National Bank of Commerce v. Pierce

219 S.W. 578, 280 Mo. 614, 1920 Mo. LEXIS 219
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedMarch 22, 1920
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 219 S.W. 578 (National Bank of Commerce v. Pierce) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
National Bank of Commerce v. Pierce, 219 S.W. 578, 280 Mo. 614, 1920 Mo. LEXIS 219 (Mo. 1920).

Opinion

WILLIAMS, P. J.

This is an action at law tried without a jury in the Circuit Court of the City of St. Louis, by which action the plaintiff sought and recovered a judgment in the sum of $700,000 as damages, for the alleged conversion, by defendant, of ten thous- and shares of the capital stock of the Nashville Terminal Company. Prom the above judgment defendant has duly perfected an appeal.

Plaintiff’s theory of the case is that this stock was deposited with it on July 18, 1904, as collateral, upon certain notes of the Tennessee Construction Company, totaling $700,000 ; that the bank never surrendered its lien on said stock, but that the defendant in December, 1908, obtained possession of said stock and thereafter converted the same to his own use and to plaintiff’s damage in the aforesaid sum.

Defendant’s theory of the case is: (1) that the stock was never pledged to the plaintiff bank as security for this loan; (2) if said stock was ever so pledged the bank thereafter surrendered or waived its right as pledgee of said stock; (3) even though it be found that defendant did convert the stock, the plaintiff suffered only nominal damages; and (4) if. plaintiff ever had any cause of action, the same has become barred under the five-year Statute of Limitations.

Several days were occupied in the trial of this case and we have before us a very large printed record. Counsel in their briefs, do not seem to have been able to agree entirely upon the facts. We have therefore made a careful review of the entire record for ourselves.

This is an action at law and one of our chief concerns .upon this review is to ascertain whether there *622 is any substantial evidence to support the judgment of the trial court. It will therefore be unnecessary to set out in tiresome detail all of the testimony, as though we were reviewing the case as a court in equity, but it will be sufficient' to confine our statement of facts very largely to that portion of the evidence which will throw light upon the ^question of whether there was substantial evidence to support the judgment below.

The evidence tending to support plaintiff’s theory of the case may be summarized as follows:

The Tennessee Construction Company, a Missouri corporation, with a capital stock of only $2,000', was used, by one J. C. Van Blarcom and associates, as a corporate organization, through which said Van Blarcom and associates constructed several million dollars worth of railroad property in the State of Tennessee. Said Construction Company made contracts with railroad co'mpanies to do certain railroad construction work, and in payment for such work generally took all the capital stock of the railroad company and the mortgage bonds which were issued upon the properties thus constructed. Van Blarcom was vice-president of said Construction Company and up to May, 1911, was largely in control of said company, and was apparently its sole financial agent, negotiating’ loans for the same by using the stock and bonds as collateral.

One of the railroad properties which the Construction Company built was the Nashville Terminal Company. This consisted of about fifteen miles of terminal railroad in the southern portion of the City of Nashville, Tennessee, and certain switch tracks to local industries. This was constructed as a terminal property to he used in connection with a railroad afterwards known 'as the Tennessee Central Railroad Company, part of which was being built by Van Blarcom and associates through the Coristruction Company.

As part payment for its work in constructing the Nashville Terminal, the Construction Company acquired all of the capital stock of the Nashville Terminal Company, amounting to ten thousand shares, of the *623 total par value of one million dollars. This is the stool? which forms the basis of this law suit.

This same Yan Blarcom was a large stockholder in and a director of the plaintiff bank. Up until December, 1905, he was vice-president, and thereafter and until his death on October 24, 1908, he was the president of said bank. During all of this time defendant Pierce was one of the large stockholders of the bank and one of its directors. Pierce was also financially interested with Yan Blarcom and others in the various railroad enterprises above mentioned.

In 1906, Henry C. Pierce and J. C. Van Blarcom, as plaintiffs, instituted a suit in the Circuit'Court of the City of St. Louis, against the executor of the estate of William H. Thompson, deceased, for an accounting. This petition, among other allegations, contained the following:

“And plaintiffs state further, that on or about the 1st day of February, 1902, the said William H. Thompson and the plaintiffs herein entered into an oral agreement, whereby they mutually undertook and agreed to promote and finance the Tennessee Central Railway, a corporation organized under the laws of the State of Tennessee, which was then and there constructing and operating line or lines of railway located in said State, and to promote and finance other incorporated companies allied with the said Tennessee Central Railway, to-wit: the' Nashville & Clarksville Railway Company, the Tennessee Central Railway Company, the Nashville & Knoxville Railway Company, the Brier Hill Collieries — all incorporated under the laws of the State of Tennessee; the Cumberland River Coal Company, incorporated under the laws of the State of Maine, and the Tennessee Construction Company, incorporated under the laws of the State of Missouri; and to acquire and hold jointly, either directly in their own names, or through the said Tennessee Construction Company, stocks and bonds of the said several corporations, and it was then and there agreed by and between the said parties that they would respectively, in equal shares, *624 provide and advance all necessary cash, credit, discounts and securities for the purpose of promoting, financing and carrying on the said Tennessee Central Railway and completing the construction of the railroad, then and there being constructed and operated by the Tennessee Central Railway, as well as of the said Nashville Terminal Company, for the purpose of ultimately disposing of their joint holdings and interest in the said several corporations so as to realize a profit out of the same — which profits, as well as any losses that might be incurred, were to be shared equally by them. ’ ’

During the year 1902 the Construction Company, through its vice-president, Van Blarcom, negotiated with the plaintiff bank, three promissory notes, in the aggregate sum' of $)700>,000. This loan will hereinafter be referred to as the $700,000 loan. This loan has never been paid and it is the loan which plaintiff bank claims this stock was pledged to secure. At the time this loan was negotiated it was secured by 750 general mortgage bonds of the Tennessee Central Railroad Company of the par value of $750,00G and 250 bonds of the Nashville Terminal Company of the total par value of $250,000. (It is not even claimed by the bank that the stock in question was placed with the bank as collateral when the loan was first made, but that the stock was depositéd as collateral to secure this loan on July 18, 1904).

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Related

Pierce v. National Bank of Commerce in St. Louis
13 F.2d 40 (Eighth Circuit, 1926)
National Bank of Commerce v. Maryland Casualty Co.
270 S.W. 691 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1925)
Sawyer v. French
235 S.W. 126 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1921)

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Bluebook (online)
219 S.W. 578, 280 Mo. 614, 1920 Mo. LEXIS 219, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/national-bank-of-commerce-v-pierce-mo-1920.