Maryland Trust Co. v. National Mechanics Bank

63 A. 70, 102 Md. 608
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJanuary 11, 1906
StatusPublished
Cited by55 cases

This text of 63 A. 70 (Maryland Trust Co. v. National Mechanics Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Maryland Trust Co. v. National Mechanics Bank, 63 A. 70, 102 Md. 608 (Md. 1906).

Opinion

McSherry, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

These are appeals from an order passed by Circuit Court No. 2 of Baltimore City on July the thirty-first nineteen hundred and five. By that order certain exceptions filed by the Maryland Trust Company and also by several shareholders of that company against the allowance of a claim preferred by the National Mechanics Bank, of Baltimore, wrere overruled, and tthe Receiver of the Trust Company was ordered to pay the ¡'claim out of any assets of the Trust Company in his hands Rafter the payment in full of the claims of all other creditors of |the Trust Company. From that order both the Maryland Trust Company and the objecting shareholders have appealed. The questions involved are numerous and important, and the amount of money at stake is large. The record and the briefs are voluminous ; and the cases have been argued with marked ability, and we have given to them a patient; and careful consideration. Before stating or discussing the questions which are before us, a brief outline of the material facts must be given — and this we now proceed to do.

By an Act of the General Assembly of Maryland, approved •on March 29th, 1894, being chapter 164 of the Acts of the January Session of that year, the Maryland Trust Company was incorporated.. It was duly organized and began business under and pursuant to its charter. In March, 1901, a merger of the Guardian Trust Company in the Maryland Trust Company was proposed and its accomplishment was undertaken by Mr. John B. Ramsay for a consideration of one hundred thousand dollars to be paid to him by the Maryland Trust Company.

*611 The basis upon which the merger was to be effected was the exchange of two shares of Guardian Trust Company stock for one share of Maryland Trust Company stock, that ratio being adopted because it was considered that a share of the last-named company’s stock was worth as much as two shares of the Guardian Trust Company’s stock. In a short while Mr. Ramsay.secured at least sixty per cent of the Guardian Trust Company’s shares for exchange under the merger agreement, and was paid his stipulated fee of one hundred thousand dollars. There were, however, left outstanding quite a number, approximately, four thousand of Guardian Trust shares, the owners whereof seemed indisposed to go into the merger scheme because they believed the value of the Maryland Trust Company shares was not equal to double the value of the Guardian shares; and this belief had its origin in the fact that the market values of the respective shares did not show a ratio of two to one. A further disturbing element made its appearance on March 2.3rd in the shape of an offer-by Hambleton & Company, published in “The Sun” of that day, to pay one hundred and ten dollars a share for the Guardian Trust stock, provided a majority of the stock of that company was deposited with them by the first of April, 1901. On March 23rd Maryland Trust Company stock was selling at two hundred and five dollars a share, though three days before, it brought two hundred and fourteen dollars per share. The officers of the Maryland Trust Company were anxious to get in all the shares of the Guardian Trust Company, and when this “obstacle” and “hitch in the deal,” occasioned by the want of parity in the market value of the two stocks and the depression in the Maryland shares confronted them, they applied to Mr. Ramsay (whose contract to secure a majority of the Guardian Trust Company’s stock had then been executed and completed) with a view of procuring aid to buy and carry the amount of Maryland Trust stock necessary to overcome the raid being made by Hambleton & Company. “We approached1 Mr. Ramsay on the matter,” so Mr. Scott testified, “and he was perfectly willing to do as we suggested, and, in fact, *612 thought it a very wise proceeding, but said that he could not lend the Maryland Trust Company enough money to buy the stock, and the obligations would have to be given in somebody else’s name, with the Maryland Trust Company as guarantor.” At that time Mr. Ramsay was, and still is, the president of the National Mechanics Bank, and when the ap- ) plication was made to him to buy and carry the Maryland I Trust Company’s stock, so as, by that means, to raise and j maintain the apparent market price thereof in order thereby to l influence the outstanding holders of the Guardian Trust Com- | pany’s stock to part with their shares on the basis fixed in the '¡merger agreement, he was approached, not individually, but as the representative of a bank and the transactions which immediately ensued brought the Mechanics National Bank into ^ the negotiations for the first time. _ As soon as the proposal j to go upon the stock market and buy up shares of the Maryland j Trust Company for the Maryland Trust Company for the purpose indicated, was suggested to and approved of by Mr. Ramsay, he proceeded to carry out the plan through a broker with whom he had been formerly associated as partner and also through other firms of brokers. As the stock of the Maryland Trust Company was bought, the bills in most instances were made out in the name of the Mechanics Bank as puixhaser and upon presentation of the bills to the bank accompanied by the shares, transferred in blank, they were paid generally, if not invariably, by checks of the bank's cashier, i The shares were treated as cash items until a considerable ■ amount expended in their purchase had accumulated, and then } a receipt, to escape the payment of the revenue tax, subse1 quently changed to a note cif, and signed by, some employee i of the Maryland Trust Company was given to the bank for J that amount, and was guaranteed by the Maryland Trust Com- | pany and the shares of stock so purchased were pledged, at I the market value paid for them, as collateral security. This * process was repeated and carried on until the bank had paid out for thirteen hundred and eleven shares of the Maryland Trust Company’s stock sums which, with interest added, now *613 aggregate two hundred and eighty-five thousand, seven hundred and sixty-three dollars and forty-eight cents. This is the claim Which the bank now seeks to have repaid out of the assets of the Maryland Trust Company in the hands of its receiver. There is no doubt that the trust company was en- j tirely solvent when these transactions took place, but, from] other causes, it was placed in the hands of a receiver in Oc- j tober, 1903. The company itself and its stockholders resist] the payment of this claim upon several grounds, the more important whereof are the only ones we need consider or determine.

The form in which the transactions with the bank were couched excluded, on its face, the theory that the trust company was primarily liable to repay to the bank the sums advanced by the latter for the purchase, in the open market, of the stock of the former; because the receipts later on replaced by the notes given to the bank for the amounts so advanced were the promissory notes, not of the trust company, but of three employees of the trust company, and the liability of that company on those notes was the liability of a guarantor, and therefore purely a secondary obligation. The books of the bank do not show an entry of any kind indicating that the trust company was an original debtor to the bank on account of these advances.

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Bluebook (online)
63 A. 70, 102 Md. 608, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/maryland-trust-co-v-national-mechanics-bank-md-1906.