Robinson v. First Nat. Bank of Ardmore

1924 OK 681, 231 P. 502, 107 Okla. 160, 1924 Okla. LEXIS 654
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedSeptember 9, 1924
Docket13087
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 1924 OK 681 (Robinson v. First Nat. Bank of Ardmore) 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
Robinson v. First Nat. Bank of Ardmore, 1924 OK 681, 231 P. 502, 107 Okla. 160, 1924 Okla. LEXIS 654 (Okla. 1924).

Opinion

LYDICK, J.

The First State Bank of Mansville, Okla., became insolvent in the month of September, 1915, and the State Bank Commissioner took charge of same and *161 proceeded to liquidate the bank as provided by law. Eugene B. Wolverton was cashier of this bank, and at that time he individually owned a certain tract of real estate in which his bank owned no interest. His bank at that time was heavily indebted to the First National Bank of Ardmore. The State Bank Commissioner feared that the particular liabilities of the First State Bank, for the payment of which the state guaranty fund was liable, would exceed the available assets of that bank, and that he would be required to pay such deficit from that fund. The First National Bank believed its securities insufficient and that it would sustain a loss on the indebtedness due it by the First State Bank. The Bank Commissioner and the First National Bank pressed Eugene V. Wolverton for protection from his individual estate against losses occasioned by his bank, the operation of which had been under his personal management. It was, therefore, orally agreed by and between the Bank Commissioner, Eugene V. Wolverton, and the First National Bank that Wolverton should execute and deliver a deed conveying this particular tract of real estate in trust to the First State Bank for the sole purpose of protecting the state guaranty fund from possible loss on account of the insolvency of the First State Bank. It was further agreed that upon said land, and subject to the rights then conveyed by this deed of trust, Wolverton would execute a mortgage to the First National Bank to secure the said indebtedness to it then due. The deed and the mortgage were executed accordingly and filed of record.

Both Wolverton and the Assistant Bank Commissioner, who made the agreement for the Banking Department with him, testified that the deed was given only to protect the state guaranty fund against loss on account of payments which by law should be paid therefrom. D. Lacy, who, as president of the First National Bank, represented it in the making of this three-party agreement, said it was specifically recited that the claim of one Dunegan upon his time certificate should not be paid, and his testimony in that regard is undisputed.

The Bank Commissioner completed the liquidation of the First State Bank and from the proceeds of the assets of this bank alone, and without recourse to the land conveyed to it by Wolverton’s trust deed, fully paid all those depositors and all others who, under the law, could in any event have claims upon the state guaranty fund. When this had all been done, one Dunegan presented to the State Banking Board for payment out of the state guaranty fund a time certificate! of deposit issued by the First State Bank before it became insolvent, same being for the sum of $8,000 and upon its face drawing interest only at the rate of four per cent, per annum. However, the bank in fact had been regularly paying six per cent, interest thereon for a long time ana was under an oral agreement to continue to do so. Under our statute this fact bars this claim from being paid out of the state guaranty fund. The State Banking Board, in regular session and in the year 1915, disapproved and disallowed this claim against the state guaranty fund for reasons stated, and for years this particular matter concerning Dunegan’s claim was a closed incident. In the year 1920, when the personnel of the State Bank Commissioner and Banking Board had changed, Dunegan again presented his claim for payment out of the state guaranty fund, and in the year 1920, five years after it had been formally disapproved, the State Bank Commissioner, but not the Banking Board, allowed the claim in the sum of $6,400, and caused same to be paid in that amount out of the state guaranty fund. Thereupon the State Bank Commissioner asserted title to the land under the trust deed and by the statutory procedure provided he sold same through an order of the district court of Carter county unto W. T. Robinson, plaintiff in error here. At that time and before Robinson bought this land from the Bank Commissioner, the mortgage to the First National Bank was of record and wholly unsatisfied, and representatives of that bank informed Robinson of all these facts and warned him to beware of the lien claimed by the First National Bank under its said mortgage. Robinson bought the land, received and recorded his deed from the Bank Commissioner, and, asserting title thereto, he brought this suit in the district court of Carter county against Eugene V. Wolverton and the First National Bank to quiet his title. The First National Bank answered and filed a cross-petition pleading the facts as stated, and sought to cancel the deed given to Robinson and to obtain a decree of the court that the equitable title in said land was vested in Wolverton, subject to the mortgage given to it. Wolverton filed a similar answer. Robinson, by way of reply, asked that in the event the court should find the deed given by Wolverton to the First State Bank was intended only as a trust deed and a mortgage, Robinson be decreed to have a first lien upon this land to secure the repayment to him of the $6,-400 paid out of the state guaranty fund on the Dunegan claim by the order of the Bank Commissioner, claiming that by the Bank Commissioner’s deed to him, he was, in effect *162 the assignee of this claim, and that it was secured by the trust deed. The case was tried to the court without a jury, and the court made its separate findings of fact and conclusions of law, finding the facts generally against the plaintiff, Robinson, and in fav- or of the defendants, and consistent with the foregoing statement. Judgment went accordingly, and the plaintiff, Robinson, brings the case here on appeal by petition in error with case-made attached.

Now, the Bank Commissioner, by virtue of this trust deed executed by Wolverton to the First' State Bank, did not acquire title to this land. As the official head of the Banking Department he thereby held only a lien on this land to secure the repayment to the guaranty fund of such sums, if any, that may have been lawfully paid out therefrom in the liquidation of the First State Bank. Not holding the absolute title to this land, he was without authority to sell, same without proceeding regularly in- the district court for the determination of the amount of the debt secured by such lien, a judgment for the foreclosure of his lien, and the judicial sale of the premises accordingly. This he did not do. Robinson purchased this - land from the Bank Commissioner with both constructive and actual knowledge of all the facts. He is not an innocent purchaser fox-value and does not here -so contend. His rights, thei-efore, are only those of a mort--gagee in possession, and thus we will treat him. Robinson, as a mortgagee in posses-ion, has a lien on the land superior to the lien of the First National Bank to secure that sum and only that sum which has been lawfully paid out of the state guaranty fund in the liquidation of, the First State Bank, and which according to the oral agreement had between the State Bank Commissioner and Wolverton, the trust deed was given to secure.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1924 OK 681, 231 P. 502, 107 Okla. 160, 1924 Okla. LEXIS 654, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/robinson-v-first-nat-bank-of-ardmore-okla-1924.