Porter v. State Ex Rel. Mothersead, Bank Com'r.

1927 OK 36, 253 P. 985, 122 Okla. 226, 1927 Okla. LEXIS 169
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedFebruary 8, 1927
Docket16771
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 1927 OK 36 (Porter v. State Ex Rel. Mothersead, Bank Com'r.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Porter v. State Ex Rel. Mothersead, Bank Com'r., 1927 OK 36, 253 P. 985, 122 Okla. 226, 1927 Okla. LEXIS 169 (Okla. 1927).

Opinion

LESTER, J.

The parties to the above entitled action will b’e referred to as tlmy appeared in the district court.

The plaintiff instituted this action in the district court of McClain county, on October 16, 1924, against the defendant claiming that she was a holder of record for twenty-sev’en and .nine-tenths shares of the outstanding stock of the Farmers State Bank of Cement, Okla. Said plaintiff alleged in his petition the fact of the organization, operation,. the declaration of the insolvency of the said bank on February 25, 1924, and the additional fact that the aforementioned number of shares, at the time the bank was declared to be insolvent, stood on its books in the name of the defendant as the owner and bolder thereof, further praying for judgment against the defendant, 'by reason of the failure of the said bank, in the sum of $2,790 and the interest thereon from February 25, 1925.'

The defendant duly filed her answer to the plaintiff’s petition denying that defendant as an individual was the owner and holder of said shares at any tim'e. and further denied that she was liable for said sum of $2.790' or any other sum whatsoever. Said answer, by way of setting up a further and affirmative defense, alleged in substance :

“1. That said shares were the property of the estate of John W. Porter, the de,-c’eased husband of the defendant.
“2. That said estate was still open and no final disposition had been made therein by the county court of McClain county.
“’3. That the defendant was duly acting as executrix of said estate, and.
“4. Further denying that she had ever acted in any relation to the said stock other than in her representative capacity as said executrix of said estate.”

The plaintiff filed a reply denying generally ail the allegations of said answer.

The cause was thereafter and on the 21st day of March, 1925, tried to the court without the intervention of a jury, and the court rendered judgment against defendant for the full’ amount alleged to be due under plaintiff’s petition, and the' defendant prosecutes this action to reverse the judgment of the district court.

It appears from the evidene'e that John W. Porter, husband of the defendant, died testate on the 7th day of January, 1920, and at the time of his death he held in his own name, 30 shares of stock in the Farmers State Bank of Cement. Said John W. Per *227 ter made a will and devised a larger portion of Lis estate to Lis wife, the defendant in this ease. Said will was duly, probated ¿nd the defendant duly qualified as executrix of said will.

It appears that on the 17th day of November, 1022, at a stockholder’s meeting of the said bank, the said stockholders by then' action reduced' the capital 'stock of s(aid bank from $25,000 to $15,000. That, as shown by the minutes of said meeting, Eda Porter was present as a stockholder and that she represented 30 shares of stock at said meeting; and that said stockholders at said me'eting levied an assessment on themselves of 100 per cent, in order to meet an assessment on account of certain notes being, carried in the bank and ordered stricken therefrom as assets by the Bank Commissioner. The defendant paid the full portion of the assessment levied against the stock that had been originally issued in the name of her husband, John W. Porter.

On the 18th day of December. 1922, the bank r'educed its capital stock from $25,000 to $15,000. On the 5th day of February, 1923, the bank issued to Mrs. Eda Porter certificate No, 1, for 18 shares of stock. On the 6th day of March, 1923, the bank issued its certificate No. 12, to Mrs. Eda Porter for nine and nine-tenths shares of stock. It is further shown from the evidence that the above-described stock was shown to be outstanding and of record in the name of Mrs. Eda Porter on the books of said bank at the time the bank wa^ closed as being insolvent by the State Bank Commissioner.

It was further shown in tbe evidence that the defendant was elected a director of the bank during the time her name appeared as the owner of the aforementioned stock, that she signed her name to certain reports, from time to time, relating to the financial condition of the said bank.

On April 24, 1924, Grover O. Wamsley, liquidating agent for the failed bank, addressed a letter to the defendant in which he advised that she owed the sum of $2,-790, with certain interest thereon, by reason of the stock held by her at the time said bank had become insolvent.

The defendant answered the letter of the liquidating agent, and in said answ'er the defendant stated in part;

“I acknowledge my liability and regret that I am at this time unable to send you my check to cover the same. I desire to avoid any additional 'expense and would like you to grant me some few months’ time on this in order that I can make some deal and raise some money or at least until such time as crops are' marketed.”

The defendant testified that she, at all times, was acting only in her capacity as executrix of the estate of her husband, and not in her individual capacity.

The brief of the defendant presents two principal propositions to this court, and w'e shall take up the same in the order named in defendant’s brief.

Defendant’s proposition No. 1 is as follows :

‘‘The judgment of the court, being contrary to its proper finding as to the 18 share lot and also contrary to the law as to the nine and nine-tenths share lot, is contrary to law on the whole and should be reversed.”

In order to support the above proposition the defendant adopts the following quotation from the case of Blackert v. Lankford, Bank Commissioner, 74 Okla. 61, 176 Pac. 532;

“The rule. announced by the textwriter and by the federal and the state courts seems to be that a person whose name rightfully appears on the books of á banking corporation as a shareholder must respond as such to all the statutory liabilities imposed upon shareholders. * * *”

We find no fault with the above language, but in the instant case it is positively shown that the defendant acted as a member of the board of directors and had access to all the records of the bank and for a long period of time permitted the stock to stand in her own name, and not until suit was brought to recover the liability due upon her stock did she raise the proposition that she was not the owner of said stock.

The defendant also cited an excerpt which is to be found in the case of State ex rel. v. Ware, 82 Okla. 130, 198 Pac. 859, whi h is as follows;

“Th'e presumption of‘liability on shares of stock in an insolvent bank, arising from the presence of a person’s name on the stock register, is rebutted by evidence that a bona fide sale of th'e stock had been made, and that the vendor had performed every duty which the law imposed in order to secure the transfer on th'e registry of the bank.”

This statement of law has reference to a state of facts that is altogether different from that which we find in the instant case.

The defendant also cites the case of Robinson v. Lane, 19 Ga.

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Related

Graham v. Graham
1938 OK 588 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1938)
Richison v. State Ex Rel. Barnett
1936 OK 236 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1936)
Swenson v. McFerson
17 P.2d 530 (Supreme Court of Colorado, 1932)
McDaniels v. McDaniels
1931 OK 650 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1931)

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Bluebook (online)
1927 OK 36, 253 P. 985, 122 Okla. 226, 1927 Okla. LEXIS 169, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/porter-v-state-ex-rel-mothersead-bank-comr-okla-1927.