Phoenix Third National Bank v. Martin

293 S.W. 1064, 219 Ky. 579, 1927 Ky. LEXIS 380
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedApril 29, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 293 S.W. 1064 (Phoenix Third National Bank v. Martin) 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
Phoenix Third National Bank v. Martin, 293 S.W. 1064, 219 Ky. 579, 1927 Ky. LEXIS 380 (Ky. 1927).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Turner,

Commissioner— Affirming.

Judge Samuel M. Wilson was agreed upon by the parties as special judge to try this case in the lower court.

The judgment of that court was entered in accordance with an opinion prepared by him which appears in the transcript, and its clearness, logic, and soundness are such that this court has, in ag’reement with it, determined to insert it as the opinion of this court.

That 'opinion is as, follows:

“This is a suit in equity, the original petition in which was filed September 23, 1915. The plaintiff seeks to recover $9,135, with interest from March 13, 1915, and $600, with interest from March 10, 1915; both claims being evidenced by negotiable notes. The original defen *581 dants were seven in number. Of these, two have died and one has been released. One of the deceased defendants had made a composition and settlement of the claim asserted against him prior to his death, and there has been no revivor as to the other decedent. This leaves four defendants still to be dealt with, to-wit, Messrs. Houlihan, Crowe, Martin, tand Treacy.

‘ ‘ The issues in the case may be said to lie upon the surface, and, for the elucidation of those issues, the court is indebted to counsel on the respective sides for the comprehensive and helpful briefs which have been filed with the record.

“Upon the issues and the proof it is clear that the plaintiff bank extended 'credit to the hotel corporation, of which the defendants were directors, on the strength, of the obligation of the corporation alone. The directors, if liable at all, are only secondarily liable. It is Sought to hold them liable upon the ground that, as directors, they committed a wrong, and were guilty of a breach of duty at the time the note for $9,135, of December 13, 1914, maturing March 13, 1915, and the twelve notes for $50 each, of March 10, 1915, aggregating $600, were executed by the hotel corporation. The liability asserted and souight to be enforced is statutory, not contractual; it arises by' operation of law, and not by mutual agreement of the parties. The claim is essentially ex delicto, and ‘sounds in tort.’

“It is established by the evidence, and the fact is undisputed, that the note of December 13, 1914, was a renewal note, evidencing an indebtedness originally created in the year 1912, $3,000 of the amount having been borrowed by the hotel corporation from the bank on February 13, 1912, and $6,000 additional having been borrowed by thé hotel from the bank on May 13, 1912, and the two loans having been consolidated and evidenced by a single note for $9,000, which was executed by the hotel to the bank on or about May 15,1912. This original note, carrying interest, added in advance, for the six-month period the note was made to run, was several times renewed, until the transaction ended with the execution of the note of December 13, 1914, now in suit. This last note being for 90 days, or 3 months, only, the interest was counted as $135, just half of what it had been in each of the five previous six months’ notes, where the interest appears as $270.

*582 “The defendants now before the court were none of them directors of the hotel corporation at the time the original note of May 15, 1912, was given.

“The articles of incorporation of the hotel company contained this limitation upon its power of contracting indebtedness, viz.:

“ ‘That the highest -amount of indebtedness’ or liability which said corporation may at any time incur shall not exceed the sum of $10,000.-’

“It is the contention of the plaintiff that this provision of the corporate charter of the hotel company was violated at the time the notes in suit were executed, and that, in consequence of such violation, -and of plaintiff’s inability to collect its debts from the hotel -corporation, which has been adjudged bankrupt, with assets insufficient to discharge these notes, the directors are hable to it for the -amount of the notes, with interest, under section 550 of the Kentucky Statutes. That section reads as follows:

“ ‘If the directors or officers of any corporation shall fail or refuse to comply with, or shall violate any of the provisions -of, this article, those so failing, refusing or violating shall be jointly and severally individually liable for any loss or damage resulting to any person from such failure-, refusal or violation, and, in addition thereto, the persons so liable shall be each punished by fine -of not less than -one hundred nor more than one thousand dollars.’

“The article -here referred to is article 1 of chapter 32 of the Kentucky Statutes, relating to ‘Private 'Corporations,’ and the specific provision -of that article involved in the alleged breach is subparagraph 8 of section 539, which requires those forming a corporation to specify in -the articles- of incorporation ‘the highest amount of indebtedness or liability which the corporation may at -any time incur. ’

‘ ‘ There has been much discussion as to which -set of directors, if either became liable in this case, should now be held liable, viz., those who were in office in May, 1912, or those who were in office in December, 1914? The plaintiff’s contention is that-the hotel corporation, at the time it gave the original note of May 15, 1912, was then indebted to -an amount in excess of its charter limit, and, if this were so, the directors then in office became liable for the -debt evidenced by the note of that date. The defendants, on the other hand, contend that the debt limit had not been exceeded, and that this initial obligation *583 was within the charter powers of the corporation. The proof seems to show that the. total outstanding' indebtedness, including' all ascertainable items, of the hotel on May 14, 1912, amounted to at least $10,944.55 (or $10,-944.64), and the report of the expert accountant, Mr. Weaver, indicates that this total may have reached the sum of $17,496.28. If the actual excess was only $944.55 (a comparatively small amount), it would be difficult, if not impracticable, now to say that it was the execution of the $9,000 note to the bank that caused this slight excess in the authorized indebtedness of the hotel corporation.

“If the debt of $9,000, when incurred on May 15, 1912, was within the hotel’s charter limit of indebtedness, the note given in evidence of that debt was a valid obligation, on both sides, ¡and, I am inclined to think, each subsequent renewal was likewise valid, and, if so, neither the original note nor any renewal thereof has given rise to any cause of action under the statute against the directors of the hotel corporation. On the other hand, if the indebtedness of the hotel, on May 15, 1912, exceeded the corporation’s charter limit, the directors in office, when the note of that date was given, became liable under the statute.

“For the purposes of this case it may be taken as granted that the weight of the evidence shows that the note of May 15, 1912, when given, was an unauthorized or illegal exercise of its debt-making power by the hotel, and, further, that, in each succeeding instance, the limit of indebtedness of the hotel corporation had been exceeded when the several renewal notes were given.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
293 S.W. 1064, 219 Ky. 579, 1927 Ky. LEXIS 380, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/phoenix-third-national-bank-v-martin-kyctapphigh-1927.