Meholin v. Carlson

107 P. 755, 17 Idaho 742, 1910 Ida. LEXIS 131
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 3, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 107 P. 755 (Meholin v. Carlson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Meholin v. Carlson, 107 P. 755, 17 Idaho 742, 1910 Ida. LEXIS 131 (Idaho 1910).

Opinions

SULLIVAN, C. J.

— This action was brought by the plaintiff as receiver, to foreclose an alleged pledge agreement and for other purposes. It is alleged, among other things, in the complaint, that the defendant and appellant, Carlson, on December 10, 1907, executed and delivered to the Capital State Bank his promissory note for $1,400, to secure the payment of which he pledged to the bank ten shares of its capital stock represented by certificate No. 183; that said note and the stock certificate came into respondent’s hands, as receiver of said bank; that said promissory note has not been paid, and prays for a decree of foreclosure and sale of said stock certificate and for attorney’s fees and for a deficiency judgment against the defendant.

The answer admits the formal allegations as to the corporate existence of said bank and the appointment of the receiver, also the execution of said promissory note, but denies. [749]*749its delivery as well as the ownership and pledging of the bank stock, and as an affirmative defense certain matters are set out relating to the manner in which the stock was issued to him, claiming that by a contemporaneous oral agreement he was not to be liable upon said promissory note; that the dividends of the stock were to pay the note, and that he was induced to enter into the transaction by reason of false and fraudulent representations.

On motion of plaintiff, all of the affirmative defenses were stricken from the answer. The action was thereafter tried before the court and the receiver was the only witness who testified on the part of the plaintiff. He testified, in substance, that he received the note and stock certificate when he took charge of the affairs of the bank as receiver; that there were no indorsements on the certificate and the blank assignment of the stock was not filled out; that he found no written pledge agreement, and the only evidence of any kind by which it was attempted to show a pledge agreement was an alleged admission which the receiver testified the defendant made to him about two or three months after he took charge of the bank as receiver; that at the time of said conversation with the defendant, the latter explained to him the condition under which the stock was issued and the note given. The court permitted him to testify, over the objections of the defendant, what was said by the defendant, and he testified that the defendant stated he was solicited to take the stock, and that the bank officials promised him the dividends from such stock would pay for it or pay said promissory note. The defendant testified in his own behalf that he had not delivered the note to the bank or to any of its officials, that the certificate of stock had never been delivered to him, that he never had it in his hands, and that he is not now and never has been the owner of said stock.

Judgment was entered in favor of the plaintiff. The appeal is from the judgment.

The first error assigned is the striking out of the affirmative defense of the answer and excluding the evidence offered in .support thereof. In support of that assignment counsel con[750]*750tend that the receiver took the assets of said bank as he found them, subject to all defenses and equities that might exist against them. This rule, as a rule of law, is conceded to be correct by counsel for respondent, but it is contended that it has no application to the facts of this ease.

It appears that the original transaction, out of which said promissory note arose, was entered into two years prior to the execution of said note, and was a subscription to a new issue of bank stock and the purchase of that stock by the defendant, with an alleged secret agreement between the defendant. and the bank that he should never have to pay the note and that the dividends of the stock would pay it. The seventh, eighth, ninth, tenth and eleventh paragraphs of said answer are as follows:

“7. And further answering said complaint defendant avers that on or about the 16th day of December, 1905, he was solicited by said bank to purchase some of the new issue of the capital stock of said bank, for the reason, as stated by said bank, that it would be a benefit to said bank and tend to increase its business to have defendant’s name connected, therewith. That defendant declined on the ground that he did not have the means. That the said bank thereupon falsely and fraudulently represented to defendant that the stock of said bank was worth a premium óf forty per cent above its par or face value, or the sum of $140 per share and that the dividends therefrom would in a very short time equal the value of said stock, and it then and there represented to defendant that if he would permit the use of his name as being interested in said bank and thereby cause new business to be attracted to said bank, it would cause to be issued in his name ten fully paid-up and nonassessable shares of said stock, and would hold the same until dividends thereon would equal the sum of fourteen hundred dollars, the alleged value of said stock, and that on the happening of that event, the said stock should be delivered to and become the property of defendant.
“8. That the said bank thereupon, and by means of said false and fraudulent representations, and without any consideration whatever, induced defendant to exécute a note for [751]*751the sum of $1,400, dated on said 16th day of December, 1905, which note, except as to purporting to be due in six months, was in tenor and effect the same as the note set forth in said complaint, but the said bank stated that said bank would never call upon defendant to pay said note and that the note together with the certificate should constitute a memorandum of the transaction without any liability whatever on the part of defendant to pay the same or any part thereof, or to pay for the said certificate of stock, except as the same should be paid for out of the dividends therefrom. That certain dividends declared were applied in accordance with agreement by the bank but defendant cannot say how much.
“9. That no indebtedness of any kind was,ever due from defendant to said bank, and the said certificate of stock was never delivered to defendant, and defendant never delivered the said note to said bank, and no consideration whatever passed to defendant for or on account of the execution thereof, and the said plaintiff has'never at any time parted with anything of value, for or on account of said transaction.
“10. That the said representations were false and the actual value of the capital stock of said bank at the time said representations were made did not, upon the best information and belief of defendant, exceed twenty-five dollars per share; and the said ten shares of said stock, purporting to be represented by said certificate No. 183 were at no time of any value whatever, for the reason that the said stock which they purported to represent was not issued for labor done, services performed or money or property actually received, and was therefore wholly fictitious and void. And defendant further avers, upon his information and belief, that said bank was at that time and at all times subsequent thereto in a failing condition, and if called upon at that time or any time' thereafter to meet its just obligations, would have been unable to do so, and said bank has since become insolvent and has been placed in the hands of receivers, and its capital stock is of no value whatever.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
107 P. 755, 17 Idaho 742, 1910 Ida. LEXIS 131, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/meholin-v-carlson-idaho-1910.