Lyon v. Featherman

261 P. 268, 80 Mont. 504, 1927 Mont. LEXIS 70
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 15, 1927
DocketNo. 6,182.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 261 P. 268 (Lyon v. Featherman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lyon v. Featherman, 261 P. 268, 80 Mont. 504, 1927 Mont. LEXIS 70 (Mo. 1927).

Opinion

MR. JUSTICE MATTHEWS

delivered the opinion of the court.

An appeal from a judgment and decree establishing the claim of William Lyon as a general creditor of the Drummond State Bank, insolvent, for the’sum of $3,300.

The facts in this case are undisputed and were established, in the main, by documentary evidence. They are as follows: The plaintiff Lyon was compelled to pay the sum of $3,300 to the Agricultural Credit Corporation of Minneapolis, as a guarantor on a note executed by one J. E. Meyers to that corporation under circumstances hereinafter detailed. Between the time the Meyers note was executed and delivered and the payment made by Lyon, the Drummond State Bank had failed, and H. A. Featherman had been duly appointed receiver. Lyon presented his claim to the receiver, who disallowed it, and Lyon, having first secured leave of court, commenced an equitable action to establish his claim.

The Agricultural Credit Association was organized for the purpose of aiding country banks under one or the other of three plans: (A) Direct loans on bills payable secured by adequate collateral; (B) outright purchase, without recourse, of high-grade bills receivable; (C) loans to stockholders of the bank for the purpose of removing slow and questionable assets from the bank. This latter plan contemplated that, when a *507 bank was in such condition that it was questionable as to whether or not its notes would ever be paid, and its bills receivable were a poor risk, the stockholders might place the bank in sound financial condition by personally borrowing money from the Credit Corporation on their notes, secured by adequate collateral, and with the money so received remove from the bank its objectionable paper. The Credit Corporation required that, when such a loan was made, although the note therefor was signed by the stockholders personally, the proceeds must go direct to the bank. The Credit Corporation had no authority to loan money to individuals, and did not do so except under plan C, and then only “for the sole benefit of the bank.”

The Drummond State Bank applied to the Credit Corporation for a loan, and that institution sent one of its examiners to Drummond. He made an exhaustive examination of the bank’s condition, and reported to the corporation that the bank had slow and questionable paper totaling $41,728.91, which he designated as “losses,” and-which would have to be removed from the bank; that the bank required a loan of that amount, and that, in the condition of the bank, the loan co.uld only be made under plan C.

It appears that at the same time an examination had been made by a deputy state examiner, and a reasonable inference from the record is that the stockholders of the bank were either ordered, or were about to be ordered, to make good the impairment of the capital stock to the extent of the $41,728.91 represented by the assets last referred to, when a special meeting of the board of directors was called for May 3, 1924. The meeting was attended by six directors of the bank, including J. B. Meyers, vice-president and general manager, and William Lyon, plaintiff in this action. Meyers stated the purpose of the meeting to be the consideration of the “contemplated loan to the stockholders by the Agricultural Credit Corporation * * * for the benefit of the Drummond State Bank.” Thereupon a resolution was introduced and adopted, which recited that it was necessary to take steps to increase the *508 bank’s reserve, and remove from the bank certain slow and questionable assets, and that the stockholders were not financially able, “without great sacrifice,” to pay an assessment, but that Meyers had suggested that it would be possible for certain stockholders (being the directors present) to secure a direct loan from the Agricultural Credit Corporation “by giving notes and guarantees. ’ ’ The resolution then listed assets which should be removed from the bank, totaling $41,728.91, which the directors estimated had a valuation of not to exceed $34,548.94, and stated that J. E. Meyers had offered to “purchase” these from the bank at $41,728.91, which offer was accepted, and the vice-president and cashier authorized to “sell, assign, and transfer” the assets to Meyers, giving him “full title” thereto.

Having thus perfected a method by which a loan could be secured from the Credit Corporation, in accordance with the report of its examiner, the directors proceeded to adopt the following resolution: “That the Drummond State Bank, upon accumulation of earnings agreed not to pay any dividends to stockholders until the net less that may be incurred from a loan made by the Agricultural Corporation for the benefit of the Drummond State Bank to Messrs. J. E. Meyers, Gust Johnson, ’Win. Lyon, H. T. Cumming, F. P. Emory, and Y. B. Morse, the participating stockholders in said loan, should first be paid to the above named stockholders, thereby reimbursing them for their net loss on account of such loan of $41,728.91; said earnings to be held intact in the undivided profits account until said loan has been liquidated, and the net loss, if any, determined upon.”

A third resolution was then passed authorizing the sale “without recourse” for the sum of $10, certain “charged out” paper of the bank amounting on its face to $39,367.34, to J. E. Meyers “to be used by him as collateral to a loan which he and other participating stockholders are negotiating with the Agricultural Credit Corporation.”

The directions in the resolutions having been carried out, Meyers wrote the Credit Corporation that, “in compliance *509 with our preliminary application for a loan we beg to submit herewith final papers,” among which were a note from Lyon to Meyers for $3,000, secured by a chattel mortgage on his cattle, tendered as collateral; the principal note for $41,728.91, signed by Meyers, and on which appears the guaranty signed by the other “participating stockholders”; a direction by all of them that the “net proceeds” of the loan be deposited in a Missoula bank “for the credit and use of the Drummond State Bank”; and a statement signed by the guarantors that their notes to Meyers were not given as accommodation paper, but “for a good and valuable consideration received” from Meyers. It will be noted that the letter is written in the plural; it is signed “J. E. Meyers, Vice-President.”

The loan was made and the net proceeds deposited as directed and used by the bank. After the bank failed, the bank assets pledged were sold by the Credit Corporation, under power given, for $1,000, and that amount credited on the principal note. The Credit Corporation then called upon Lyon, and he was forced to pay the sum of $3,300 in settlement of his note. Lyon testified that he received no consideration for the execution and delivery of his note to Meyers, but, on cross-examination, admitted that, as a stockholder and depositor in the bank, he was benefited by having the bank placed in a temporarily sound condition and kept open. This benefit also, of course, accrued to Meyers and the other guarantors; all were further benefited by being relieved from paying an assessment at that time.

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Bluebook (online)
261 P. 268, 80 Mont. 504, 1927 Mont. LEXIS 70, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lyon-v-featherman-mont-1927.