McConnell v. Sprouse

13 Tenn. App. 291, 1931 Tenn. App. LEXIS 72
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedFebruary 28, 1931
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 13 Tenn. App. 291 (McConnell v. Sprouse) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McConnell v. Sprouse, 13 Tenn. App. 291, 1931 Tenn. App. LEXIS 72 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1931).

Opinions

This was a suit by S.S. McConnell, State Superintendent of Banks and Receiver for the Peoples Bank of *Page 293 Springfield, to recover of G.B. Sprouse, president and director of said bank, three notes aggregating $25,000, secured by a mortgage on a warehouse and real estate, executed by the Tennessee-Kentucky Tobacco Co.

The bill alleged that Sprouse was a stockholder, director and president of said Peoples Bank of Springfield, and that the Tennessee-Kentucky Tobacco Co. owed said bank several notes, amounting to $24,000; and, on July 12, 1924, the Tobacco Co. executed three notes of $8333.33 each, secured by a mortgage on its warehouse and real estate, to said Sprouse, which notes were for the benefit of said bank, and to be used as collateral to obtain credit at other banks for funds greatly needed to carry on said bank's business and to ward off its impending failure; but since the failure of said bank, Sprouse now refuses to turn over said notes to the receiver and claims that they were taken for his own individual benefit, and that he issued his own check upon his personal account in said bank, which the Tobacco Co. used to pay off its old, unsecured indebtedness to the bank. It was alleged that said bank was on said date insolvent and unable to honor and pay its customers' checks.

The receiver sought to recover said notes and mortgage for two reasons: (1) under an express agreement that they were taken for the bank's benefit, and (2) that Sprouse as director and president should not be permitted to exchange his deposit in an insolvent bank for securities worth their face value.

Defendant Sprouse answered and denied that he had taken said notes and mortgage for the benefit of the bank but on the contrary he had made said loan by check on his personal account and had taken the notes and mortgage for his own individual benefit, in good faith, without knowledge of the insolvency of the bank. He pleaded want of mutuality, want of consideration, failure of consideration, uncertainty of the contract both as to the parties and subject matter, ratification and estoppel and the statute of frauds.

The Chancellor found the issues in favor of the complainant and rendered a decree against the defendant Sprouse for the amount of the loan and interest, totaling $31,000, the decree to be satisfied by the surrender of the notes secured by the mortgage, in which event the receiver was ordered to reinstate on the books of the bank the sum of $25,000 as a deposit to the credit of defendant Sprouse and to pay him thereon the percent of dividends heretofore paid to other depositors.

The defendant, Sprouse, appealed and has assigned twenty errors, which are, in substance, that the Chancellor erred in finding the issues in favor of complainant and in rendering the decree because the defendant took said notes and mortgage for himself and not for the bank; that the alleged parol agreement was in contravention *Page 294 of the statute of frauds, and void for uncertainty, want of consideration and mutuality, and failure of consideration; that the Chancellor erred in holding the contract valid as to the bank and void as to Sprouse, in that, the decree held that the bank could recover on the mortgage and rescinded the contract as to Sprouse; that the Chancellor erred in granting relief on account of the insolvency of the bank because the bill did not ask relief on that theory, and such relief was repugnant to the other relief prayed; and because the allegations of the bill ratified complainant's withdrawal of the $25,000, and the receiver was therefore estopped to recover on the ground of the insolvency of the bank; and because the proof failed to show that the creditors of the bank suffered any loss by the transaction as the Tobbacco Co.'s notes to the bank were not secured and that Company was insolvent; that the bank paid 30% on the deposits and the Tobacco Co. paid only 20% on its debts; and that the Chancellor erred in admitting certain testimony.

The Peoples Bank of Springfield was a state institution and had a capital stock of $100,000. Defendant Sprouse was a wealthy man and owned a large amount of stock and had much money on deposit in said bank. He was and had been a director in the bank for more than ten years, and had been vice-president for some years. But he insists that he was not an active vice-president, received no salary and that it was merely an honorary position.

The Tennessee-Kentucky Tobacco Co. was a corporation and it seems that its principal officers were also the principal officers of said bank, and as a result of this situation it had borrowed large sums of money from the bank and in July, 1924, it owed the bank several notes aggregating $23,000 which were then held by the bank. It also owed the bank another lot of notes aggregating $15,000, which had been re-discounted to other banks, and it also had a very large overdraft. This indebtedness had been running for some time and the bank examiner had criticized the officials of the bank about this large indebtedness.

In the spring of 1924 the Peoples Bank was in a bad financial condition. Its officers had lent more than one-half a million dollars to parties who were insolvent, and the bank had become insolvent. It had been forced to re-discount its paper to other banks, but it appears that defendant Sprouse had not been apprised of these loans and of the financial condition. But on July 8, 1924, Sprouse was appealed to for help in borrowing money from other banks to the amount of $50,000 in order for the bank to transact business, and on July 12, 1924, Sprouse and H.T. Stratton, president of said bank, went to Nashville to see Vance Alexander, vice-president of the American National Bank, of Nashville, for the purpose of borrowing $50,000. Alexander told them that if they would put up good *Page 295 collateral he would lend their bank $50,000 provided that Stratton would resign and that Sprouse be elected president, to which they readily agreed. They returned to Springfield, called a meeting of the board of directors, Stratton resigned and Sprouse was elected president, and Stratton was in turn elected vice-president. Sprouse says that he would not agree to accept the presidency of the bank until after he had gone over the notes and its papers and had ascertained whether it would be a going concern. He called in the cashier and other officers of the bank and they began an examination of the bank's books and its paper on that afternoon. They worked on the books on up until the afternoon of July 15th, when several other large notes were discovered in the last lot that they examined. These notes aggregated one-half of a million dollars and were executed by insolvent parties, and it was found that the bank was hopelessly insolvent. The State Superintendent of Banks was notified that afternoon and he immediately came to Springfield, was appointed receiver and took charge of the affairs of the bank. It was found that the bank was hopelessly insolvent. It has paid only 30% on the deposits.

After Sprouse's return to Springfield from his visit to see Vance Alexander, on July 12, 1924, and after he was elected president of said bank, he lent $25,000 to the Tennessee-Kentucky Tobacco Co. by drawing his check payable to said Tobacco Co. and took the three notes secured by mortgage on the warehouse and real estate owned by said Tobacco Co. His check was deposited in the bank to the credit of the Tobacco Co. and it paid the lot of notes amounting to $23,000 then held by said bank, which notes were marked paid and turned over to the Tobacco Co., and the remaining $2000 was applied on the large overdraft of the Tobacco Co.

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Bluebook (online)
13 Tenn. App. 291, 1931 Tenn. App. LEXIS 72, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcconnell-v-sprouse-tennctapp-1931.