Muller v. Planters' Bank Trust Company

275 S.W. 750, 169 Ark. 480, 1925 Ark. LEXIS 480
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedOctober 12, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 275 S.W. 750 (Muller v. Planters' Bank Trust Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Muller v. Planters' Bank Trust Company, 275 S.W. 750, 169 Ark. 480, 1925 Ark. LEXIS 480 (Ark. 1925).

Opinion

McCulloch, C. J.

.This is an.-action instituted in the chancery court of -St. Francis County by appellants, who were stockholders of the Planters’ Bank, a defunct corporation, organized and doing business at Forrest City, against the -directors of the bank to r.ecov-er. on account of alleged negligence in the operation of the .affairs of the hank.

The Planters’ Bank & Trust Company, a banking corporation at Forrest City, which took over the assets of the Planters’ Bank and assumed its liabilities to depositors, was joined .as defendant, and recovery against that institution was sought by appellants on the ground alleged in the complaint that the consent of the stockholders to the transfer of the assets of the Planters’ Bank was induced by false and fraudulent representations of the directors of the old bank, who also became directors of the new bank, concerning the value cf those assets and the financial condition cf the old bank. There are certain other allegations of fraud and misconduct, but in the presentation of the case here the .only relief sought is against the directors of the Planters’ Bank for alleged negligence in managing the affairs cf the bank.

The Planters ’ Bank was organized in the year 1910 with Henry P. Gorman, an experienced banker, as cashier. He died in the year 1918, and was succeeded by a young man who had been his assistant for five or six years prior to that time. The affairs of the bank wiere in a prosperous condition until the summer of 1920, when it was discovered that the affairs were in a doubtful condition on account of insufficient securities from borrowers. The bank experienced difficulty in keeping up its cash reserve, and from -time to time some of the directors borrowed money on their own private securities and placed it in the bank in order to restore the cash reserve.

On May '2, 1921, a meeting of the stockholders was held, at which a resolution was adopted with substantial uuanimity by which .the directors of the 'bank were authorized to liquidate the affairs of the bank by transferring all of its assets to a new barking institution then organized under the name of the Planters ’ Bank & Trust Company, that institution assuming all of the liabilities to the depositors of the old bank. The resolution adopted specified in detail the terms of the deal to be consummated with the Planters’ Bank & Trust Company, and that arrangement was carried out by the directors in accordance with the resolution.

The Planters’ Bank & Trust Company assumed the liabilities to the depositors of the old bank, and the directors of the old bank conveyed to it the banking house and fixtures and the bulk of' the bills receivable and securities of the face value of $219,468.39. These assets were taken by the new bank at face value,, but the sum of such value being about $14,000 less than the assumed liabilities, the Planters’ Bank & Trust Company agreed to, and did, advance that sum upon the transfer to it as collateral security of the. remainder of the bills receivable and securities of the old bank -of the face value of $76,447.36. A note was executed to the Planters’ Bank & Trust Company for said sum of $14,000, and the last mentioned batch of doubtful securities were transferred to a trustee as collateral security for the note. Prior to that time two of the directors of the old hank had, in order to keep up the cash reserve, borrowed the sum of $40,000 and deposited it in the bank, not to be checked out, and the old bank was thereby indebted to those directors in that sum at the time of the liquidation. That debt, however, was not assumed by the new bank, but a note was executed to those two directors for the amount and the securities of the face value of $76,447.36 were held by the trustee as collateral security for said note, subject to the prior lien of the Planters’ Bank & Trust Company for the $14,000 note. The Planters’ Bank ceased to do business, and was succeeded by the new institution, the Planters ’ Bank & Trust Company, the latter institution being made up principally of stockholders of the old bank. All of the stockholders of the old bank were offered stock in the new; many of them, however, including appellants, did not take advantage of the offer.

It is alleged that the directors of the bank negligently permitted Gilliam, the cashier, to conduct the affairs of the bank recklessly and without good judgment, which caused losses to the extent that it became insolvent. It is also alleged that Gilliam used funds of the bank for his own private purposes and was short in his accounts, and that this occurred by reason of the negligence of the directors, who, it is alleged, allowed him to continue to handle the affairs of the bank after his shortage occurred, and after it was known that he had made bad loans.

The record in the case is very large, and the testimony on the only issue left in the case for our determination is voluminous. The testimony is undisputed as to the condition of the hank at the time of the liquidation of its affairs, but there is a conflict in the testimony as to the cause of the losses — whether by negligence of the cashier and the directors, or whether they occurred from depreciation in value of the securities, which occurred in the year 1920. It is undisputed that 'the bank had liquid assets in the form of secured loans of the value of $219,468.39, which were turned over to the new institution at their face value, and that the doubtful securities were of the face value of $76,447.36. It is conceded that the last mentioned lot of securities were of very doubtful value, and that there will he heavy losses on the same, but there is some conflict as to the extent of the loss. The testimony adduced by appellants singles out many i items of the securities which the testimony tended to show were bad loans — loans that were ill advised and I insufficiently secured at the time they were made. On. the contrary, the testimony adduced by appellees tended to show that, while most of these securities were of little | value at the time of the liquidation, they were good at \ the’time the loans were made, and that the losses occurred ¡ bv reason of general depreciation in property values. There is a conflict in the testimony also as to the extent of the personal attention given to the affairs of the bank bv the directors. Appellants undertook to show that the directors gave very little attention to the affairs' of the bank, and left everything: in the hands of Gilliam, the. ^ashier. Thev support this by introducing the minute book to show that the meetings of the board of directors were not regularly held, hut that long intervals occurred between these meetings. On the other hand, the directors and other witnesses introduced testified that the directors gave personal attention to the affairs of the hank, and supervised the transactions conducted by the cashier, and that the directors were not derelict in their duty. The minutes of the directors’ meetings were not conclusive as to the extent of the attention given by the directors to the business of the institution. It would serve no useful purpose to detail the various loans around which the controversy turns as to the conduct of the directors and the cause of the losses. Suffice fit to say that the finding of the chancellor that the directors gave a reasonable amount of attention to the management of the affairs of the bank and were not negligent in that respect is not against the preponderance of the evidence.

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Bluebook (online)
275 S.W. 750, 169 Ark. 480, 1925 Ark. LEXIS 480, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/muller-v-planters-bank-trust-company-ark-1925.