Ruohs v. Bank

28 S.W. 303, 94 Tenn. 57
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 8, 1894
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 28 S.W. 303 (Ruohs v. Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ruohs v. Bank, 28 S.W. 303, 94 Tenn. 57 (Tenn. 1894).

Opinions

Wilkes, J.

Complainant, Ruohs, bought twenty-two bonds, purporting to have been issued by the town of Athens, Tenn., in aid of- the Nashville and Tellico Railroad Company, each for one thousand dollars, and paid for the same $19,800, or at the rate of ninety cents on the dollar. He afterward brought suit against the town of Athens to recover the amount then due him on said bonds, when it was held that the charter of the town of Athens was void, and its bonds, as a consequence, were invalid and void, even in his hands as a loom fide holder for value, and relief was denied him. See the case of Ruohs v. Athens, 7 Pick., 20.

The present bill is filed to hold the defendants, Third National Bank of Chattanooga, W. E. Bas-[59]*59kett, its cashier; W. PI. Hart, vice president, and the representatives of Jno. A. Hart, its president, .liable for said bonds.

The grounds upon which it is sought to hold the defendants liable t are guaranty, ‘ ‘express and implied,” fraudulent misrepresentations, and mutual mistake, in the sale of the bonds to Ruohs, in which it is charged the hank, as a corporation, and its officers, as individuals, participated.

Much proof was taken, and, on the hearing, the Chancellor denied complainant any relief, and dismissed his bill, from which he appealed, and has assigned errors.

There is no controversy hut that complainant is a bona fide purchaser of the bonds, for full value, and without actual notice of their invalidity; that he paid the sum of $19,800 for them, and that there is a total failure of consideration in the fact that the bonds are invalid and void.

Complainant’s view of the case is, that he was a patron of the defendant bank, kept a large amount of money on deposit in it, had the utmost confidence in its officers, and trusted largely to their representations and statements in his business matters.

He was approached by John A. Hart, the president, with an offer to sell him the twenty-two bonds, and, knowing nothing of them, he sought the advice of Plart, and inquired specially as to the solvency and validity of the bonds, and was assured by Hart that they were regular and valid, that the officers of [60]*60the bank had made an investigation at Athens and found the bonds were all right, and they would prove a good investment and be 'worth a premium. Hart represented that he would be glad to buy them himself if complainant would lend him the necessary money. He further represented, that the bonds belonged to a Louisville party, and the bank was only interested in selling them for a commission. Similar inquiries were made of the cashier, Baskett, and vice president,' W. H. Hart, and they also assured complainant that the bonds were good. Complainant, relying upon these representations, made no further inquiries, except to consult legal counsel whether the bonds were regular on their face.

Complainant charges that the Harts and Baskett conspired together to mislead him; that they had already bought the bonds for seventy-two and one half cents on the dollar, and sold them to complainant for ninety cents, and this was done with the intention, afterwards consummated, to appropriate and divide the profits.

The bank filed a demurrer, and demurrers were also incorporated in the answers of the officers as individuals. The bill was amended so as .to charge, more distinctly, conspiracy on the part of the bank and its officers to defraud complainant, and that the defendants acted for the bank as well as for themselves, and that the spoils were divided between the bank and the officers.

A second demurrer was filed by the bank, set[61]*61ting up, among other grounds, that the act, as charged, was ultra vires so far as the hank was concerned. This demurrer was overruled, with liberty to rely on the same in answer.

It is insisted, with great earnestness and zeal, that the Chancellor erred in refusing to grant the relief asked against each and all of the defendants. The grounds on which complainant bases his claim to relief are, in substance:

First. — That the officers and bank guaranteed the validity and solvency of the bonds by express stipulation; and if this cannot be maintained, such guaranty will be implied from the transaction itself.

Second. — That the officers of the bank made false and fraudulent misrepresentations in regard to the bonds and their validity and, solvency, upon which complainant relied, and for which he is entitled to hold both the bank and the officers liable to the extent of the bonds, or at least the amount paid for them.

Third. — If neither of these contentions can be maintained, still complainant can hold both the bank and its officers for the full amount paid for - the bonds, on the ground of mutual mistake of - the parties in dealing with the bonds, which had no legal existence, and which proved to be utterly void.

It appears that when the bonds were issued by the town of Athens, they went into the hands of R. L. Bright, president of the railroad company, and were by him hypothecated — one half with the Eirst-[62]*62National Bank of Athens, and the other half with the Bank of Fayetteville, Tennessee.

About the first -of November, 1888, while Bright was in New York, he sold the bonds to a party to him then unknown, but represented by Defendant Baskett. He had previously been negotiating for a sale of the bonds with Jno. A. Hart and Baskett. He states that he did not know the bank at all in the transaction; that the negotiations were made with Jno. A. 'Hart and Baskett, and, if the bank had any connection with it, he did not know it. He further states, however, that when he returned, a memorandum was presented to him, showing how the proceeds had been applied, and that $354.75 of the proceeds had been applied as a credit on a note he owed the bank individually, and that this amount, together with the amounts paid the Athens and Fay-etteville banks, and a commission to Baskett of $159.50 (or one per cent.), consumed the proceeds of the sale — $15,950.

He cannot account for this $354.75 transaction, except by saying that Hart and Baskett, having possession of the money, and being officers of the bank, had it credited upon his note to the bank, and he accounted' for the same to the railroad company.

He states, in a second deposition, that he knew the bank only as a collecting agent, and did not know it had any interest in the purchase, but supposed he was selling to Baskett and Hart, and possibly other parties than the bank, otherwise he would [63]*63probably not have sent the bonds to the bank for collection. Instructions were given to the Athens bank to turn its bonds over to Baskett, and the Fayetteville bank’s bonds were sent to the defendant bank for collection from Baskett and' associates, if any.

Baskett’s testimony is that he bought the bonds for Jno. A. Hart, and the bank was not- interested in the purchase in any way or to any extent, and had nothing to do with the sale to the complainant, and received none of the profits of the sale.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Lane-Lott v. White
126 So. 3d 1016 (Court of Appeals of Mississippi, 2013)
Hudson v. Evans
113 S.W.2d 407 (Court of Appeals of Tennessee, 1937)
Freeman v. Citizens' Nat. Bank
70 S.W.2d 25 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 1934)
Holston National Bank v. American Christian Missionary Society
11 Tenn. App. 72 (Court of Appeals of Tennessee, 1929)
Ohio Valley Banking & Trust Co. v. Citizens National Bank
191 S.W. 433 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1917)
Bank of Commerce v. Ruffin
175 S.W. 303 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1915)
Wood v. Green
131 Tenn. 583 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 1914)
Pearsons v. Washington College
130 Tenn. 601 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 1914)
Memphis Street Railway Co. v. Giardino
116 Tenn. 368 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 1906)
First National Bank v. Columbus Savings & Trust Co.
2 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 525 (Court of Common Pleas of Ohio, Franklin County, Civil Division, 1904)
Talbott v. Manard
59 S.W. 340 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 1900)
Richardson v. Marshall County
100 Tenn. 346 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 1898)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
28 S.W. 303, 94 Tenn. 57, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ruohs-v-bank-tenn-1894.