Petters Co. v. Rock River

260 P. 674, 37 Wyo. 225
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 1, 1927
DocketNo. 1351
StatusPublished

This text of 260 P. 674 (Petters Co. v. Rock River) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Petters Co. v. Rock River, 260 P. 674, 37 Wyo. 225 (Wyo. 1927).

Opinion

This is an action by plaintiff, Petters and Company, against the Town of Rock River, Wyoming, to recover upon two city warrants, each dated September 21, 1922, for the sums of $5,000 and $5,059.23 respectively, each made payable to the First National Bank of Rock River, Wyoming.

A short time thereafter, these warrants were fully endorsed by the First National Bank and sold to the plaintiff for $9,707.16. The petition of the plaintiff alleges ownership of the warrants, and presentment for payment and refusal on the part of the town to pay the same. The answer of the town alleges the warrants were unlawfully issued and fraudulently obtained from the town by the bank, and that the town never received any consideration for the same, etc.

The reply pleads an estoppel, and asserts, among other things, that the town is estopped to deny: First, the validity of the warrants; second, want of consideration for the same; andthird, estopped to deny the acts of its officers from issuing the warrants, and also alleges that the town is estopped to plead and allege fraud in the obtaining of the warrants.

It is admitted that the plaintiff is the owner of the warrants, and paid a valuable consideration for the same, and that they have not been paid.

The trial consumed several days in time and a great deal of testimony was taken in the case. During the first trial, one of the jurors died, thus making it necessary that the *Page 228 case be re-tried. And on the second trial, the jury returned a general verdict in favor of the defendant, and judgment was accordingly entered by the court in favor of the defendant.

The findings by the jury and the evidence introduced in the trial, clearly indicate to us the following facts and circumstances to have existed, to-wit:

That the Town of Rock River was a municipal corporation that was continuously in need of money; that its city council was dominated by a man named L.C. Butler, who was not only mayor of the town, but was vice president and cashier of the First National Bank of Rock River — the payee of the warrants sued upon in this case; that no books or records of any consequence were kept by the town of its council meetings, and those that were kept were of a very meager description and the minutes very indefinite; that the bank was in the habit and did buy the town warrants continuously, and, at a regular meeting of the town council on September 8, 1922, Butler represented to the council that the First National Bank — of which he was vice president and cashier — was holding some old city warrants known as numbers 77, 78, 79 and 80, totalling $10,059.23; that these warrants were getting old and that the board of directors of the bank wanted them renewed and desired that the council renew the old warrants by issuing two new warrants, one for $5,000 and one for $5,059.23, to take up the old warrants numbering 77, 78, 79 and 80.

The council, pursuant to Butler's request, authorized the clerk to issue two new warrants — Nos. 127 and 128 sued upon in this case — one to be for $5,000 and one for $5,059.23. The council also at that meeting instructed the city clerk to hold these two new warrants, and not to deliver them to the bank until the bank turned over to the clerk the four old warrants above mentioned. *Page 229

The clerk, a short time after this council meeting, went to the bank to see Butler, and took with him these two new warrants, Nos. 127 and 128 for $10,059.23, and, instead of Butler giving him the four old warrants that he had represented the bank held and would exchange for the new warrants, he gave to Nelson, the clerk, the following receipt:

                        "THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK

Rock River, Wyo.

Sept. 21, 1922.

Received this date from the Town of Rock River, the following warrants:

#127 First Nat'l Bank 9-21-22 $5,059.23 #128 do 9-21-22 5,000.00

which are to take the place of the following warrants which we are now holding:

#77 10- 8-21 First Nat'l Bank $3,739.23 #78 10- 8-21 do 2,760.00 #80 10-26-21 J.S. Schwartz 1,560.00 2,000.00

THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK, ROCK RIVER, By Lewis C. Butler, Cashier."

The bank did not have the four old warrants but had sold them long before to other banks and bond houses. Wilcox and Son of Denver had purchased from the bank and was then holding warrants Nos. 77, 78 and 80, and the American National Bank of Cheyenne had purchased and was then holding warrant No. 79, for $2,000.

The First National Bank did not deliver the four warrants to the town. The bank, through Butler, then attempted to sell the two new warrants, Nos. 127 and 128, to the plaintiff herein, and finally made the sale to the plaintiff by furnishing the plaintiff a certificate of the city treasurer as to their validity, and a contract of repurchase on the part of the bank. The bank received from the plaintiff in the neighborhood of $10,000 for these two warrants and never paid the money to the town and never *Page 230 delivered the four old warrants to the town, as it represented that it would do.

The other members of the city council never knew that the warrants Nos. 127 and 128 had been sold by the bank to the plaintiff, and never knew that the bank did not deliver the old warrants to the clerk, as provided and specified at its council meeting of September 8, 1922, until after the bank's failure. Later on the bank, through Butler, prevailed upon the city council to float a bond issue for the purpose of taking up some of the indebtedness and to buy a water system. At about this time, Wilcox and Son, who held warrants Nos. 77, 78 and 80, insisted upon the bank taking these warrants back from them, under their original repurchase-contract with the bank, which the bank did. The American National Bank of Cheyenne held warrant No. 79 for $2,000. In order to sell warrants Nos. 77, 78 and 80 again, and the First National Bank being in hard circumstances, Butler prevailed upon the International Trust Company of Denver to send an agent to Rock River to buy the bonds that the city was issuing, and after the agent arrived on March 14, 1923, and after the agent had contracted with the city for the bonds, Butler, before he would allow the International Trust Company to buy the bonds, insisted that the International Trust Company buy from the bank warrants Nos. 77, 78 and 80, and authorized the International Trust Company to deduct from the bond issue, when the money was forthcoming, the amount of these three warrants which they were then buying from the bank.

It further appears that Petters and Company knew nothing about the representations of Butler to the city council, and the International Trust Company knew nothing about the dealings of the First National Bank, and Butler and the council. The International Trust Company deducted the amount of the three warrants from the bond issue and returned the warrants to the town the following *Page 231 fall, along with the balance due on the bonds. The city then paid the American National Bank for warrant No. 79.

It will thus be seen that Butler, by this manipulation, arranged for three warrants — Nos.

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Bluebook (online)
260 P. 674, 37 Wyo. 225, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/petters-co-v-rock-river-wyo-1927.