Rogers v. First State Bank

243 P. 637, 79 Colo. 84
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedFebruary 15, 1926
DocketNo. 11,284.
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 243 P. 637 (Rogers v. First State Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rogers v. First State Bank, 243 P. 637, 79 Colo. 84 (Colo. 1926).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Adams

delivered the opinion of the court.

The First State Bank of Aguilar, defendant in error, was plaintiff in the district court. It obtained judgment against Earl Rogers in a suit upon a promissory note. Rogers brings the case here for review. The parties will be referred to as plaintiff and defendant, as in the trial court.

Defendant was a stockholder and also president and manager of the Rogers Farming and Live Stock Company, a corporation, the capital stock of which was owned by defendant, his brother, since deceased, and his father. The company owed the plaintiff bank $9,350, evidenced by two of its corporate notes, one for $6,850, and the other for $2,500. The State Bank Commissioner *86 objected to the size of the credit extended to the company by the bank, on the ground that it was excessive and contrary to law and the banking regulations.

With the above situation before the parties, defendant and his deceased brother executed and delivered to the bank their personal note for $2,500, to reduce the excess loan to the corporation. The corporate note was thereupon marked “Paid” and was so shown on the books of the bank, and the new note was substituted for the old one, although it appears that the corporate note, as well as the Rogers personal note, remained in the bank files. The bank is a going concern.

At the time that the defendant executed his personal note to the bank, one Emberton, who was then the bank president, gave defendant a separate memorandum, in the following words:

“Aguilar, Colorado, July 5, 1922.
“This is to certify that Jeff Rogers and Earl Rogers have this day and date signed a note for $2,500.00 with the First State Bank of Aguilar, Colo., and which note is to be taken up by said bank without cost of any nature whatsoever to the said Jeff and Earl Rogers. It merely reduces an excess loan to the Rogers Farming and Live Stock Co. (The italics are ours.)
“W. T. Emberton.”

The defendant kept the above memorandum and the bank kept the note and included it among its assets. No officer of the bank, other than Emberton, knew about the above separate memorandum when it was made, nor did the State Bank Commissioner know of it. Emberton is no longer connected with the bank.

After maturity, the bank sued Earl Rogers and Jeff Rogers on their personal note. There was no service on Jeff Rogers, he having died after the suit was brought. Upon his death the action was dismissed as to him but was continued to final judgment against Earl Rogers, which is the matter now here on review.

*87 Defendant’s first argument goes to the question of the validity of the above contemporaneous agreement; second, that the note sued upon was given without consideration; and third, a plea of payment.

1. As to the above agreement signed by Emberton: Defendant, although admitting that he and his brother signed the personal note, and that it was delivered to the bank, makes this defense, relating to the above side agreement, which we quote from defendant’s answer: “Defendant Earl Bogers further says that said pretended note was so solicited and obtained as aforesaid merely for appearances (the italics are ours) in order to avoid criticism by the State Bank Examiner because of excess loans from plaintiff bank to the Bogers Farming and Live Stock Company aforesaid, and for no other purpose. That it was then and there distinctly understood and agreed by and between plaintiff and defendants that no money, property, or any other thing of value should go to defendants or either of them upon, or because of, their signing and delivering said pretended note, or at all.”

The above defense, in connection with the evidence, as well as the separate agreement itself, disclose that defendant intended to reduce the excess debt of the corporation in which he was a stockholder, and also the president and manager thereof, and to give it a pretended financial standing by making it seem that the orders of the State Bank Commissioner had been complied with, whereas, they were not. Also that defendant, “merely for appearances,” thereby intended to deceive the public officer by covering up the excess loan to the corporation, and that in order to do so he meant to help swell the portfolio of the bank with a fictitious or spurious note that was never to be enforced, it having been executed and placed there solely for the purposes of deception.

Plaintiff denies defendant’s plea and says that the alleged separate agreement is in violation of law and *88 opposed to public policy. The evidence further shows that the State Bank Commissioner was in fact deceived.

The trial court held that Epaberton had no power or authority to bind the bank by a separate agreement that the note would not be enforced and that defendant knew or should have known this. We must agree with this conclusion. We cannot concede that such a plea as that interposed by defendant would be good in any jurisdiction, but if there be a doubt, we purpose to dispel it here. The State Bank Commissioner is a public officer, charged by law and obligated by his oath of office, as well as by considerations of honest dealing with the banking public, to protect their rights. A defense that a note sued upon was given to deceive him is contrary to law and sound public policy. No relief based upon such a plea can be granted to any litigant.

In German American State Bank v. Watson, 99 Kans. 686, 163 Pac. 637, it is said: “By the weight of authority an executive officer of a bank has no implied authority to bind it by a promise that one who signs a note shall not be required to pay it. The cases on the subject are collected in a note in 28 L. R. A. (N. S.) 501, where it is said: ‘It is a general rule recognized by the great majority of the cases, that the president or cashier or any other similar executive officer of -a bank has no authority, simply by virtue of his office, to bind his bank by an agreement, made with the maker or indorsers of commercial paper payable to the bank, that their liability on such paper will not be enforced. The rule applies whether the agreement is made before the paper has, been signed, or after.’ ”

To same effect: Michie on Banks and Banking, section 102, page 706; 3 R. C. L. section 69, page 442. Many other authorities are reviewed in German American State Bank v. Watson, supra.

Defendant cites cases permitting recovery by receivers of national banks on the ground that the receiver repre *89 sents the creditors of the bank, and holding that as such representative, he can collect for such creditors. From this counsel for defendant argues that after a receivership a recovery may be permissible for the creditors, but not before, because he says that before a receiver has taken charge, it is the bank and not the creditors whose rights are involved. But the receivership cases are not in point, for there is no question involved here as to the rights of a receiver.

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243 P. 637, 79 Colo. 84, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rogers-v-first-state-bank-colo-1926.