McCauley v. German National Bank

17 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 305
CourtCourt of Common Pleas of Ohio, Hamilton County
DecidedNovember 15, 1914
StatusPublished

This text of 17 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 305 (McCauley v. German National Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Common Pleas of Ohio, Hamilton County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McCauley v. German National Bank, 17 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 305 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1914).

Opinion

Geoghegan, J.

This is an action brought by William J. McCauley, receiver of the National Endowment Company, a corporation under the laws of the state of West Virginia, against the German National Bank of Cincinnati, Ohio, and John R. Picton, as an individual and as trustee.

• The German National Bank is defending the action, the said Picton having died prior to the trial thereof, and his administrator being in default for answer.

The facts upon which this action is based may be briefly stated as follows:

In the year 1891, a corporation known as the National Investment Company was incorporated under the laws of West Virginia. The business of the said National Investment Company was conducted from its offices in the city of Cincinnati, Hamilton county, Ohio, and consisted in the issuing of debentures, contracts of investment security or certificates, which business was declared unlawful by the Supreme Court of Ohio in the case of State, ex rel, v. Interstate Savings Investment Company, 64 Ohio St., 283, decided March 26, 1901. The National Investment Company carried on its business in the city of Cincinnati until the 4th day of December, 1900, when a suit was filed in the Superior Court of Cincinnati, seeking, among other things, the dissolution of the National Investment Company, the winding up of its affairs, the distribution of its assets, etc. The promoters of the National Investment Company were a number of men prominent in the business affairs of the city of Cincinnati, among whom were included George H. Bohrer, who was president of the German National Bank, the defendant herein, and John R. Picton, who subsequently became the president of the National Investment Company.

The evidence shows that while the suit that had been brought in the Superior Court of Cincinnati to dissolve the corporation ..was pending before a referee, John R. Picton, being desirous of continuing the business and having' evolved a plan whereby this might be done without, as he concluded, running afoul of the law, in concert with a number of the directors of the National [307]*307Investment Company formed a corporation under the laws of the state of West Virginia, to be known as the National Endowment Company.

At the time of the filing of the suit in the Superior Court of Cincinnati, the National Investment Company had on deposit with the treasurer of the state of Ohio a sum of money approximating $55,000. This sum it had been compelled to deposit there for the purpose of doing business in this state. Simultaneously, therefore, with the incorporation of the National Endowment Company a circular letter was sent to all the debenture holders of the National Investment Company requesting them to assign to J. R. Picton, trustee, all their right, title and interest in certificates issued by the National Investment Company, including any proportionate share in all assets and funds on deposit with the state treasurer of Ohio or elsewhere in the name of the National Investment Company.

Tt was explained in this circular to these debenture holders that, the litigation against the company had been protracted by the dilatory tactics of the prosecution; that the National Endowment Company had agreed to underwrite all the business of the Investment Company and had agreed to take over the certificates issued by the National Investment Company; that the National Endowment Company had been incorporated by the principal stockholders of the old company, that is, the Investment Company, and that to facilitate the early resumption of business the certificate holders were requested to sign a transfer enclosed and to return same, together with old certificates and unpaid dues. It was stated that the purpose of this transfer was to preserve their interest in the reserve funds of the old company for the benefit of the new certificates.

A great number of the debenture holders of the National Investment Company complied with this request and made the assignment, and to them were issued debentures of the new company, including a certificate in lieu of the amounts paid on their certificates in the old company.

However, a considerable number of the certificate holders in the old company did not comply with this request, and there[308]*308upon Picton and his associates evolved the plan of buying out as many of these certificate holders as were willing to sell, tñe idea being to end the litigation which was then embarrassing the new company in the prosecution of its business. For this purpose J. R. Picton, Peter G. Thomson, H. G. Pounsford, D. James Davis, A. J. Parlin and George Kreis, being all directors of the National Investment Company, and also, with the exception of A. J. Parlin, directors of the National Endowment •Company, gave their several notes amounting in all to $35,000 to the German National Bank of Cincinnati. These notes were the individual obligations of the several persons whose names were signed to the notes, as it appears from the evidence that owing to the litigation then pending against the National Investment Company, the German National Bank would not lend anything to the National Investment Company upon its own responsibility. The money obtained in this manner was placed in the hands of W. C. Wachs, then cashier of the German National bank, as trustee, and with it the said Wachs proceeded to buy up the claims of those who did not transfer their old certificates to the National Endowment Company.

When the receivership proceedings against the National Investment Company were wound up in the Superior Court of Cincinnati, an order was made by that court that Picton, trustee, be paid the sum of $16,156.23 out of the funds in the hands of the treasurer of the state of Ohio. An order was also made to pay to Wachs, trustee, out of said funds a dividend upon the amount of claims that had been assigned to him by those certificate holders who had not transferred to the new company and whose claims he had been able to buy up. The amount so ordered paid to him still left a deficit to the extent of $10,885.21, which sum was the difference between what he received from the treasurer of state and the $35,000 that had been made available to him by the giving of the notes to the German National Bank. At the same time the National Investment Company was indebted to the German National Bank upon its note for $10,700, upon which'a payment of $3,000.00 had previously been made.

[309]*309On or about the 5th day of August, 1904, the treasurer of the state of Ohio sent a check payable to the order of John R. Pieton, trustee, for $16,156.23, being the amount that was ordered paid to him in the case in the Superior Cjourt of Cincinnati, and the said check was endorsed and delivered by John R. Pieton, trustee, to the German National Bank. Of the said sum, $10,885.21, was applied to pay the deficit in the Wachs trusteeship fund, and the balance, $5,271.02, was applied to the payment of the note of the National Investment Company in the hands of the German National Bank.

It may be stated is passing that neither the Pieton trusteeship fund or the Wachs trusteeship fund received the amount from the treasurer of state that it had been anticipated each would receive for the reason that a large part of said fund in the hands of the state authorities was consumed by court costs, counsel fees, and other expenses, a thing not at all unusual but more than necessarily common in affairs of this kind.

It is upon this diversion of the amount received by John R.

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Bluebook (online)
17 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 305, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mccauley-v-german-national-bank-ohctcomplhamilt-1914.