Moore v. State

17 S.W.2d 30, 159 Tenn. 112, 6 Smith & H. 112, 1928 Tenn. LEXIS 68
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedMay 25, 1929
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 17 S.W.2d 30 (Moore v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Moore v. State, 17 S.W.2d 30, 159 Tenn. 112, 6 Smith & H. 112, 1928 Tenn. LEXIS 68 (Tenn. 1929).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Swiggart

delivered the opinion of the court.

The plaintiff in error, G. D. Moore, assigns as error that the evidence preponderates against his conviction for receiving deposits in a hank, of which he was cashier, at a time when he had good reason to believe that the hank was insolvent.

The indictment charged that Moore had knowledge of the insolvency of the bank at the’ time he received the deposit in question, but the trial judge, ruling upon the motion for a new trial, has stated that the proof convinced him that the plaintiff in error did not know or believe his hank insolvent, and approved the conviction because he believed from the proof that the plaintiff in error did have “good reason to believe” the bank insolvent, and, therefore, rendered himself guilty under the statute, Acts 1913, chapter '20', section 34.

It does not appear to he seriously contended in this court that the proof is insufficient to show that the bank was insolvent in fact; but counsel for plaintiff in error correctly insist that the guilt or innocence of the plaintiff in error must be determined by considering the condition of the bank as nearly as possible as it appeared to the plaintiff in error at the time the deposit was received.

The Bank of Portland, of which plaintiff in error was cashier, had a capital stock of $25,000, and showed on its books a surplus of about $9000. All of the capital stock except eleven shares was owned by the father of the *115 plaintiff in error, R. D. Moore, who took an active interest in the management of the hank nntil it was closed.

The conviction is for receiving a deposit from C. W. Kerley oh the morning of October 4, 1926. During that day practically' all of the available cash of the bank was exhausted by the withdrawal of about $10,000 in deposits. At the close of the day the bank had less than $300 in cash, with several hundred dollars owing by other banks, and, therefore, collectible on demand. A meeting of the directors after banking hours resulted in a decision to transfer the bank to the State Banking Superintendent for liquidátion. Referring to this meetiug of the directors and the decision to surrender the bank for liquidation, and to the fact .that the cash had been reduced to .less than $300 by the withdrawals of the day, the plaintiff in error testified: “We knew that we could not run with that amount of stuff on hand, and rather than to involve any of the depositors, or anything like that, we decided that night not to reopen the next morning. ’ ’

The statement of the bank’s assets and liabilities at the close of its active business showed deposits in the sum of $126,500', of which $51,800 were time deposits. The total loans and discounts were $221,700. In addition to the deposits other liabilities, excluding capital stock and surplus, consisted of $80,000' borrowed from other banks, and outstanding cashier’s cheeks of $1100.

It is probable that the conviction of the plaintiff in error was brought about by the fact that $90,000 had been loaned by the bank to the father, brothers and uncle of the plaintiff in error, and to firms and corporations in which the brothers were interested. The opinion of the learned trial judge, rendered on the hearing of the mo *116 tion for a new trial, however, discloses that he considered the insolvency of the bank to have'resulted from the fact that practically the entire capital had been withdrawn by R. 3>. Moore, the father of plaintiff in error, in the form of loans, and the fact that $101,000' of the assets of the bank consisted of loans secured only by second mortgages on farm property.

Much of the record is devoted to the solvency of the Highland Rim Crate & Furniture Company, the Hardi-son-Hill-Moore Company, and a flour mill, large debtors of the hank, in which brothers of the plaintiff in error were either in control or heavily interested. The trial judge held that the proof was, perhaps, sufficient to establish the solvency of the Crate & Furniture Company and of the Hardison-Hill-Moore Company. While we are inclined to agree with the trial judge, it is quite apparent that both of these concerns were very much involved and had borrowed the limit, their ability to repay being limited to future earnings or proceeds of liquidation. Their debts could not be regarded as quick assets of the bank.

The record does not disclose how long the $40',000 of loans secured by the second mortgages had been outstanding, but it does appear that they were several years old. It appears that the bank had made large loans on real estate prior to 1920, when land values were high, and that after the drop in land.values they had permitted the borrowers to procure as much as they could from Federal Land banks and insurance companies on long time first mortgage loans, paying the proceeds to the bank in part payment of their obligations to it. The $40,000 of second mortgage loans represented the balance owing to *117 the bank after the proceeds of the first mortgage loans had been so applied.

Withput reference to the proof that none of these second mortgage loans had been collected by the receiver, and that whenever a foreclosure sale had been made, the proceeds were insufficient to satisfy the first mortgage, the trial judge stated that it was apparent that the bank had collected all the money it could collect on these debts when the second mortgages were taken, and that the plaintiff in error was not justified in carrying the second mortgage notes as solvent assets of the bank. We find no sufficient answer to this holding of the trial judge, either in the proof or in the brief and argument of counsel.

With respect to the aggregate loan of $26,000, made to R. D. Moore, president and owner of the capital stock of the bank, the trial judge was of the opinion that the plaintiff in error had no reasonable or just cause to regard his father as solvent or the loan as an asset of the bank. As held by the trial judge, it is obvious that the ownership of the shares of stock in the Bank of Portland could not be regarded as an asset of R. D. Moore, in determining whether his debt to the bank could be collected, since the amount of the capital stock cannot be considered as a liability of the bank in determining its solvency. .R. !B. Moore appears to have owned other bank stock and real estate, but for the most part the bank stock was pledged and the real estate mortgaged.

As stated above, the Bank of Portland had been carrying $40,000 of loans on second mortgage paper for a considerable period, without any reason on the part of the plaintiff in error to believe that any of this large sum could be collected until a change in agricultural condi- *118 lions should work an increase in farm land values. More than half the total assets of the hank, including the notes which were most likely to be solvent, had been pledged to secure $80,000 borrowed from other banks. This borrowed money, with the exception of approximately $10,000 in the vault of the bank on the morning of the day it ceased to do business, had been absorbed, and nothing had been done toward the reduction of the debt owing to the bank by its president.

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Bluebook (online)
17 S.W.2d 30, 159 Tenn. 112, 6 Smith & H. 112, 1928 Tenn. LEXIS 68, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moore-v-state-tenn-1929.