 received for these two judgments was not on hand on January 1, 1907, as it had been distributed'to the stockholders to reimburse them in part for the dividends they had previously lost by reason of the failure to realize on these judgments. We are not impressed with the soundness of this argument. The Livingston bank could not, after November 1,1906, convert into money any of the property it owned on November 1st, and distribute the same among its stockholders, and then set up that because the money so distributed was not on hand on January 1, 1907, the First State Bank was not entitled to it. The Livingston bank had as much right and authority to convert into money any note or bill in its vault, and distribute the proceeds among its stockholders and refuse to account for it to the First State Bank, as it did to dispose in this way of the money realized on these judgments. They were as much the property of the state bank as any other asset owned by it on November 1, 1906;

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Bluebook (online)
121 S.W. 451, 136 Ky. 546, 1910 Ky. LEXIS 469, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/livingston-county-bank-v-first-state-bank-kyctapp-1910.