Missouri State Life Ins. v. Keyes

46 F. Supp. 181, 1933 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 958
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Kentucky
DecidedMarch 18, 1933
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 46 F. Supp. 181 (Missouri State Life Ins. v. Keyes) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Missouri State Life Ins. v. Keyes, 46 F. Supp. 181, 1933 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 958 (W.D. Ky. 1933).

Opinion

COCHRAN, District Judge.

This suit is before me on petition for rehearing filed by the defendant against whom a decree was entered upon the hearing. It was for the amount of two certificates of deposit issued by the National Bank of Kentucky, of which the defendant is receiver, and upon which the suit was brought. Each certificate was dated August 21, 1930, was for $250,000, and provided that it was payable to plaintiff’s order six months after date after thirty days’ notice with interest at the rate of 3% per annum. They were issued prior to the closure of the Bank which took place November 17, 1930. The defendant had filed an answer setting up what he conceived to be a defense to the suit and on-the hearing, in advance of the introduction of the evidence, a statement was made on his behalf of the facts which he expected to establish in support of his defense. I held that the facts stated did not make out a good defense to the suit and adjudged the plaintiff was entitled to a decree. It is not claimed the statement did not cover fully the facts which defendant expected to prove. The question before me, on this petition, therefore, is whether according to that statement plaintiff was entitled to the decree.

The statement was rather extended but the substance thereof can be presented in brief form. The two certificates were issued in substitution for two such certificates, of like tenor, issued by the Bank to •Caldwell & Co., the day of their date, and shortly thereafter sold and assigned by Caldwell & Company to plaintiff for their face value, $500,000, then and there paid by the latter to the former. One was issued September 5, 1930, pursuant to plaintiff’s request of August 27, 1930, and the other September 16, 1930, pursuant to such request of September 13, 1930. These two original certificates were given for the proceeds of a loan made August 21, 1930, by the Bank to the Associated Life Company, Inc., evidenced by the latter’s promissory note secured by certain collateral. At the time of the loan and as a condition precedent to the issuance of the certificates the Associated Life Companies, Inc., through its secretary delivered to the Bank a letter addressed to it, containing these words r “You have today granted loan of $500,000 to. this Company from which proceeds we have purchased two $250,000 certificates of deposit from your Bank in the name of Caldwell & Co. We hereby agree and guarantee that the certificates of deposit will not be cashed only in the reduction of the above mentioned loan.” $300,000 has been realized from the collateral placed to secure the loan, leaving $200,000 still unpaid.

Caldwell & Company was a corporation, engaged in the brokerage and promotion, business at Nashville, Tenn. Rogers Caldwell was its president and he and his father,. James E. Caldwell, both of whom lived in Nashville, owned its capital stock arid, completely dominated its affairs. The Associated Life Companies, Inc., was a corporation engaged in business, possibly at Nashville. The nature of its business does, not appear. It was dominated by Caldwell. & Co. and was a mere dummy organization, created and existing for that corporation.. G. C. Arnett was its president and he andi [183]*183Rogers Caldwell were directors of it. The plaintiff was a corporation engaged in life insurance business at St. Louis, Missouri. Hillsman Taylor was its president and Rogers Caldwell, James E. Caldwell and G. C. Arnett were directors of it. It does not appear that there were not other directors. It is likely that there were. Its executive committee were composed of Taylor, the two Caldwells, and Arnett. This committee, acting on behalf of plaintiff, purchased the two original certificates from Caldwell & Co., for whom Rogers Caldwell acted in the transaction. Caldwell & Co. had at one time owned as much as 70% of plaintiff’s capital stock and at the time of the transaction in question owned 30%. Through Rogers Caldwell it dominated plaintiff. His will determined its action, particularly in the matter of its investments. Instances of this were set forth. Though plaintiff’s home office was at St. Louis, 75% of the meetings of the executive committee and board of directors were held in Nashville in Caldwell & Co.’s offices or in an office next door thereto, to which many of its books and papers had been transferred. Rogers Caldwell and G. C. Arnett knew of the side agreement made by the Associated Life Companies, Inc. They were present at the time of the transaction. It was not stated that James E. Caldwell had actual knowledge thereof, nor that facts would be shown that would justify the inference that he had such knowledge. The statement was that he “must have known it because of his close connection with Caldwell & Co. and all these others and the like of that” and that he “knew about it, perhaps not as much as the others.” It was not stated that Taylor had any knowledge of such agreement. The statement as to him was that “if he exercised his proper duty in investigating about the big investment of his big Life Insurance Company, would have known about it.” It was further stated that Taylor had testified by deposition that he did not know anything about it. After plaintiff’s request that the substituted certificates be issued and before they were issued Rogers Caldwell had a conference with the President and a Vice President of the Bank in which they said “Mr. Caldwell, this isn’t according to the agreement; the agreement provides that these certificates will not be cashed except in payment of that Associated Life Companies note,” and Caldwell agreed with them that the agreement made by the Associated Life Companies would be binding on plaintiff and that plaintiff would not cash those certificates of deposit except and unless the note had been paid.

Such then I take to be a fair statement of the facts on which defendant based its defense. As $300,000 had been realized from the collateral placed to secure the note leaving $200,000 unpaid, if a defense at all, they were only such to the extent of $200,000. That defense was that the original certificates of deposit were not to be paid until the loan to the Associated Life Companies, Inc. note was paid- — that this agreement constituted an infirmity in the certificates which would affect one purchasing them if he had knowledge thereof— that the plaintiff was chargeable with Rogers Caldwell’s knowledge thereof — and that by reason of the agreement with Rogers Caldwell before the issuance of the substituted certificates those certificates were affected by the same condition and infirmity as the originals. They were not to be paid until the note of the Associated Life Companies, Inc., note was paid.

1. Two questions are presented here. One is whether plaintiff would have been entitled to recover had there been no substitution and the suit had been brought upon the originals. This depends upon the effect of the side agreement and whether plaintiff was chargeable with notice thereof. It is not certain that the effect of that agreement was to import a condition in the certificates that they were not to- be paid until the note of the Associated Life Companies, Inc., was paid. The certificates were not pledged as collateral to secure the note. It was secured by other collateral out of which $300,000 has been realized. Caldwell & Company to whom the certificates were issued did not execute the agreement. It was executed only by the Associated Life Companies, Inc. Nor did it provide that the certificates were not to be sold. It must have been realized that if they were sold to an innocent purchaser he would be unaffected by the agreement. The likelihood of Caldwell & Co.

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Bluebook (online)
46 F. Supp. 181, 1933 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 958, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/missouri-state-life-ins-v-keyes-kywd-1933.