Petty v. Bay City Bank

220 N.W. 704, 243 Mich. 362, 1928 Mich. LEXIS 634
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 24, 1928
DocketDocket No. 50, Calendar No. 33,608.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 220 N.W. 704 (Petty v. Bay City Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Petty v. Bay City Bank, 220 N.W. 704, 243 Mich. 362, 1928 Mich. LEXIS 634 (Mich. 1928).

Opinion

McDonald, J.

The plaintiffs were stockholders of the Farmers State Savings Bank of Bay City, Michigan. On January 31, 1927, by order of the banking commissioner, the bank ceased to do business. An investigation by the State banking department had disclosed that its capital was impaired to the extent of $100,000. It was necessary that its affairs be liquidated and a 100% assessment be made against the stockholders for payment of depositors. The board of directors, which included most of the plaintiffs, persuaded the defendant bank to take over the assets of their bank and to liquidate its affairs. In furtherance of this purpose, an agreement of sale was entered into between the Farmers State Savings Bank designated therein as the seller and the defendant bank as the purchaser. This agreement was in part as follows:

“In addition to the cash items set forth in the attached balance sheet, there shall be paid to the purchaser by the seller the sum of at least seventy-five thousand dollars ($75,000). This amount, it is understood by the purchaser, is to be realized from an *364 assessment of one hundred (100) per cent, to be made upon the stockholders of the seller. To guarantee the collection of such assessment and the payment by the seller to the purchaser of at least the sum of seventy-five thousand ($75,000) dollars thereof, within five (5) months from the date thereof, certain individuals acceptable to the purchaser are to enter into an individual agreement and to deposit collateral acceptable to the purchaser.”

The guaranty referred to was executed by the plaintiffs and contains the following obligation:

“Now, therefore, in consideration of the premises, and for the purpose of assuring said first party of the collection of at least 75 per cent, of said assessment, the said second parties do hereby guarantee the collection of at least $75,000 on said assessment within 90 days from the date hereof; and in the event of the failure, to collect said assessment to the amount of $75,000 within said period of 90 days, then and in that event the said second parties shall become liable to pay forthwith to said first party the difference between the amount actually collected on said assessment and $75,000, and on making such payment said second parties shall be subrogated to the rights of said first party or any other person or corporation having the right to collect such assessments, and collections made thereon after said 90 days shall belong to said second parties up until the amount of $75,000 is collected, to reimburse them for the amounts paid under this guarantee. * * *
“In case of the collection from the stockholders of said Farmers State Savings Bank on the assessment aforesaid, of $75,000 or more, or if such collections are less than $75,000, and said second parties make good the deficiencies to the first party, then this obligation, so far as it affects said first party, shall be void and of no effect.”

To secure the faithful performance of their obligations under this guaranty, the plaintiffs deposited with defendant certain collateral which in the agreement was credited to them individually by name. No assessment was levied or attempted to be levied upon the *365 stockholders as contemplated by the parties and nothing in lieu thereof has been paid in by the plaintiffs. The defendant was about to sell the pledged collateral. The plaintiffs filed this bill to restrain such action and to compel a return of the collateral and a cancellation of the agreement of guaranty.

The theory of the bill is that the plaintiffs believed an assessment would be levied by the State banking department; that it would be a legal assessment binding on all of the stockholders; that if such an assessment were made they estimated at least $75,000 would be paid thereon; and that in signing the guaranty they believed they were assuming liability for the payment of that amount only if the assessment were made by the banking commission. It is alleged,

“That the board of directors had no authority to levy an assessment under the facts existing, and that therefore it took no action, and that no legal assessment was made or could be made by said board under the law.”

It is further alleged,

“That by reason of the fáct that no assessment has been made, and that no assessment can be made upon the stockholders of said bank under the conditions existing, they are released from liability to said Bay City Bank, under the writing aforesaid, and that they are entitled respectively to the return of the collateral put up with said agreement and now in the hands of the Bay City Bank.”

On the hearing, the circuit judge dismissed the bill. From the decree entered the plaintiffs have appealed.

There is involved, first, a construction of the guaranty agreement, and, second, whether under tlie existing facts a legal assessment could be made against the stockholders. The guaranty agreement is dated January 31, 1927. It was not made in anticipation of an agreement with the defendant for the liquidation of the affairs of the bank. At that time negotiations *366 were being carried on with other banks. When these failed they sought to interest the defendant. An agreement was finally reached. It was reduced to writing and is dated February 8, 1927. While the two agreements are of different dates, they relate to the same subject-matter, are between the same parties, were delivered to the defendant at the same time and are parts of a single transaction. The so-called agreement of sale expressly refers to the guaranty agreement. In these circumstances, the two instruments should be considered together in determining the obligations of the plaintiffs. The purpose of both, agreements was the liquidation of the Farmers State Savings Bank of Bay City. The matter of chief concern was the assessment to be made on the stockholders. Both agreements refer to it. It was agreed that an assessment was necessary and would be made. That was the principal condition on which the defendant agreed to take charge of the liquidation. Without it there would be a definite loss of at least $100,000 to any bank that took over the assets and business for liquidation. . All of the parties so understood the situation. The agreement of sale provided that the Farmers State Savings Bank should pay to the defendant at least $75,000 to be realized from an assessment on the stockholders. To guarantee the collection and payment of this amount to the defendant, the plaintiffs were to enter into an “individual agreement and to deposit collateral acceptable to the purchaser.” The plaintiffs ratified this agreement in a meeting of the stockholders subsequently held, so they had full knowledge that an assessment was to be made and collected by their bank and $75,000 thereof paid to the defendant. Reading the two- contracts together, it is clear that the plaintiffs intended to guarantee the performance of the conditions relative to the assessment embodied in the *367 contract of sale. They guaranteed that an assessment against the stockholders would be collected and at least $75,000 paid to the defendant within 90 days.

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Related

American State Bank v. Aaron
260 N.W. 141 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1935)
Reichert v. Farmers' & Workingmen's Savings Bank
241 N.W. 239 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1932)

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Bluebook (online)
220 N.W. 704, 243 Mich. 362, 1928 Mich. LEXIS 634, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/petty-v-bay-city-bank-mich-1928.