Rayville State Bank v. Mangham State Bank

2 La. App. 710, 1925 La. App. LEXIS 243
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 9, 1925
DocketNo. 2231
StatusPublished

This text of 2 La. App. 710 (Rayville State Bank v. Mangham State Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rayville State Bank v. Mangham State Bank, 2 La. App. 710, 1925 La. App. LEXIS 243 (La. Ct. App. 1925).

Opinion

ODOM, J.

Plaintiff brings this suit to recover of defendant, Mangham State Bank, the sum of $840.00 with 5% per annum interest thereon from judicial demand until paid; the said amount being the alleged value of five shares of the capital stock of Mangham State Bank represented by certificate No. 68.

As a cause of action, plaintiff sets out, in substance, that the said five shares of stock represented by certificate No. 68 were issued by the Mangham State Bank to W. Kline on February 20, 1913, and that on April 9, 1913, said Kline signed, in blank, a power of attorney for the transfer of said stock on the books of the corporation, and that subsequently the said Kline and one A. S. Brown became jointly indebted to the plaintiff bank and that Kline pledged the said certificate of stock as collateral to secure the payment of said indebtedness; that said indebtedness was renewed from time to time, and that at the time of the filing of this suit said Kline and said Brown are indebted to plaintiff bank for a considerable amount represented by a certain promissory note signed by A. S. Brown and endorsed by Kline dated April 16, 1920, and due December 1, 1920, and to which note is attached as collateral security the above referred to bank stock.

The plaintiff alleges that said note provides for the sale of any collateral which may be attached thereto, and’that upon the failure of said Kline and Brown to pay the note due it applied to the Mangham State Bank to have five shares of its stock transferred to petitioner for the purpose of giving credit on said note for the value thereof.

[711]*711And it is further alleged that plaintiff was then informed hy the hank officials that the transfer could not he made for the reason that it had previously issued to said W. Kline, the book owner of the five shares of stock represented by certificate No. 68, a new certificate, No. 177, in lieu of certificate No. 68, which latter certificate was represented to have been lost or destroyed and advertised in a local newspaper; and that on December 22,1922, said certificate No. 177 was transferred to Mrs. Rosa B. Willis who surrendered the same and had issued to herself certificate No. 178.

Petitioner then sets up that the acts of said Kline and Mrs. Rosa B. Willis in representing that certificate No 68 had been lost or destroyed and procuring the issuance of certificate No. 177 lieu thereof were fraudulent and that said certificate No. 68 had been pledged to it and was in its possession for more than five years and that Mrs. Rosa B. Willis knew at the time she acquired said certificate of stock from Kline that the original certificate was not lost or destroyed but was in plaintiff’s possession.

Plaintiff further alleges that the Mangham State Bank had knowledge of these fraudulent acts and deeds by and between Kline and Mrs. Willis and knew that the original certificate had not been lost.

Both Kline and Mrs. Willis were made parties to the suit.

The defendant bank answered especially denying any liability- to plaintiff and setting up that certificate No. 68 was never held as collateral to the note which plaintiff alleges is due it by Brown and endorsed by Kline but that it was held as collateral to an indebtedness of Kline’s which had been paid.

It admitted that it refused to issue a certificate to plaintiff when requested to do so, and it especially alleged that before it issued certificate No. 177 it required the said W. Kline, who was the record owner thereof, and Mrs. Willis, who claimed to hold the same, to advertise the loss of the original certificate No.. 68, and that upon the failure of any one to claim the ownership thereof it issued the duplicate.

Defendant asked that Mrs. Willis and the said Kline be called in warranty and made to respond to it in ease it should be held that it is due plaintiff any amount. W. Kline answered denying that the bank stock was ever pledged to the plaintiff bank on account of the indebtedness alleged upon but, on the contrary, he alleged that said stock was left in the plaintiff bank, merely for safe-keeping and that said stock Was never pledged to plaintiff as collateral to the Kline-Brown indebtedness.

He admits that in the summer of 1912 he agreed to sell the stock to Mrs. Willis and being unable to find the certificate he caused the same to be advertised in the name of Mrs. Willis at the direction of the Mangham State Bank and that after the advertisement the bank issued certificate No. 177 which he subsequently transr ferred to Mrs. Willis.

Mrs. Willis answered alleging especially that she acquired certificate No. 178 in good faith, paying therefor $790.00, but only after the loss of the original certificate No. 68 had been advertised.

Further answering, she reiterates the allegations of Kline’s answer as to the pledge of the stock to the plaintiff bank, and she especially alleges that the plaintiff bank was aware of the advertisment of the loss of the certificate of stock, and made no claim to the stock.

The trial of the case in the lower court resulted in a judgment rejecting plaintiff’s demand and recognizing Mrs. Willis as the owner of the stock from which judgment .plaintiff has appealed.

[712]*712OPINION.

i A complete history.of this case and the .various transactions with reference to. the dive , shares • of the capital stock of the .•Mangham State Bank, as between W. Kline, •the original owner thereof, and the plaintiff, and as between Kline and Mrs. 'Willis, his transferee of the stock, and as between Kline and the Mangham State Bank and Mrs. Willis and the plaintiff, is fully set forth in the above statement of pleadings.

The suit is to recover of the defendant bank the sum of $840.00, the alleged value of five shares of its capital stock.

Plaintiff is the holder, under a blank endorsement of W. Kline, of certificate No. 68 representing five shares of the capital stock of defendant bank, issued to W. Kline; claiming that said stock had been pledged to it by Kline as collateral for an- indebtedness which he was due it ■and which he failed or refused to pay, plaintiff presented said certificate to the defendant bank in the latter part of 1922 and asked that said bank cancel it and issue in lieu thereof another certificate •for a. like number of shares of its capital stock; the bank refused to to this and gave, as its reasons, the following, stated in a letter to Tobin R. Hodge, attorney for the bank, dated May 2, 1923.

. “We are" unable to accept certificate No. 68 for five shares stock, in favor of W. Kline, and issue to the Rayville State Bank a like number of shares, for the reason - that this stock was advertised in the' Richland Beacon News, as lost, and on 11-29-22 we issued to W. Kline cer. No. 177 for the said shares of stock and he, on' Dec. 22, 1922, transferred to the same to Mrs. B. R. Willis, which stock she now holds under certificate No. 178 as of last date named.”

It is. plaintiff’s contention that "it is entitled,,to stock and that defendant bank should not have reissued it to Kline, and the said bank, being custodian of its shares of stock and being" vested with the power ’and it .being its duty, to protect the interests of its stockholders must respond to plaintiff in damages on account of the injury which plaintiff suffered by reason of defendant’s failure to properly exercise its powers and perform its duties.

It is alleged and proved that defendant bank has .

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Bluebook (online)
2 La. App. 710, 1925 La. App. LEXIS 243, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rayville-state-bank-v-mangham-state-bank-lactapp-1925.