PLANTERS BK. v. TM Garrott, Jr.

122 So. 2d 256, 239 Miss. 248, 1960 Miss. LEXIS 282
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 11, 1960
Docket41557
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 122 So. 2d 256 (PLANTERS BK. v. TM Garrott, Jr.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
PLANTERS BK. v. TM Garrott, Jr., 122 So. 2d 256, 239 Miss. 248, 1960 Miss. LEXIS 282 (Mich. 1960).

Opinion

*257 Kyle, J.

This case is before us on appeal by the appellant, the Planters Bank of Tunica, Mississippi, contestant, from a decree of the Chancery Court of Tunica County, affirming the decision and order of the State Banking Board directing the Comptroller of banks to issue to the appellees, T. M. Garrott, Jr., G. D. Perry, S. W. Owen, J. W. Caperton and Henry G. Lee, prospective incorporators, a certificate authorizing them to incorporate and organize a new bank in Tunica County, to be known as the Tunica County Bank, as prayed for in the application filed by said prospective incorporators with the Comptroller.

The record shows that the above named appellees on July 28, 1958, gave notice to the State Comptroller of the department of bank supervision of their desire to engage in banking and filed their application for a certificate of authority to incorporate under applicable laws of the state, as provided for in Section 5160, Mississippi Code of 1942, Recompiled. The applicants also filed with the State Comptroller a copy of the proposed articles of incorporation, duly sworn to by one of the pros *258 pective incorporators. The State Comptroller promptly gave consideration to said application, and made an examination of the proposed articles of incorporation to determine if they met all requirements of law. The State Comptroller then made an investigation of the several matters which he was required to investigate by Code Section 5160, supra, to determine whether the public necessity required that the proposed new bank should be chartered and permitted to operate. When he had completed his investigation, he recorded his findings in writing, and drew up his recommendations to the State Banking Board, and set a date for the hearing of said application by the State Banking Board and called a meeting of said Board. The State Comptroller gave due notice of said meeting to the prospective in-corporators of the proposed new bank and all other interested persons and extended to them an invitation to be heard in writing or in person by the Banking Board. Notice of said meeting was given to the appellant and to all banks in all counties adjoining Tunica County.

The meeting of the State Banking Board for the purpose of considering said application was begun and held on January 27, 1959. The appellant Planters Bank appeared, by its attorneys on that date, and stated that it desired to contest the appellees’ application, and asked to be admitted as a party to the hearing. The appellant’s request was granted. Pour and one-half days were consumed in the taking of testimony, and at the conclusion of the hearing, on February 25, 1959, the Board rendered an opinion and decision in favor of the prospective incorporators. The Board found that public necessity required that the new bank be chartered and permitted to operate, and an order was duly entered directing that a charter be issued. From that decision and order the appellant prosecuted an appeal to the Chancery Court of Tunica County, and on October 8, 1959, the chancellor rendered his opinion and entered a decree affirming the order of the State Board. *259 The chancellor found that the finding of the State Board that public necessity required that the proposed new hank be chartered and be permitted to operate was supported by substantial evidence and was not arbitrary or capricious, and that no prejudicial error had been committed by the Board in the proceedings before it or in the rendition of its decision and order.

The appellant’s attorneys have assigned and argued four points as grounds for reversal of the decree of the lower court:

(1) That the appellant was denied the right to a fair hearing and due process of law by the action of the State Banking Board in withholding from the record at the time of the hearing and treating as confidential the findings of the State Comptroller showing the results of the investigation which he had made pursuant to the requirements of Section 5160, Code of 1942, Recompiled, prior to the meeting of the State Banking Board, to determine whether the public necessity required that the proposed bank be chartered.

(2) That the court erred in refusing to compel certain of the appellees’ witnesses to answer questions on cross-examination as to the source of their alleged information that the appellant’s officers had the reputation of using the bank to promote their political ambitions and their personal business enterprises.

(3) That the Board failed to render such opinion at the conclusion of the hearing as the statute required, in that the opinion rendered contained no findings of fact and gave no reasons for the Board’s decision, but merely stated a conclusion.

(4) That the order of the Board finding that a public necessity existed which required that the proposed new bank be chartered and permitted to operate, was not supported by substantial evidence, but was manifestly erroneous, arbitrary and capricious.

The record in this case consists of two volumes of pleadings, affidavits and exhibits, and six volumes of *260 testimony taken during the hearing before the State Banking Board. It would serve no nsefnl purpose for us to undertake to incorporate in this opinion a detailed analysis of the exhibits or a digest of the testimony of the witnesses. But, before proceeding to a consideration of the above mentioned assignments of error, it is necessary that we make a brief statement concerning the nature of the testimony offered on behalf of the respective parties.

The record in this case shows the following facts concerning the area in which the proposed bank is to be located: Tnnica County has an area of 458 square miles lying wholly within the Mississippi Delta. The population of the county according to the 1950 census was 21,658, the white population being 3,939, and the Negro population being 17,719. The total assessed valuation of taxable property in the county at the time of the hearing was $11,231,374. There is only one bank in the county, the appellant Planters Bank, which was chartered in 1912 and is domiciled in the Town of Tunica. The county is traversed from north to south by U. S. Highway No. 61, which is a heavily traveled paved highway, and by two lines of railroad, and three gas transmission lines. The chief source of income for the people of the county is agriculture. The value of the agricultural products produced and marketed during the year 1958 was approximately eleven million dollars. There are 26 cotton gins, two fertilizer distributing plants, one oil mill, five grain elevators, one cotton compress, two sawmills and one manufacturing plant in the county. There are two new automobile sales agencies, and several used car sales agencies, also the usual number of mercantile establishments, gasoline and oil distribution agencies and service stations. The record shows that there have been three bank failures in the county during the last 50 years. The Bank of Tunica, which was founded about 1888, became insolvent and was forced to close in June 1913. The Citizens Bank of Tunica was chartered in 1916 and be *261 came insolvent ten years later. Tlie Bank of Dundee, located in the Town of Dundee, was organized in 1919, but was liquidated three years later.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
122 So. 2d 256, 239 Miss. 248, 1960 Miss. LEXIS 282, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/planters-bk-v-tm-garrott-jr-miss-1960.