State Ex Rel. Farmers & Merchants State Bank v. Schanke

19 N.W.2d 264, 247 Wis. 182, 1945 Wisc. LEXIS 252
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedMay 15, 1945
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 19 N.W.2d 264 (State Ex Rel. Farmers & Merchants State Bank v. Schanke) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Ex Rel. Farmers & Merchants State Bank v. Schanke, 19 N.W.2d 264, 247 Wis. 182, 1945 Wisc. LEXIS 252 (Wis. 1945).

Opinion

Martin, J.

Wisconsin Dells is a city of the fourth class with a population of one thousand eight hundred. During the summer months many tourists stop there. From 1910 to *184 February 26, 1944, the city had two banks: The Kilbourn State Bank, hereinafter referred to as the "selling bank;” and the Farmers & Merchants State Bank, hereinafter referred to as the “purchasing bank.”- The Kilbourn State Bank was the oldest. For many years it was owned, except for three or four qualifying shares, by W. S. Stroud, who died about six years ago. He was a man of considerable wealth. On his death control of the bank passed to his son, Ray Stroud, an attorney engaged in the practice of law in the city of Madison.

After the death of W. S. Stroud, and during a period of about two years preceding February 26, 1944, there were some indirect negotiations between the banks toward a sale of the Kilbourn State Bank to the Farmers & Merchants State Bank. Active negotiations toward a sale took place during the two or three months prior to February 26, 1944. These negotiations were carried 'on between Mr. Stroud and Mr. Amann, president of the purchasing bank.

The negotiations culminated in a contract whereby the purchasing bank purchased assets and assumed liabilities of the selling bank, totaling approximately $1,434,395.69. As a part' of the transaction, and on February 26, 1944, the Kil-bourn State Bank sold and conveyed to the Farmers & Merchants State Bank its bank building, furniture, and fixtures. The agreed consideration for the bank building was $20,000 ; and for the furniture and fixtures, $8,000. The conveyance of the real estate on which the bank building was located included that part of the lot to the rear of the bank on which was located a two-story frame building and a garage; that is, all the real estate and improvement thereon sold for $20,000.

For the 1944 tax the assessor assessed the real estate and building's as follows : Land on which bank building is located, $5,000; bank building, $29,000; warehouse portion of lot, $1,050; warehouse building, $950; making a total assessment of $36,000.' For a number of years prior to 1938 the real *185 estate of the Kilbourn State Bank, including the building and that portion of the lot to the rear on which the warehouse and garage were located, was assessed at $23,500. In 1938 there was a reassessment of all the city property. The assessment of the Kilbourn State Bank property in 1938 was $36,000. No change has since been made in this assessment and no objection to this value was ever made by the Kilbourn State Bank. No change or additions were made to the property from 1938 to 1944.

Before the sale the selling bank carried this real estate on its books at $16,500, and the furniture and fixtures at $6,472; and carried insurance against loss by fire on its bank building in the sum of $10,000, on its warehouse in the sum of $1,000, and on its furrtiture and fixtures in the sum of $2,000. After the sale the purchasing bank, with the consent of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation and the banking commission, carried the bank building in its financial statement at $20,000, and the furniture and fixtures at $9,328, some additional furniture and fixtures having been purchased subsequent to the sale. Since the sale the equalizing committee of the Columbia county board has determined that the assessed valuations in Wisconsin Dells are one hundred twenty per cent of the equalized assessed valuations in Columbia county.

At the hearing before the board of review D. F. Pauls, senior bank examiner, testified in behalf of the respondent bank. He testified that he had charge of bank consolidations and sale of assets for the banking commission; that he was ( familiar with the valúe of bank buildings and their furniture and fixtures; that there is a limited sale for such buildings; that they sell at tremendous sacrifices, their cost of reproduction affects market value very little; that in small towns in Wisconsin there a-re several bank buildings which have not been occupied or rented since 1933; that bank buildings have frequently sold at less than their book value; that on February 26, 1944, and thereafter, the fair market value of the *186 Kilbourn State Bank real estate and the buildings thereon was $20,000; that such sum could not have been obtained except from another bank; that he based his testimony on his personal knowledge of sales of bank buildings in cities and villages having a population less than three thousand; that sales of bank property are not similar to sales of other real estate; that his knowledge of the market value was based on other sales of property of closed banks and of going banks which consolidated or merged.

E. C. Amann, president of the purchasing bank, testified that said bank still owns the building from which it moved into the building of the selling bank; that since February 26, 1944, they have been trying to sell or rent their former building but have had no opportunity to do either, although they have advertised it extensively; that the building of the selling bank would be hard to sell except for bank purposes because it is not on the ground level; that it has a vault on the main floor that would have to be remodeled for other purposes. He testified that in 1944 the market value of the building in question, which was built about 1905, was $20,000; and that the value of the furniture and fixtures was $8,000.

Mr. Amann further testified that there is a poor marketability for bank buildings; that in Prairie-du Sac a beautiful bank building is used as a drug store; that in Mauston a modern, large bank building is used for a tavern and a drugstore; that in Columbus a.bank building which cost over $70,000 was sold to a reorganized bank for $14,000; that in Richland Center a bank building that at one time had a $100,000 bond issue on it sold for less than $20,000; that in Marshfield a building which cost about $150,000 sold for $25,000 to a new bank; and that at Rio- a bank building has stood idle since 1933.

The board of review offered no testimony on market value. The city assessor did not testify, nor did the two men who assisted him in the city’s reassessment of 1938. The only witness called by the board of review was the city clerk. He did not testify on the subject of market values.

*187 Appellant argues that the sale was not made under normal and usual circumstances and did not overcome the presumption of correctness of the- assessor’s valuation. The respondent concedes that the rule is that in order for an actual sale to be controlling on assessment value, it must be shown that the sale was made under such circumstances as would lead to the conclusion that the price was that which ordinarily could be obtained at a private sale. State ex rel. Collins v. Brown, 225 Wis. 593, 275 N. W. 455.

Appellant contends that the sale was not made under normal and usual circumstances because the negotiations contemplated the purchase by the Farmers & Merchants Bank of the Kil-bourn State Bank as an entirety; that there was no discussion of the sale of the building alone. In this connection, it appears without dispute that during the two or three months of the active negotiations between Mr. Stroud and Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
19 N.W.2d 264, 247 Wis. 182, 1945 Wisc. LEXIS 252, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-farmers-merchants-state-bank-v-schanke-wis-1945.