Peoples Bank v. Exchange Bank

43 S.E. 269, 116 Ga. 820, 1902 Ga. LEXIS 287
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedDecember 12, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 43 S.E. 269 (Peoples Bank v. Exchange Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Peoples Bank v. Exchange Bank, 43 S.E. 269, 116 Ga. 820, 1902 Ga. LEXIS 287 (Ga. 1902).

Opinion

Fish, J.

The Exchange Bank of Macon presented to the superior court of Talbot county a petition in which were set forth the following allegations of fact: “ On the 10th day of January, 1896» G. H. Estes, who was then and was for some time thereafter the president of ” the Peoples Bank of Talbotton, “ made and executed to petitioner his two notes for the sum of eight hundred-and three and 37/100 dollars, and eight hundred and six and 25/100 dollars, respectively, . . and, for the purpose of securing the payment of the said notes, deposited with petitioner fifteen shares of the capital stock of said defendant bank, after having transferred and assigned said shares to petitioner and giving the necessary power of attorney to have the same transferred upon the books of said defendant bank.” Estes subsequently made default in the payment of these notes, and petitioner “demanded of the proper officers of [822]*822said defendant bank that it transfer upon its books said fifteen shares of stock to petitioner, as required by the charter and bylaws,” but with this demand they refused to comply, assigning as a reason for their refusal that Estes was indebted to the Peoples Bank “ in a large sum, and that by the charter of said bank a lien is created on the stock held by any stockholder for any indebtedness due by him which is superior to any lien that may be created thereon.” Petitioner “ was an innocent purchaser for value of said stock, without notice of any such conditions in said charter, and without notice of any indebtedness of said Estes to said bank; and therefore its title to said stock is superior to the lien claimed by said bank, if any such lien exists.” Furthermore,“evenif the said G. H. Estes was so indebted to said defendant bank, he has paid to it in money and property a sufficient amount to have discharged said indebtedness in full, and any lien which said bank may have had on said stock has been thereby discharged.” At “ the time of the creation of the indebtedness of said-G. H. Estes to your petitioner, and from that time until the maturity of the debt so created, said defendant bank, had allowed the said G. H. Estes to become indebted to it in the sum of twelve thousand dollars, or other large sum, and under the requirements of the charter of said defendant bank no person could become indebted to it in any sum greater than one tenth of the capital stock of said bank; that said capital stock, under the provisions of the charter of said defendant bank, is twenty-nine thousand dollars, and that, by reason of the conditions hereinbefore referred to in said charter, said bank could not. allow ' said Estes or any other person to become indebted to it in any sum more than twenty-nine hundred dollars/’ The said Estes “ has more than repaid to said defendant bank the amount which he was legally entitled to borrow from it, or had become indebted to it; and by reason of said payment any lien that said bank may claim ” under the above-mentioned provision of its charter “ has become discharged, and by reason thereof petitioner is entitled to have a transfer of the stock held by it,” and accordingly “ prays that a decree may be rendered requiring defendant bank and its proper officers to accept the surrender of said fifteen shares of stock, and in lieu thereof issue to petitioner new stock for the same amount and of the same face value.”

The Peoples Bank filed an answer in which it admitted that its [823]*823capital stock was $29,000, and that under its charter “the total liabilities of any person to said bank ‘ for money borrowed ’ can not exceed one tenth of the capital stock; ” but it therein alleged that its charter also provided that “the discount of bills of exchange drawn in good faith and the discount of commercial paper actually owned by the person discounting the same shall not be considered as borrowed money,” and that while Estes became largely indebted to the bank, his indebtedness to it “for‘money borrowed’ at no time, from date he became indebted to plaintiff to maturity of the claim of plaintiff, exceeded, nor did it reach, $2,900.00, and that his large indebtedness arose by reason of the defendant discounting in good faith commercial paper actually owned by Estes.” The Peoples Bank also in its answer admitted the demand made upon it by the plaintiff to transfer to it the fifteen shares of stock in controversy, but pleaded as a justification for refusing to comply with this demand the following matters of defense: Estes was indebted to the defendant bank “ at the time plaintiff claims that the 15 shares of stock” were deposited with it; “ also at the time plaintiff demanded a transfer of said stock, and is now indebted.” Section 6 of the charter of the Peoples Bank of Talbotton provides: “That the board of directors shall issue to each stockholder certificates of stock which shall be held bound to the bank for any dues or other indebtedness by said stockholder to the bank, and a lien is hereby declared upon the same in favor of the bank, superior to all others, which may be foreclosed upon the sapie as a mortgage upon personal property, and sold in the same way, and no stockholder who may be indebted to said bank, either as principal or security Or indorser, shall, while so indebted, sell or transfer the stock held by him or her without the consent of the president and directors of the bank, and all sales and transfers of stock in said bank must, in order to be valid, be made on the books of the bank by the owner of the stock, or his or her lawfully appointed attorney in fact, under such rules and regulations as may be declared by the by-laws of the bank, and any other transfer is void as against the company.” This provision being contained in a charter which constituted “ a part of the public law,” and the world being therefore charged with notice thereof, “ the plaintiff could not have been ‘ an innocent purchaser for value without notice of the conditions in •. defendant’s charter.’” The amount of Estes’indebtedness to it “at the time [824]*824plaintiff demanded transfer of stock was, and now is, sufficient to ■ cover the value of said 15 shares of stock,” and accordingly “the plaintiff is not entitled to a transfer of the same; ” for, under the charter provision above quoted, the assignment to plaintiff “ of said stock while the stockholder, G. H. Estes, was indebted to” the defendant “ bank was absolutely void.”

By way of amendment to its petition, the Exchange Bank replied to this answer by alleging, among other things, the following : The Peoples Bank “ violated its charter in loaning to said G. H. Estes a larger sum than ten per cent, of its capital stock,” permitted him to make large overdrafts, “accepted bills of exchange not drawn in good faith ” by him, and discounted commercial paper which was not actually owned by him. A large amount of usurious interest is included in the indebtedness of Estes to that bank, and “upon á just accounting of all money loaned by said defendant to said Estes at the legal rate of interest, the payments and credits made by and allowed to said G. H. Estes for money and property received by it would fully pay off and discharge the principal debt and all legal interest thereon.” In this amendment the Exchange Bank prayed that “a just and true accounting be had and taken between said G. H.

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Bluebook (online)
43 S.E. 269, 116 Ga. 820, 1902 Ga. LEXIS 287, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/peoples-bank-v-exchange-bank-ga-1902.