Riley v. Bondi

64 F.2d 515, 1933 U.S. App. LEXIS 4138
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedMarch 30, 1933
DocketNo. 9552
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 64 F.2d 515 (Riley v. Bondi) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Riley v. Bondi, 64 F.2d 515, 1933 U.S. App. LEXIS 4138 (8th Cir. 1933).

Opinion

KENYON, Circuit Judge.

Appellant is receiver of the Interstate National Bank of Helena, Ark. He brings this action to recover against appellee, Ike Bondi, as a stockholder of said bank, a 100 per cent, assessment, which was levied on his stock by the Comptroller of the Currency.

In 1920 appellee contracted for the purchase of ten shares of the capital stock of this bank from one Seelig, and twenty shares from one Mundt. In each instance the seller indorsed the certificate of stock in blank and drew with the stock attached on appellee for the amount due. Appellee paid the drafts, took over the stock, and had the bank issue new certificates. In place of the canceled Mundt shares the bank issued two new certificates — one for ten shares, to Solomon. Bondi, and one for ten shares, to Ike Bondi’s wife, Dora Bondi. Por the Seelig stock it issued ten shares to Solomon Bondi. Later, when the capital stock of the bank was decreased, which was a few years prior to the closing of the bank, the certificates in the name of Solomon Bondi (the son) were canceled and a new certificate issued to him for ten shares. Thereafter the books of the bank showed ten shares of stock of the par value of $100 per share in the name of Solomon Bondi. At the time of the original placing of the stock in the name of Solomon Bondi, he was six years of age. When the bank closed in 1931 and was placed in the hands of the Comptroller of the Currency, he was seventeen years of ago.

The case was tried to a jury. No motion was made for a directed verdict, and the only questions here presented arise on an exception to a portion of the court’s charge and a refusal of the court to give a requested instruction. That part of the court’s instructions objected and excepted to is this: “Defendant, however, says that he bought stock, but bought it for his son and paid for it with his son’s money. That leaves but one ques[516]*516tion for you to determine as a jury, that is this, did Mr. Bondi when he bought the stock, buy it with his son’s money, and pay for it with his son’s money, or did he buy it with his own money, and have the stock issued in the name of his son. The fact that the son was a minor at the time of the purchase of the stock makes it impossible for him to assent to its purchase, and in that way bind himself. So, if Mr. Bondi, at the time he purchased the stock purchased it with his own money and made a gift of it to his son, he would still be liable, if the bank failed. 1 think I make the issue clear, that you have to pass upon. Did, Mr. Ike Bondi, at the time he purchased this stock and had it issued in the name of his son, purchase it with his own money and give the stock to his son, or did he purchase it with his son’s money and had it issued in the name of his son. If he purchased it with his son’s money and had it issued in the name of his son, then defendant would not be liable for this assessment. If on the other hand, he purchased it with his own money and gave it to his son, by having the stock issued in the name of his son, he would be liable, inasmuch as the son is a minor.”

The instruction requested, which was refused, and to which due exception was taken, is this: “If you find from a preponderance of the evidence that the defendant, Ike Bon-di, contracted for the stock, and caused it to be issued in the name of his minor son, that you will find for the plaintiff, and that it is immaterial whose money paid for the stock.”

The jury returned a verdict for defendant, upon, which judgment was entered.

■ It is the theory of appellant that, as ap-pellee contracted for the stock and purchased the same and placed it in the name of his minor son, who lacked capacity to assent to any transfer, the father became liable for the assessment, even though the stock was paid for by funds of the son. On the other hand, it is the contention of the appellee that he never owned the stock, that it was paid for with the son’s money, and consequently he (appel-lee) cannot be liable for the assessment.

In the face of the uneontroverted evidence that appellee contracted for the purchase of the stock and paid for it by debits to his account in the Merchants’ & Planters’ Bank of Clarendon, Ark., we are not called on to accept the jury’s finding as one that at the time he purchased the stock he purchased it with the son’s money. To do so would be to disregard the only evidence in the record — to accept as true what the record shows is not true. The largest amount the son had on deposit in his own name in that bank at any time during the year 1920 was $214.19. With reference to payment for the ten shares purchased from B. Seelig, appel-lee testified: “The books show it was charged to my account.” With reference to payment for the twenty shares purchased from Hugo Mundt he testified: “The $3,200 that was used to pay Mr. Mundt was paid in part by me, part by my wife’s money, and in part with my son’s money. I kept it all together, as well as I can remember and when the stock came to Clarendon, I was short and did not have enough to pay for it. It was paid out of my account. It was charged to my account. I think the money was all kept together at that time. At that time my wife’s money, my money and the boy’s money was all kept together.”

The overdraft created in defendant’s account by tlie $3,200 payment to Mundt was subsequently made good by appellee, according to his testimony, out of funds the son had on deposit in a St. Louis bank. Appel-lee testifies that the funds of the boy used to pay for the stock came from presents of money to the boy from his grandfather, his aunts and uncles, that the boy had an account in St. Louis — where or in what bank is not shown — and that appellee drew this and paid the overdraft created when the owners of the stock drew on him for the amount of the purchases. Appellee seems to have kept the dividends and handled the boy’s account exactly as if the funds had been his own.

There can be no question that appellee, Ike Bondi, and not his son, was the intended party to the contracts of purchase. He himself testified: “I handled the transaction for 10 shares issued in the name of my son from Mr. Seelig. * * * I contracted for it and had it issued in the boy’s name, and it came out to Clarendon and was delivered and I signed for it.” With reference to the twenty shares purchased from Hugo Mundt, Mundt testified: “I sold it to Ike Bondi.” In each instance the stoek was indorsed in blank by the seller, and it was at appellee’s direction that the new certificates were issued in his son’s name. So far as either the seller or the bank was concerned, defendant had acquired complete dominion over the stock, to place it in whose ever name he should direct.

We are justified under this record in accepting the verdict of the jury as a finding that the son paid for the stock in. the sense that his father reimbursed himself out of [517]*517funds of the son for the amounts he paid for tho stock. Under these circumstances was appellee liable for the assessment?

The son never became a stockholder liable to the assessment. Ho was not in law capable of giving assent to a purchase of the same for him. He did not have contractual capacity. His nonliability is tho same whether tho stock was given him or purchased with his money. He could ratify the contract of course when he became of age, but until that time it was not binding on Mm.

The National Bank Act, Rev. St. § 5151 (12 USCA § 63) contemplates that on every share of stock held in a national bank some one shall be legally liable for assessment.

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Bluebook (online)
64 F.2d 515, 1933 U.S. App. LEXIS 4138, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/riley-v-bondi-ca8-1933.