Midgley v. Ralls

176 So. 799, 234 Ala. 685, 1937 Ala. LEXIS 482
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedNovember 4, 1937
Docket7 Div. 453.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 176 So. 799 (Midgley v. Ralls) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Midgley v. Ralls, 176 So. 799, 234 Ala. 685, 1937 Ala. LEXIS 482 (Ala. 1937).

Opinion

BROWN, Justice.

This appeal is from the final decree of the circuit court, sitting in equity, denying to complainants relief and dismissing their bill. The ground on which the decree is rested is that the complainants failed to meet and carry the burden of proof imposed by the bill’s material averments.

The bill is one in the nature of a bill of review, filed by the minor children of Charles H. Midgley, deceased, through and by their next friend and guardian, to vacate, set aside, and annul a former decree of the court, authorizing the register of the court to execute in their name a mortgage on valuable business property in the city of Gadsden, which complainants inherited from their deceased father, to secure an alleged temporary loan and for future advances, for the support, maintenance, and education of said minors, and the protection of their property; and to set aside, vacate, and annul said mortgage, the foreclosure thereof, and the deed executed in pursuance of the foreclosure by the Gadsden National Bank to itself as the purchaser at the foreclosure sale, and for a sale of said property for division among the joint owners.

Upon full review and consideration of the competent and legal evidence, to our *687 minds the conclusion is irresistible that the circuit court erred in denying the complainants relief and dismissing their bill.

We now state briefly the controlling facts leading to this conclusion.

Midgley, the father of the complainants, died intestate, October 12, 1924, leaving surviving him, his widow, and said complainants, a girl and a boy, respectively, seven and six years of age, and an estate consisting of improved real property in the city of Gadsden, estimated to be worth about $50,000. This included a residence on Turrentine avenue in one of the best residential districts. The rent income from the property, not including the residence, was from $1,600 to $1,800 per annum.

The property was unincumbered, and his debts all paid.

In December, 1926, Midgley’s widow, the mother of complainants, married Howard L. Ralls, who was at that time, and for a number of years prior thereto, the cashier of the Gadsden National Bank, in general charge over the bank under the supervision of its officers and directors. Ralls had two boys, and, after the marriage, with these boys moved into the Midgley residence, and there Ralls and his two boys, and Mrs. Ralls with her two children lived as one family, without paying rent therefor. Thereafter, three more children, the issue of said marriage, were born to the Ralls,

By frequent surreptitious overdrafts, referred to in the testimony as loans, Ralls became indebted to the bank in the sum of $10,618.33, and Mrs. Ralls, as appears from the bank records was allowed to overdraw, without any authority except from her husband cashier, until her indebtedness amounted to $3,250.

The bank records show that three of these overdrafts or loans occurred on the same date, February 24, 1928, aggregating $720, some of them secured by hypothecated stocks, and, on the same date, three different “loans’.’ were charged to Mrs. Ralls, aggregating $1,000. All of these several overdrafts or “loans” occurred between March 2, 1927, and August 31, 1931, on which date the overdrafts charged to Ralls amounted to $10,618.33, and the amount charged on the books to Mrs. Ralls, $3,250.

On the last-mentioned date the sum of $5,500 was transferred on the books, from Ralls’ account, and charged on the account of Mrs. Ralls, boosting her indebtedness to $8,750, and Mrs. Ralls, her husband joining therein, executed a mortgage to the bank on the Midgley home, estimated to be of the value of $15,000, and a one half undivided interest in business property situated in the city of Gadsden, also estimated to be of the value of $15,000, the bank being the owner of the other half interest. This mortgage was executed, recorded, and placed in the files of the bank without the knowledge of the other officials of the bank.

This defalcation of the cashier, taking as true the testimony offered by the defendants, was brought to the knowledge of the bank officials in the latter part of August, 1931, through an investigation by a committee appointed by the board at the suggestion of the chief examiner of banks.

When the amount of the indebtedness of Ralls and wife was reported to the board of directors, to quote from the testimony of the chairman of the committee “They were surprised at the amount of the debt and the question of security was discussed, and the matter was turned over to Mr. Hood. He represented the bank.”

Another member of the board testified that “in the directors’ meeting it was stated that this specific part of this debt — $8750.00 —that rightly belonged to the Midgley children would be charged against them”. That the chairman of the investigating committee complained that the indebtedness of Mr. Ralls and Mrs. Ralls “was out of line and both of the loans were excessive.” That the board designated Mr. Flollingsworth, the president of the bank “to handle the situation further with Mr. Ralls.”

Hollingsworth testified: “Well, the final upshot was that the board demanded that the debts were (be) paid, or satisfactorily secured — that was the substance of it, and that (they) authorized or instructed me to confer with Mr. Ralls and see that matter was reported back if possible in a manner that would be satisfactory to the Board.

“Q. Was it discussed any further after that at that meeting? A. I guess it was discussed,- but that was the final upshot.

“Q. After that meeting, cither that night or the next day or later on, did you discuss the matter with Mr. Ralls? A. I called Mr. Ralls into the directors’ room the next afternoon and had several talks with him— possibly extending over a week or ten days.

“Q. What did he tell you part of this money, or the larger portion was used for ? A. He elaborated on that in his private *688 conversation to me — he made statements to the board, was about the substance of it. I talked to Howard not only as an official of the bank but I think that he felt that way, as a friend of 20 odd years of standing of him, and I called his attention to the fact that he had the authority and that it was especially important if he could either pay them off or make some satisfactory settlement with the board of directors, because the matter involved him with the comptroller at Washington, He never, disputed that or denied it at all. He just told me from day to day that he would do everything he could to straighten it out. At last, after possibly a week or ten days— I would call him most every day and ask him what progress he was making. He said he would talk it over with his wife and see what could be done. The last conference we had he stated that he had talked the matter over' with his wife and that she Had consented to it to assist him in fixing the indebtedness up to the satisfaction of the board.-

“Q.' What was the next step that was taken? A. After that the next step, I think, Mr.' Ralls and I went into Mr. Hood’s office. After that I had nothing further to do with the matter.” (Italics supplied.)

Mf. Hood testified: “I was a director of the Gadsden National Bank and its attorney until it closed on January 9, 1932.

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Bluebook (online)
176 So. 799, 234 Ala. 685, 1937 Ala. LEXIS 482, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/midgley-v-ralls-ala-1937.