Riegel v. Planters State Bank

1924 OK 303, 227 P. 105, 100 Okla. 42, 1924 Okla. LEXIS 912
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedMarch 11, 1924
Docket11790
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 1924 OK 303 (Riegel v. Planters State Bank) 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
Riegel v. Planters State Bank, 1924 OK 303, 227 P. 105, 100 Okla. 42, 1924 Okla. LEXIS 912 (Okla. 1924).

Opinion

Opinion by

LYONS, C.

In this case the jury found in answer to a special interrogatory that O. B. Riegel, attorney at law, earned a fee in the sum of $250 for services performed by said attorney for the Mountain Park State Bank in the suit of Lewis Terry, Receiver, v. Mountain Park State Bank.

This action is maintained by the personal representative of said O. B. Riegel, an attorney at law, who was deceased prior to the filing of the cause in the district court. Suit was brought against the Planters State Bank, a corporation, and A. M. Trader and A. Y. Britton, who are the defendants in error in this cause.

The plaintiff seeks to recover against these defendants on the theory that the Mountain Park State Bank was merged and consolidated with the defendant Planters State Bank, and it is claimed that the Planters State Bank took over all of the assets of the Mountain Park State Bank and assumed charge and control of the /banking business of the said bank, and consolidated the same with the banking business of the defendant Planters State Bank, and that the Planters State Bank then and thereby assumed the payment of all of the liabilities, debts, and obligations of the Mountain Park State Bank, including the indebtedness due by reason of the services of 0. B. Riegel, attorney at law.

The defendants A. M. Trader and A. V. Britton are said to be liable by reason of the fact that they were stockholders in the Mountain Park State Bank, holding stock therein in excess of the sum of $500 par value, and it is claimed therefore, that there is a statutory liability provided against them equal to the par value of the stock held by them, by reason of their stock ownership.

It is clear under the finding of the jury that the plaintiff has a valid debt which was owed b,y the Mountain Park State Bank to O. B. Riegel, an attorney at law, since deceased. The trial court held, however, that the indebtedness could not be asserted against the Planters State Bank, a corporation, or against A. M. Trader and A. V. Britton, as stockholders.

It must be noted that the basis of the claim against Trader and Britton is the statutory liability of a stockholder of a bank. We think the judgment of the trial court was correct as to Trader and Britton. The case of Dill v. Ebey, 27 Okla. 584, 112 Pac. 573, and the case of Blackert v. Lankford, 74 Oklahoma, 176 Pac. 532, are sufficient authority to sustain the judgment on the question of the individual liability of stockholders of a bank. In the Blackert Case, supra, the court cited with approval a decision of the Supreme Court of Minnesota in the case of N. W. Trust Company v. Bradbury, 117 Minn. 83, 134 N. W. 513, Ann. Cas. 1913D 69, as follows:

“The constitutional liability of stock holders in banking corporations was designed solely for the benefit of creditors, and constitutes a fund available only when the bank is insolvent and unable to meet its *43 obligations in full. Tbe corporation itself bas no authority over tbe fund, cannot compel its payment, nor by any act on its part release tbe stockholders therefrom. It amounts for all practical purposes to a reserve or trust fund, to be resorted to only in proceedings in liquidation, when necessary to meet tbe payment of obligations of tbe corporation, it is limited to an amount equal to tbe par value of tbe stock held and owned by each stockholder, and exists in favor of tbe creditors collectively, not severally, and in proportion to tbe amount of their respective claims against the corporation.”

We think, therefore, that under tbe rule of this court tbe plaintiff did not make a sufficient showing to disclose liability against Trader and Britton, and that tbe judgment of tbe trial court as to said defendants is correct.

Tbe principal question in this case, and one which is not free from difficulty, is whether or not the Planters 'State Bank is liable for tbe indebtedness by reason of its transactions with tbe Mountain Park State Bank. The principles of law covering the transaction are settled. If the Planters State Bank acquired tbe assets of tbe Mountain Park State Bank by an unconditional sale, and paid value for such assets, then there is no liability. If, however, tbe transaction between the Mountain Park State Bank and tbe Planters State Bank is a consolidation or a merger, or if the Planters State Bank is a successor of the Mountain Park State Bank in a legal sense, then the Planters State Bank is liable for tbe indebtedness. It therefore becomes necessary to examine tbe facts to determine the legal effect of the transaction between these two banks. Tbe only witness who testified at the trial in tbe lower court on this question was W. G. Oapps, president of the defendant Planters State Bank:

“Q. Who were the stockholders of the Mountain Park State Bank?, A. A. Y. Brit-ton, A. M. Trader, and I don’t remember the others. Q. Mrs. Trader? A. Yes. Q. Plow much of the assets of the bank did they take over? A. Well they took over forty thousand — the equivalent of the deposits, whatever they (were, or forty thous- and. Q. How much money? A. Well, I think that their loans was probably about twenty-two or three thousand dollars, and the furniture and fixtures was about $2,100, and then the difference in cash. Q. You took over- all the cash they had? A. Yes, sir. Q. You took all real estate also? A. No, sir. Q. You didn’t take the banking house and fixtures? A. I took the fixtures. Q. Did the banking house belong to the Mountain Park State Bank, ,or were they renting it? A. Renting it, j suppose. . Q. But you took their'fixtures and other stuff? A. Yes, and their fixtures.’ Q. Now what part of that — did any of the stockholders of the Mountain Park State Bank’ become stockholders in- that transaction of the Planters State Bank? . A. Well'the — not by that transaction; some of them afterwards became stockholders; Q. Isn’t it a fact, Mr. Capps, that as a member of that — as a. part of that transaction. you issued stock of the Planters State Bank to the stockholders of the Mountain Park State Bank in payment of the consideration for that transfer? A. Well, I don’t know whether you would call it that or not, hardly, although of course they had money there and they took some stock in our bank. Q. They took Stock for the money that was coming to them out of the transaction — who did Qiat? A. Well, Mr. Trader. Q. Mrs. Trader? A. Mrs. Trader. Q. And the Brittons, did they take any stock? A. No, sir. Q. They took theirs in money? A. Yes, sir. Q. Now, when did the Mountain Park State Bank go into liquidation? A. Weil, it was along — I think it was the latter part of 1914, I am not certain about the year. * * * Q. You assisted in the liquidation of the bank? A. Well to that extent.of taking — paying off the depositors out of the notes and fixtures and assets that we took over. Q. As a matter of fact, Mr. Capps, you did not pay off the depositors at the time of the liquidation— you merely transferred their accounts to your bank and they became depositors in your bank? A. Yes. Q. As a matter of fact, some of those accounts haven’t been paid yet? A. I could not say — -probably some of them have been paid. Q. Probably some of them are still holding deposits in your bank ? A. Well, that might be. , Q. You merely took over his banking — you merely took over and transferred to the books of the Planters State Bank the accounts, of the Mountain Park State Bank? A. Yes, sir. Q. Now, did you pay any,debts of the Mountain Park State Bank, besides the deposits? A.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1924 OK 303, 227 P. 105, 100 Okla. 42, 1924 Okla. LEXIS 912, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/riegel-v-planters-state-bank-okla-1924.