State Ex Rel. Smith v. Leonard

95 S.W.2d 86, 192 Ark. 834, 1936 Ark. LEXIS 176
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedJune 8, 1936
Docket4-4301
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 95 S.W.2d 86 (State Ex Rel. Smith v. Leonard) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Ex Rel. Smith v. Leonard, 95 S.W.2d 86, 192 Ark. 834, 1936 Ark. LEXIS 176 (Ark. 1936).

Opinion

McHaney, J.

Appellee Boy Y. Leonard was formerly the State Treasurer for the State of Arkansas, serving as such from 1931 to 1935, and the appellee Fidelity and Casualty Company of New York was the surety upon his official bond. As such State Treasurer he deposited at different times in the Planters Bank and Trust Company of Forrest' City, Arkansas, the sum of $37,500 of State funds, pursuant to a 'contract between said bank and the State Depository Board. Said deposit was secured by' a pledge of bonds as authorized by law. Thereafter, from time to- time appellee Leonard,- as State Treasurer, made withdrawals from said deposit in said bank and at the same time permitted said bank to withdraw a like portion of the bonds it had pledged as collateral, until on January 11, 1932, AVben said bank was closed and placed in charge of the State Bank Commissioner, the amount of the deposit therein Avas $10,000, which was secured by $10,000 of bonds of HoAvard and Sevier Road Improvement District No. 1. Thereafter an order Avas entered in the St. Francis Chancery Court freezing the deposits in said bank so as to make them payable 15 per cent. February 1, 1933, 35 per cent. February 1, 1934, and 50 per cent. February 1,1935. An agreement Avas made between the State and said bank that it would not call for its deposit until the maturity of the bonds it held as collateral security for said deposit, Avhieh was September 1, 1933. At that time the value of the bonds Avas doubtful, being quoted on the market at 35 per cent, to 50 per cent, of their face value. Counsel for the bank proposed a cash compromise settlement of the State’s claim of $4,000 by writing a letter to the Attorney General to this effect. Under date of January 9, 1933, the then Attorney General, Hon. Hal L. NorAAmod, addressed a letter to the bank’s attorney, as follows:

“Your letter of the 6th instant would have been answered sooner but it was of- such importance that I Avanted to give it deliberate consideration.
“I note that when the Planters Bank & Trust-Company was closed in January, 1932, that the- State had on deposit $10,000 and held as security the same amount of old road improvement district bonds; that when the bank was permitted to open it Avas agreed that the State would not call for its deposit until the maturity of the bonds. I presume this is the reason that the order did not proAude for certificates of deposit to be paid in one, two and throe years to be issued to the State the same as other depositors.
“I have talked Avith Mr. Leonard and he says the reason that this agreement Avas made was because the bonds Avould mature in about a year and he thought that at their maturity the State would be able to pay the bonds and that therefore upon the payment of the bonds the bank could use the same money to pay the- State. The Treasurer is now confronted with quite a different problem. There is no money to pay the bonds and provision has been made to issue revenue bonds, payable in ten years.
“It appears to me that under the agreement made with the bank the State would not be in a position to enforce collection of the amount due it for ten years, and if it could enforce collection at this time, the bank, not anticipating that there would be a default in the payment of the bonds, is not in a position to pay the State. I do not think it would be proper to accept the bonds in full settlement of the amount due the State because the money due the State was collected for various funds, and whatever is collected must be disbursed by these several funds. Of course, the cancellation of the bonds would liquidate that much of the debt due the road improvement district that issued the bonds, but we have no right to take money belonging ta other funds to cancel a debt of these road districts. If the State took the bonds it would be its duty to dispose of them in order to apportion the amount to the several funds composing the deposit in your bank, and it is extremely doubtful what amount could be obtained for the bonds.
“I requested Mr. Leonard to make inquiry as. to the market value of these bonds. He reported to me that he talked to the bond department of several banks and that these bonds were quoted from thirty-five to fifty cents on the dollar, but sometimes there is a difference between quotations and what can be actually received. They might not bring more than your offer of $4,000 in settlement, but in view of the fact that they are quoted as high as fifty cents on the dollar, I do not think it would be proper to accept less than $5,000 in settlement of the State’s claim. T attach some little importance to the responsibility of the bank, however, we cannot tell what will be the condition of a. bank ten years from now, but I think that this should be taken into' consideration in the margin between what you offer and what we are willing to settle for. I do not think that we have a legal right to call on the bank at this time for settlement, in view of the agreement and in view of the '.State’s default in its obligation.
“Considering the whole matter, I have reached the conclusion that if your hank will pay $5,000, that it would be best for the funds to which the money is due to accept it. If this is agreeable, the bank may pay the Treasurer $5,000 and I authorize the Treasurer to accept the amount in full compromise settlement under the authority given me by act 157, approved March 21, 1923.
“I am handing a copy of this letter to the Treasurer.”

Acting on the advice of the Attorney General, appellee Leonard as State Treasurer accepted a draft of said bank drawn on the Peoples’ Trust Company of Little Rock in the sum of $5,000 in full settlepaent of said claim. This draft for $5,000 was received by appellee Leonard on January 16, 1933, in full settlement of the State’s deposit. The Peoples’ Trust Company had on deposit on said date, and at all times thereafter until it closed its doors, a sum more than sufficient to pay said draft. “Due to confusion in the office of the State Treasurer, because the Legislature was in session, the defendant, Leonard, withheld said draft from the regular channels of business, and he failed to present same to the Peoples’ Trust Company, a banking institution in Little Rock, Arkansas, the city in which the State Treasurer’s office is and was located. Said draft was kept in Leonard’s personal possession, without his having had same presented to Peoples’ Trust Company for payment, for the period of forty-two days.” Agreed statement of facts. On May 28, 1934, the State Treasury received from the Peoples’ Trust Company a 30 per cent, dividend on its claim for $5,000, in the sum of $1,500, and it is unknown what additional amount will be paid thereon.

Appellant brought this action to recover judgment against appellees in the sum of $8,500 and interest, being the balance due; on the total deposit in said bank, less the amount collected on said draft from the Peoples’ Trust Company, on the ground that the settlement was improvident and that the Attorney General was not authorized to make same, and that appellee Leonard was negligent in the handling of the said $5,000 draft or check drawn on the Peoples’ Trust Company.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
95 S.W.2d 86, 192 Ark. 834, 1936 Ark. LEXIS 176, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-smith-v-leonard-ark-1936.