Saunders v. Bank of Mecklenburg

71 S.E. 714, 112 Va. 443, 1911 Va. LEXIS 103
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedJune 8, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 71 S.E. 714 (Saunders v. Bank of Mecklenburg) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Saunders v. Bank of Mecklenburg, 71 S.E. 714, 112 Va. 443, 1911 Va. LEXIS 103 (Va. 1911).

Opinion

Buchanan, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is a proceeding by notice and motion under section 3211 of the Code to recover a judgment on a promissory note for $10,000, made by the plaintiffs in error, Mrs. A. A. Saunders, Mrs. Clara C. Saunders and Mrs. Neva S. Prince, payable to the defendant in error, the Bank of Mecklenburg, dated April 28, 1908, and due twelve months after date.

The Bank of Mecklenburg suspended business on the 13th of April, 1908, on account of its insolvency. It had been m business from the year 1872 or 1873, with a principal office at Boydton and a branch office at Chase City. The insolvency of the bank seems to have resulted from the action of the cashier at Boydton in permitting one of its customers who became insolvent to overdraw' his account by more than $100,000, and the action of the cashier at Chase City in allowing the Kershaw Manufacturing Company, another of its customers, wdiieh was also insolvent, to overdraw its account to the extent of some $29,000. When the stockholders ascertained the condition of the bank, one-fourth or more of them in interest, who were also creditors, [448]*448filed their bill in the Circuit Court of Mecklenburg county, pursuant to the provisions of section 1105-a, sub-section 15, Va. Code, 1904, for the purpose of winding up and dissolving the corporation, and enjoining the bank, its officers and directors from disposing of its assets, and praying for the appointment of a receiver or receivers to take charge of its affairs, to collect the debts due and payable to it, for such disposition of its assets as might be just and equitable, and for general relief.

The bank filed its answer, in which it admitted the allegations of the bill. As prayed for, the court granted an injunction and appointed receivers. Afterwards, on the 28th day of April, 1908, the note sued on was made.

Upon the trial of the cause, there was a verdict and judgment for the plaintiff bank for the benefit of its receivers. To that judgment this writ of error was awarded.

The principal errors assigned, in substance, are: (1) That the bank, at the time the note was made, was a dissolved corporation and could not be legally made the payee thereof; (2) That if the note was a promise to pay the debt of another, it is not a sufficient promise in writing under the statute of frauds; (3j That it was given for an illegal consideration ; (4) That the note was without consideration.

The questions involved in these assignments of error were raised in the circuit court by pleas, objections made to evidence, instructions given and refused, and by a motion to set aside the verdict as contrary to the law and the evidence. The assignments of error will be considered, for the most part, without reference to the manner in wdiich the questions involved were raised.

As to the first assignment of error: It is true that at the time the note sued on was made the makers thereof were not indebted to the plaintiff bank, but it was executed in part payment, or as collateral for the payment, of the debt due from the Kershaw Manufacturing Company by [449]*449overdraft, before the bill for winding up the affairs and dissolving the bank was filed. The taking of the note, however, was not in any sense engaging in new business, as is argued on the part of the bank, but was merely a means of securing the payment of an existing indebtedness. While the object of the proceeding under section 1105-a, sub-section 15, Va. Code, 1904, was to wind up the business and dissolve the bank corporation because of its insolvency, no decree, when the note sued on was made, had been, or so far as the record shows has ever been, made dissolving the corporation.

The general rule (and there is nothing in the statutes under which the bill was filed to wind up and dissolve the corporation to change that rule) is, that no defense can be made to an action by a corporation on a contract made with it that it has forfeited its charter for acts of nonuser or misuser, or that it has been dissolved, until after such forfeiture or dissolution has been judicially determined in a proceeding instituted for that purpose. See Banks v. Poitiaux, 3 Rand. 136, 15 Am. Dec. 706; Crump v. Mining Co., 7 Gratt. 352, 56 Am. Dec. 116; Pixley, &c. v. Roanoke Nav. Co., &c. 75 Va. 320; 1 Min. Inst. 637; 2 Cook on Stockholders, sec. 637; 2 Clark & Marshall, sec. 324; 10 Cyc. 1345.

The next question to be considered is whether or not the note for the payment of the debt of another is sufficient under section 2840 of the Code, which provides, among other things, that no action shall be brought “to charge any person upon a promise to answer for the debt, default or misdoings of another . . . unless the promise, contract, agreement, representation, assurance, ratification, or some memorandum or note thereof be in writing and signed by the party to be charged thereby or his agent; but the consideration need not be set forth or expressed in the writing, and it may be proved (where a consideration is necessary) by other evidence.”

[450]*450Our statute does not require, as did the fourth section of the English Statute of Frauds, that a writing evidencing a promise to pay the debt of another shall show on its face the agreement between the parties in order to be valid. The difference between the two statutes is commented upon by the judges delivering opinions in the case of Colgin v. Henley, 6 Leigh 85. At that time there was no provision in our statute that the consideration for the promise need not be stated in the writing, but could be shown by parol evidence. In that case the court seemed to think that the statute was satisfied if the promise to pay the debt of another was in writipg.

In the case of Packard v. Richardson, 17 Mass. 122, 9 Am. Dec. 123, in which the Massachusetts statute (substantially the same as the English it seems) was construed, it was said by Chief Justice Parker that the object of the statute was to secure certain and definite evidence of the existence and terms of the promise sought to be enforced against the defendant, and it ought not to be carried further by arguments founded upon the technical meaning of the word “agreement.” It was, therefore, decided in that case that if the nature and extent of an undertaking for the debt or default of another appear in writing, the demands of the statute are satisfied, and the consideration by which the agreement is upheld may be shown, as in other cases, by parol evidence.

And as the learned editors of Smith’s Lead. Cases say, in their note to the case of Wain v. Walters, Vol. 2, p. 291 (5th Am. ed.), the same course of decision has been generally followed in the New England States as wed as in most other parts of the Union, citing a number of cases, “and there can be little doubt of its soundness where, as in some of the States, the word promise (as in Virginia) has been substituted for or introduced with the word agreement in the fourth section of the statute.”

[451]*451The writing sought to be enforced against the defendants in this case shows clearly the nature and extent of their undertaking and, as it seems to us, satisfies the requirements of that section of our statute of frauds, the construction of which is involved in this case.

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Bluebook (online)
71 S.E. 714, 112 Va. 443, 1911 Va. LEXIS 103, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/saunders-v-bank-of-mecklenburg-va-1911.