Noyes v. Wood

247 F. 72, 159 C.C.A. 290, 4 Alaska Fed. 636, 1917 U.S. App. LEXIS 1639
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedNovember 19, 1917
DocketNo. 2593
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 247 F. 72 (Noyes v. Wood) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Noyes v. Wood, 247 F. 72, 159 C.C.A. 290, 4 Alaska Fed. 636, 1917 U.S. App. LEXIS 1639 (9th Cir. 1917).

Opinion

HUNT, Circuit Judge.

This is a cross-appeal; the original appeal being No. 2528, Jesson et al. v. Noyes, as Receiver of the Washington-Alaska Bank, reported in 245 F. 46, 157 C.C.A. 342, to which reference may be had for the general nature of the suit. By this appeal the receiver asks review of certain findings and conclusions made by the lower court in respect [638]*638to the purchase of certain shares of bank stock, referred to as the Strandberg, Johnson, and McGinn stock, respectively, and also challenges the accuracy of certain conclusions of law and of the decree made upon the facts as found.

The substance of the finding of the court with relation to the purchases of the stock referred to is as follows:

The board of directors of the bank required monthly statements showing the condition of the bank, and on July 13, 1908, considered refunding to those who wished to give up their stock, and thereafter numerous surrenders were made by stockholders. Stock taken back by the bank was charged to treasury stock. On November 18, 1908, the stock of Strandberg Bros., 100 shares, Emma Strandberg, 10 shares, and Johnson, 10 shares, of an aggregate par value of $12,000, was taken up by the bank in part payment of a loan of $15,000 that the bank had previously made to the firm of Strandberg & Johnson. The bank was also paid at that time $4,000 in cash on account of the loan. The court regarded this transaction as the taking of stock for a pre-existing debt rather than as a purchase of stock by the directors, and held that when the transaction was had the directors acted in good faith and in the belief- that the loan to Strandberg was precarious.

McGinn owned 100 shares of stock, of the par value of $10,000, and on October 13, 1910, demanded the right to inspect the books of the bank, and threatened that, unless he was given such right immediately, he would apply for an order permitting the examination and for the appointment' of a receiver. The court found that the directors, fearing that the information obtained by an investigation would be used by McGinn in promoting the interests of a rival bank, and that if litigation were started it would impair confidence, authorized the cashier to lend a purchaser enough money to pay for McGinn’s stock; that one of the directors said that he had a purchaser who would buy the stock for $6,000, but that the money would have to be borrowed; that, the matter being urgent, the cashier bought the stock in his own name, and gave his note to the bank for the purchase price thereof, and paid to McGinn $6,000, the proceeds of the note, for 100 shares of stock; that thereafter, about October 25, 1910, the cashier, without the [639]*639knowledge of the directors, canceled the note, charging the amount thereof to the bank, and surrendered it to the bank; and that thereafter the bank held the stock as treasury stock.

The court found generally that, when stock was taken back by the bank, the amount paid was either turned over in cash or notes held by the bank or canceled and surrendered by the stockholders, that there was no surplus or undivided profit against which the account could be charged, and that the directors acquiesced in the stock surrenders, and in some instances expressly approved the same. The court exonerated Jesson, Hill, and Peoples of all liability connected with the purchase of the Strandberg and Johnson stock, and dismissed the appellant’s action with relation thereto, and also appellant’s action for recovery against the appellees Jesson, Brumbaugh, Clark, Healey, and Preston, directors at the time of the purchase of the McGinn stock.

The evidence upon which the findings rest shows that on November 5, 1908, the executive committee of the bank agreed to lend Strandberg Bros. $15,000 on the security of 110 shares in the Fairbanks Banking Company and notes aggregating $2,500. The directors approved this resolve on November 12, 1908. Strandberg and Strandberg Bros, and Johnson made a note to the bank for $17,050, dated November 5, 1908, due May 31, 1909, and $15,000 as the proceeds of the note were credited to Strandberg Bros, and Johnson, and the stock placed as collateral. It does not appear definitely what day the note was executed, but it would seem to have been about November 12th, or about six days before the executive committee discussed the matter of taking over the Strandberg stock, with a view of applying the proceeds to take up the loan of Strandberg Bros. On November 19th the stock was taken up, $4,000 was paid, and the note canceled and surrendered, and the stock was charged to the treasury stock account, and the deposit account of Strandberg Bros, and Johnson was credited with $15,000, which the court finds “subsequently was withdrawn by them.” Afterwards, November 25th, the deposit account of Emma Strandberg was credited with $1,000, par value of her stock, and her 10 shares were [640]*640canceled, charged to treasury stock, and the amount so credited to her account was by her subsequently withdrawn.

The history of the surrender of the McGinn stock is as follows:

Prior to October 12, 1910, McGinn, who had been a director of the Washington-Alaska Bank, formerly the Fairbanks Banking Company, and an attorney for the bank, notified the vice president and manager that he intended to examine the affairs of the bank and would sell his stock for $6,000. The court found that McGinn, who was at that time an owner in the First National Bank, a rival of the Washington-Alaska Bank, threatened the officers of the Washington-Alaska Bank by telling them that an examination would disclose matters which would be of advantage to the First National Bank and harmful to the Washington-Alaska Bank, and that this threat alarmed the directors of the Washington-Alaska Bank, and that thereupon the transaction referred to was entered upon. The court finds that these matters were told to the directors and at a meeting of October 12, 1910, the directors authorized a loan “to the party to whom McGinn would sell and retain the stock in the bank as collateral,” and that, if necessary to prevent action by McGinn, the cashier, Hawkins, should be loaned the money to pay for the McGinn stock, and the stock should be held as collateral for the loan; that when the prospective purchaser could be communicated with a new loan could be made to him and the stock issued to such purchaser and be held by the bank as collateral security for such new loan. The cashier borrowed $6,000, bought the stock, made his note to the bank, and thereafter canceled his note and returned the stock to the bank without any knowledge on the part of any of the directors until after the bank was closed. It is found that the directors acted in good faith in this matter and believed, when they bought the stock, that it was worth more than $6,000, and that if McGinn had been permitted the right claimed by him as a stockholder, and examination of the bank had followed, irreparable damage would have ensued.

The Strandberg stock transaction is not clear to us, and the briefs 'of counsel on the respective sides tell us that the evidence of the bookkeeping of the matter 'is in[641]*641definite.

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Related

Noyes v. Wood
247 F. 83 (Ninth Circuit, 1917)

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Bluebook (online)
247 F. 72, 159 C.C.A. 290, 4 Alaska Fed. 636, 1917 U.S. App. LEXIS 1639, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/noyes-v-wood-ca9-1917.