Power County v. Evans Bros. Land & Live Stock Co.

252 P. 182, 43 Idaho 158, 1926 Ida. LEXIS 39
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 19, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 252 P. 182 (Power County v. Evans Bros. Land & Live Stock Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Power County v. Evans Bros. Land & Live Stock Co., 252 P. 182, 43 Idaho 158, 1926 Ida. LEXIS 39 (Idaho 1926).

Opinions

*163 LEE, District Judge.

On April 12, 1915, L. L. Evaus and his sons, L. L., Jr., and Roland, executed and filed with the recorder of Power county, Idaho, articles of incorporation of the Evans Brothers Land & Live Stock Company, hereinafter denominated the Evans Company. The declared purposes for which such corporation was formed were:

“ .... to carry on a general farming and livestock business, to buy, own, operate and sell real estate, horses, cattle, hogs, sheep and all kinds of personal property, to erect, buy, own and operate mills and factories, or any kind of manufacturing plants, to borrow and lend money, and to receive money and other property and hold the same in trust.”

A certificate of incorporation duly issued, and the company was organized under a directorate, all stockholders and officers being members of the Evans family. On January 5, 1922, the company through its board of directors adopted and spread upon its minutes the following resolution:

“Resolved, that in furtherance of the business of this corporation, the officers hereof are empowered to sign as sureties, depository bonds, under which bonds the First State Bank of Rockland, or the First National Bank of American Falls, or the Evans State Bank of American Falls, Idaho, may be principals, for the purpose of securing public deposits in either of such banks.”

Thereafter, the Evans State Bank, controlled by the Evans family, was consolidated with the First National Bank of American Falls under the latter’s name, L. L. Evans and L. L. Evans, Jr., being directors, and respectively, president and vice-president thereof. Various members of the Evans family “were all the stockholders.”

Prior to the consolidation of these banks, plaintiff had on deposit therein the respective sums of $8,964.33 and $40,760.04, all of which remained after consolidation in the said First National Bank. This bank was designated as a depository of plaintiff’s funds; and desiring to retain said funds on deposit, and secure further deposits of similar *164 funds, it executed and delivered to plaintiff on May 1, 1922, its depository bond to secure the same in the principal sum of $20,000. One of the sureties executing this bond was the Evans Company above mentioned. It obligated itself in the sum of $14,000.

At the time of tendering the bond, the Evans Company delivered plaintiff’s board of county commissioners a certificate in words and figures as follows:

“Resolution: At a regular meeting of the Evans Brothers Land & Live Stock Company held at the office of such corporation on January 5th, 1922, the following resolution was duly offered and adopted as appears by the minute books of such corporation;
“Resolved, that in furtherance of the business of the corporation the officer’s hereof are empowered to sign as sureties, depository bonds, under which bonds the First State Bank of Rockland, or the First National Bank of American Falls, or the Evans State Bank of American Falls, Idaho, may be principal for the purpose of securing public deposits in either of such banks.
“Dated January 22nd, 1922.
“L. L. EVANS, President.
“L. L. EVANS, Jr., Secretary.
“State of Idaho,
“County of Power, — ss.
“I, L. L. Evans, Jr., Secretary of the Evans Brothers Land and Live Stock Company, do hereby certify that the foregoing is a full, true and correct copy of a resolution appearing on the minute book of such corporation, offered and adopted as above stated.
“Witness my hand and the seal of such corporation the 2nd day of February, 1922.
“Corporate seal.
“L. L. EVANS, Jr., Secretary.”

Plaintiff accepted the bond and relying thereon increased its deposits in said bank until the closing thereof on February 8, 1923, when the deposits totaled $52,844.93. After crediting on this amount the proceeds of other bonds, *165 there remained an unpaid balance of $35,734.93, to recover which this action was brought.

The sole defense interposed by the Evans Company was that the execution of the surety bond was ultra vires.

J. Paul Evans, a son of L. L. Evans, intervened, claiming to own 100 shares of the company stock, and setting up the same defense as the defendant company. From a judgment in plaintiff’s favor, both the company and intervenor have appealed, assigning as error: That the court erred in that it concluded that the acts of the defendant Evans Brothers Land and Live Stock Company, a corporation, were not ultra vires; that the court erred in that it found as a conclusion of law and without finding as a fact that said Evans Brothers Land and Live Stock Company has been benefited in its business on account of the execution of said bond, and is therefore estopped from denying its action in so signing the bond was, and is, intra vires.

Respondent moves a dismissal of the appeals upon the ground that heretofore and subsequent to the taking of appeal appellants brought an action in the trial court, claiming that the judgment had been fully paid and satisfied by execution, and praying injunctive relief against further threatened levies. Such satisfaction, however, must have been accomplished by a hostile proceeding to which appellants were in nowise parties. In order to maintain their appeals, they were not required to stay execution. They may either have been unable to furnish supersedeas bond, or elected to stand upon the appeal and sue for conversion in case of a successful issue. The motion to dismiss is denied.

At the time the Evans Company executed the bond, it was indebted to its principal, the First National Bank of American Falls, in the maximum sum by law allowed. Its officers were officers of the bank. Its directors were among the bank’s directorate. Its stockholders were stockholders of the bank. The Evans family controlled both. The entire paid-in capital of the company had been advanced without obligation of repayment by L. L. Evans who handled the *166 stock as he saw fit without objection or apparent inquiry by other members of the family who constituted the remaining stockholders. The company owned a large part of the property hear the bank; and the Evans family had “a large part” of their finances tied up in the bank. Confronted with such an array of interlocking interests, it is difficult to conceive how any benefit inuring to the bank from the execution of this bond could fail to work a direct benefit to the company. The trial court so concluded, which conclusion was in effect a finding of fact supported by the evidence. But, granting that the court erred, it further appears that for over a period of nine months, while plaintiff was continually increasing its deposits, the defendant company had been advised and in fact believed its undertaking to be ultra vires

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
252 P. 182, 43 Idaho 158, 1926 Ida. LEXIS 39, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/power-county-v-evans-bros-land-live-stock-co-idaho-1926.