Queensboro National Bank of the City v. Kelly

220 A.D. 515, 221 N.Y.S. 703, 1927 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 9351
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedMay 6, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 220 A.D. 515 (Queensboro National Bank of the City v. Kelly) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Queensboro National Bank of the City v. Kelly, 220 A.D. 515, 221 N.Y.S. 703, 1927 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 9351 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1927).

Opinion

Kapper, J.

Defendant was the principal stockholder, director and president of the plaintiff bank. He is sued on his promissory note, made payable to the plaintiff, for the sum of $2,377.17.

His answer is, first, .that the note was made by him without consideration, and second, that the note was one of twenty-one notes each for a like amount and made by the twenty-one directors of the bank including himself to make good an impairment of about $50,000 of the bank’s assets; that it was agreed amongst the several directors that payments on these notes should be made by the makers in equal proportion to the amounts of the note or notes signed by each director;” that none of the directors made any payments on account of said notes at their maturity with the exception of interest charges and ten per cent of the amount of each note, and that the 'defendant has offered to pay on account of his note “ any sum in proportion to the amount paid by the other directors,” but plaintiff has declined to receive any payment from him other than the amount of the note in full.

Trial by jury was had, and a single question submitted to them for answer, namely: At and prior to April 6th, 1925, the time of the making of the original notes by the defendant and the other directors of the plaintiff bank, was an agreement for the payment of such notes as testified to by the defendant entered into between the directors and the bank? ” To this question the jury answered, Yes.” The learned trial justice thereupon made an order holding “ that the said agreement found by the jury as having been entered into between the plaintiff and the defendant is invalid and has no significance in law because the same is indefinite, vague and uncertain,” and directed judgment in favor, of the plaintiff for the amount of the note with interest, and judgment accordingly was thereupon entered. From it the defendant appeals.

There is no dispute but that, up to the time of the commencement of this action, the directors other than the defendant had paid into the bank on account of their notes ten per cent of the amount thereof, as the defendant alleged.

The so-called agreement upon which the appellant relies has for its basis only his own testimony, from which it appears that the bank was in process of examination by the Federal bank examiner who, on April 6, 1925, while the examination was about completed, [517]*517engaged in a conversation with the defendant and his codirectors; and defendant, being asked to state what was said at that time, answered: There were certain slow and doubtful assets of the bank which the bank examiner ruled could not be carried among the assets of the bank. Some of these loans were considered collectible in the future, but for present purposes he considered they should not be classed among the live assets. Accordingly, the sum total of those accounts was some $51,000, approximately. It was suggested at that time that the directors, proportionate among themselves, take up these losses, with the idea of reimbursing themselves either from the slow and doubtful assets as they were collected or from other earnings of the bank as they might be available. The proportionate amount was $2,166. 'A director by the name of Jacob Rachich and myself drew our checks for that amount of money and laid them on the table. One director, by the name of James S. Hurwitz, objected that he was not in a position to liquidate any such sum of money at that time, nor he did not see in any event why he should liquidate any part of that loss, and some argument took place, and his friends, Mr. Perlo and Mr. Roth, persuaded him to sign the note for that amount, for $2,166. Another director, John Russo by name, as I recall it, together with Mr. Hurwitz, objected that they would not be able to pay those notes in full as they became due; and the matter then resolved itself into an understanding with all the directors that these notes should be given proportionately * * *. The conversation among the directors was they were not able to and would not be willing to liquidate these notes as they became due, but that they would liquidate these notes gradually and proportionately. Some question was made to the bank examiner as to whether these notes — one of the directors addressed an inquiry to the bank examiner as to whether these notes must be paid in full at maturity, and he said 1 no/ that as long as reasonable reduction — something like ten per cent was mentioned — I even think he suggested the amount, if my recollection serves me right — that if proportionate payment of, say, ten per cent was made when these notes gradually fell due, it would be considered proper by the Bank Department, and would be passed by him. * * * The conversation at that time among the directors was that while there was no positive liability on the part of the directors, that these losses had been occasioned in the functioning of the bank over a year and a half or more of its existence, and that , rather than levy an assessment upon the stockholders, the directors would take up the losses, with the distinct understanding that they would be reimbursed either from one or two sources; that is, liquidation [518]*518of the bad accounts or from other resources of the bank or earnings as they came in.”

Assuming that this testimony made out an agreement amongst the directors of this bank that the notes of each were to be obligated only to the extent of proportionate payments on account from time to time, I am of the opinion that such agreement was wholly ineffectual to defeat the bank’s claim against the makers of the notes. The contention that this note was without consideration cannot prevail.' The vital interest which this appellant, as principal stockholder, director and president of the bank, had in its success or continuance in business was in and of itself a sufficient consideration for the giving of his note for a one-twenty-first proportion of the total of the bank’s impaired assets. It is apparent from the defendant’s testimony that the ruling of the Federal bank examiner was that these doubtful assets ” or losses ” could not be carried as bank assets. Moreover, the testimony expressly shows that these directors would take up the losses, with the distinct understanding that they would be reimbursed either from one or two sources; that is, liquidation of the bad accounts or from other resources of the bank or earnings as they came in.” It was the clear intention of all of the makers that their notes were to be looked upon by the bank’s depositors as well as the public as five and liquid funds, and that these notemakers were to be regarded as creditors of the bank out of specific sources, namely, when the “ bad accounts ” were liquidated or the resources or earnings of the bank would permit of reimbursement. The notes were not only good but were based upon a fair legal consideration.

Moreover, I think that, under well-settled authority, this arrangement of the directors, assuming it to have been made and further assuming it to be entitled to the dignity of being called an agreement, was illegal. Daly, Chief Judge of the New York Common Pleas, General Term, in Sickels v. Herold (15 Misc. 116, 118), learnedly discusses the proposition, as follows:

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Bluebook (online)
220 A.D. 515, 221 N.Y.S. 703, 1927 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 9351, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/queensboro-national-bank-of-the-city-v-kelly-nyappdiv-1927.