State ex rel. Hadley v. People's United States Bank

94 S.W. 953, 197 Mo. 574, 1906 Mo. LEXIS 52
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJune 20, 1906
DocketNo. 1
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 94 S.W. 953 (State ex rel. Hadley v. People's United States Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State ex rel. Hadley v. People's United States Bank, 94 S.W. 953, 197 Mo. 574, 1906 Mo. LEXIS 52 (Mo. 1906).

Opinion

LAMM, J.

Defendant bank, by virtue of Revised Statutes 1899, section 806, appeals from an order of the circuit court of St. Louis county entered August 15, 1905, refusing to revoke an interlocutory order, granted on a second amended petition, appointing a receiver to take charge of, and to wind up, its affairs.

On motion here the cause was advanced in obedience to the command of said section of the statute and set down for hearing at the January call, 1906, in Banc. [581]*581At that time it was argued orally and leave granted plaintiff and defendant to file briefs. During February, 1906, these briefs were supplied and, on March 30th, a per curiam order was passed and sent down reversing the order, nisi, refusing to revoke the order appointing a receiver, and the trial court was directed to sustain said motion to revoke and proceed with the cause. Opinion to be filed thereafter.

In pursuance of the aforesaid order this opinion is formulated and now handed down.

A resume of the facts in the history of the litigation will show that on July 10th, 1905, the State of Missouri, at the relation of its learned Attorney-General, Herbert S. Hadley, commenced a proceeding in the circuit court of St. Louis county for the purpose of having a receiver appointed for the People’s United States' Bank, a banking corporation organized under the laws of this State and domiciled in St. Louis county. Upon this petition Judge Selden P. Spencer, was appointed receiver on the same day — the scope and character of this order are not in issue and need no notice. A.n idea of the magnitude of the bank’s operations may be got from the fact that four days thereafter he, as such receiver, filed a report of its assets, summarized as follows:

( C Exhibit A. Stocks and Bonds (belonging to the Bank) ........ 204,469.92
Exhibit B. Cash in other banks and on hand...................... 346,897.63
Exhibit C. Time and Demand certificates (of deposit in sundry banks) 1,046,758.43
Exhibit D. Time and Demand Loans (due to said bank).............. 1,010,183.12
Exhibit E. Sundry accounts (carried as assets) .................... 70,935.69
Total.........i.........2, 679',244.79”

[582]*582On the 11th of July a writ of summons was sued out and duly served on defendant bank on July 14,1905, made returnable to the September term, 1905.

Thereafter, limiting its appearance to the purposes of the motion, defendant bank, before the return day, appeared and filed its motion to revoke the order appointing Judge Spencer receiver and, on hearing, said motion was sustained on July 17th and he was ordered to re-deliver to it all its property and assets of every kind in his hands, which order he obeyed.

Following that, on the 19th of July, an amended petition was filed, not only setting forth further facts, but elaborating the allegations of the abandoned petition and enlarging the scope of, and putting in the alternative, the relief prayed. This petition was, in turn, abandoned and needs no attention.

Thereupon plaintiff filed a third pleading on July 29th, 1905, called in the record a second amended and supplemental petition, wherein the relief sought was: (1) the appointment of a receiver to wind up the affairs of the bank; or (2) the appointment of a receiver for the preservation of the assets of said bank, “and for the doing of such other acts as in the opinion of the court may from time to time be necessary;” or (3) if the interests of stockholders and creditors would not be subserved by the appointment of a receiver for either of the purposes aforesaid, then, that the court make an order for the removal of officers and make other orders suggested by the conditions discovered by the court, etc.

The second amended and supplemental petition contained information given to the court upon the official oath of the learned Attorney-General, which information is based upon official communications from the Secretary of State, under his hand and the great seal of the State of Missouri. Defendant, having been notified of the new and pending application for a receiver, appeared conditionally, resisted the appointment and [583]*583filed and exhibited to the court certain affidavits denying some of the averments of the petition, explaining others and presenting facts deemed pertinent to the matter then pending, with the result, as said, that on the 15th day of August, 1905, an order was made appointing Frederick Essen receiver; and defendant’s motion to revoke this order having been denied, it excepted, declined to give a supersedeas bond for $100,-000, perfected its appeal without such bond, and thereby permitted its assets to pass into Essen’s hands and its affairs to be put in process of liquidation.

Assuming for the purposes of this case that averments of fact relating to the cóndition of a state bank, based on official communication from the Secretary of State to the Attorney-General, and ascertained by official examinations, when presented to a court under the oath of office of the Attorney-General, are taken as true, prima facie, then a proper consideration of the questions presented here on this interlocutory order appointing a receiver seeks an examination of the allegations of the petition and the facts stated in the affidavits presented by 'defendant; for these are the only proofs adduced. And, broadly speaking, the question presented below and here is whether, on the allegations of the petition alone, or on such allegations, taken in connection with the showing made in defendant’s affidavits, the appointment of a receiver can stand.

The second amended and supplemental petition, covering thirty-four pages of print, is too long to reproduce in this opinion. Nor will it be necessary so to do in order to grasp and formulate the contentions of the parties litigant. Those contentions, deemed material on any vital issue, will be taken up one at a time and in connection with their consideration the pertinent facts will apear.

I. In the first place, plaintiff, as a chief contention, insists the facts show that because of promises [584]*584made by a promoter before tbe incorporation of a bank, broken after its incorporation, the bank should be taken as born in the gall of bitterness and in the bond of iniquity, so to speak, as a preconceived and elaborate scheme to defraud — and, hence, the arm of the law should lift its properties and affairs out of the hands of its board of directors and administer them through the court’s receiver. The controlling force of this contention is spent upon the insistence that one E. Gr. Lewis was its originator and promoter and that, as such, he made certain fetching promises in soliciting subscribers to its stock which good faith required should be kept by the bank and which were not kept, except with Punic faith. Not only so, but when the Secretary of State demanded that these promises should be kept, his demands were not only not complied with but counsel were employed to resist them.

To get at the merits of this contention it will be necessary to draw an outline of the situation — thus: Lewis is the president of defendant bank and at the same time the dominating spirit, as chief executive officer, of two other corporations — one, the Lewis Publishing Co., the other, the University Heights Realty & Development Co.

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

Related

Simplex Paper Corp. v. Standard Corrugated Box Co.
97 S.W.2d 862 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1936)
Stipp v. Bailey
53 S.W.2d 872 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1932)
McKinney v. Nayberger
6 P.2d 228 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1931)
Niedringhaus v. William F. Niedringhaus Investment Co.
46 S.W.2d 828 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1931)
State Ex Rel. Hurst Automatic Switch & Signal Co. v. Wurdeman
274 S.W. 410 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1925)
State Ex Rel. Priest v. Calhoun
226 S.W. 329 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1920)
Van Zandt v. St. Louis Wholesale Grocer Co.
190 S.W. 1050 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1916)
Blades v. Billings Mercantile Co.
134 S.W. 579 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1911)
Gupton v. Carr
125 S.W. 849 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1910)
Cantwell v. Columbia Lead Co.
97 S.W. 167 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1906)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
94 S.W. 953, 197 Mo. 574, 1906 Mo. LEXIS 52, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-hadley-v-peoples-united-states-bank-mo-1906.