Pendleton v. Garrard Bank Trust Company

272 S.W. 917, 209 Ky. 451, 1925 Ky. LEXIS 519
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedJune 5, 1925
StatusPublished

This text of 272 S.W. 917 (Pendleton v. Garrard Bank Trust Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pendleton v. Garrard Bank Trust Company, 272 S.W. 917, 209 Ky. 451, 1925 Ky. LEXIS 519 (Ky. 1925).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Dietzman

Affirming.

In March, 1920, appellant herein had on deposit with the appellee, Garrard Bank and Trust Company, at Lancaster, Kentucky, something over $4,000.00, and he was anxious to invest these idle funds. Appellant is a man of limited education, being able, as he says, to read print with difficulty, and script not at all, and being unable to make any arithmetical calculations beyond those of the simplest kind. However, it is shown he is a shrewd money maker in a small way and of that type of mind which constantly sees flaws in what it has done and needs to be reassured that it has proceeded correctly. He conferred with appellee Elmore, the cashier of the bank, regarding a suitable investment. He claims that he insisted on a land note. Elmore, however, testified, and in this he is borne out by the witness Hopper, that appellant positively did not want a land note; that he first offered appellant a certificate of deposit but as this bore only three per cent interest and appellant desired a higher rate, he declined it, and that he then suggested a land note although remarking that it was a little late in the season to get one. He claims that appellant also declined the land note because land note® were of record at the court house and so known to the assessor and appellant was seeking an investment that would not be taxed against him. Appellant’s subsequent conduct with reference to his assessments rather substantiate Elmore’s testimony in this regard. When appellant had declined, as Elmore says, all of these suggestions, Elmore then told him that he thought he could lend the money to the Lancaster *453 Flour Mill, a local corporation. Thereupon appellant inquired concerning its solvency and Elmore assured him •that it was amply solvent, as were also its two owners, Spoonamore and Zanone. Appellant claims that he was given no specific figure concerning the assets and liabilities of either the mill or its owners. Elmore on the contrary claims that' he did give appellant a financial statement of this company and these individuals. But be that as it may, the evidence overwhelmingly and really without dispute discloses that at this time both the mill and its owners were amply solvent and good for a loan of many times the amount of $4,000.00. At appellant’s request.,’ Elmore called up the mill and found out that they could use the money, and then he made out a check payable to the mill and a note payable to appellant. Appellant claims that he signed the check and left both papers with Elmore for him to get the signature of the mill to the note which he thought was going to be a land note. Elmore claims that he gave the check and the note to appellant and the latter took the papers down to the mill for signature. On this issue, the great weight of the evidence is with appellant as he is borne out by Spoonamore and by subsequent developments. Instead of the mill signing the note Spoonamore signed the note individually. So far as financial responsibility is concerned, the note was probably better with Spoonamore’s individual signature than it was with that of the mill. The 'check was then endorsed by the mill by Spoonamore and then by Spoonamore individually, and the proceeds placed ■by the bank to his credit. There, is no intimation that Spoonamore did anything wrong in this connection as he was using his private funds to finance the flour mill, and the purchase of wheat at this time required a good deal of ready cash. After the note had been thus signed, it was left with Elmore at the bank and he placed it with the other papers of appellant in a wallet where the papers of customers of the bank were kept. Elmore .says that appellant thereafter, about once a month, came to the bank and looked over his papers and that at least on one occasion the note was read by him to appellant and that the latter knew all along that the note was Spoonamore’s note and not the mill’s note. Appellant denies this, but as we shall point out, his own evidence contradicts him on this point. In the early part of February, 1921, appellant, having the idea that it was necessary to give the *454 maker of a note notice that it was falling due in order to collect, came to the bank to see Elmore about sending such notice. Elmore asked him why he was going to collect in his note, and appellant first stated that he was going to buy some land. Elmore advised against such purchase, as land values at this time were on the verge of tumbling from the high prices which prevailed during and immediately after the war. Appellant then said that if he did not collect in his money, he ought to get a higher rate of interest, and again inquired about the solvency of the maker. His testimony is replete with evidence showing that he then knew Spoonamore was the maker on this note. For instance, in answer to question 44 he says:

“He (Elmore) advised me to run it on, said would be same care took of me as was of themselves taken at the bank, and I asked him, way the thing come up, my brother had one on same man, too, and I asked him why he put both on same man. He said because the man was good, that he had 318 acres of land at the edge of town and a mill and everything, and, some other stuff, and he was perfectly good, and that was all that was over it at that time.”

He repeats this statement again in answer to question 74, and in substance again in answer to questions 106 and 107, and numerous other places through his testimony. Thus he makes it perfectly clear that he thoroughly understood at this time that it was Spoonamore who was the maker of this note; and hence it is plain that even if he did instruct Elmore in March, 1920, to lend this money to the mill and thought then that Elmore had so done, yet by February, 1921, he knew that Elmore had violated instructions and lent the money to Spoonamore instead. It is true that Elmore in this February, 1921, conversation again assured appellant of the ■solvency of Spoonamore; but we do not find in the record any testimony that Elmore was not perfectly bona fide in making this statement, or that in fact it was not true. On the contrary, the evidence indicates that these statements were true. Appellant then went to see Spoonamore about collecting his interest and demanded for the coming year seven per cent instead of six per cent. Spoonamore, not knowing appellant, as he says, declined at that time to pay him the interest then due, and stated that he would háve to see Elmore to find out if appellant was *455 the one to whom he was indebted. This was satisfactory to appellant. Spoonamore then consulted and learned that appellant was his or editor. He also at this time asked Elmore’s advice as to whether or not he ought to pay seven per cent for the coming year. As interest rates had advanced in that community, Elmore advised him to do so if he wished to keep the money. A few days later appellant again went to the mill and there received a check of the mill not only for the past year’s interest but also for one per cent for the coming year in advance, the remaining six per cent to be paid when the year was up. It is clear that in making this transaction, appellant ratified the loan theretofore made to Spoonamore. The_ fact that he received the mill’s check for the interest does not militate against this conclusion as.

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Taylor Coal Co. v. Miller
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
272 S.W. 917, 209 Ky. 451, 1925 Ky. LEXIS 519, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pendleton-v-garrard-bank-trust-company-kyctapphigh-1925.