State National Bank of Marshall v. Tittle

183 S.W.2d 720, 143 Tex. 235, 1944 Tex. LEXIS 255
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 15, 1944
DocketNo. A-184.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 183 S.W.2d 720 (State National Bank of Marshall v. Tittle) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State National Bank of Marshall v. Tittle, 183 S.W.2d 720, 143 Tex. 235, 1944 Tex. LEXIS 255 (Tex. 1944).

Opinion

Mr. Judge Brewster,

of the Commission of Appeals, delivered the opinion for the Court.

This is a suit on a note brought by the State National Bank of Marshall, petitioner, through its voluntary liquidating committee, against. W. D. Tittle, respondent. A trial court judgment on special issues for petitioner was reversed by the court of civil appeals and rendered for Tittle. 179 S, W. (2d) 1010.

Tittle’s defense was that the note was an accommodation note. He alleged that on December 31, 1941, petitioner, a national bank with a capital stock of $100,000.00 and a surplus of $50,000.00, was not permitted by law to lend more than $15,000.00 to any customer; that Waterman Brick & Tile Company, a corporation, was then indebted to petitioner on notes for approximately $15,000 and on overdrafts of approximately $10,000.00, which was in excess of what the law allowed petitioner to lend it. He alleged that the brick company had a contract with the United States to furnish its products in the construction of an ordnance plant but did not have the funds either to fulfill its contract or to liquidate its overdraft with petitioner; that the government then owed the brick company about $57,-000.00 for materials already delivered but that payment “was being delayed by the usual * * red tape encountered in dealing with the government”; that petitioner and the brick company, “both acting through W. M. Thomas, who was duly authorized to act for each of them” in securing funds to pay the overdraft and to enable the brick company to continue, approached. him and agreed that if he would execute to petitioner his note for $3,000.00 and allow the proceeds to be used “to take up checks which the Brick Company had drawn on the plaintiff, and which plaintiff had paid and had not charged to the account of the Brick Company because its funds on deposit were insufficient,” the first money received for the brick company on its contract *238 would be applied to payment of the note and that he would never be called upon to pay it. He alleged that this note was renewed on April 7, 1942, under Thomas’ representations that the money due the brick company had not come in but would be applied to the note when received and that Tittle would never be required to pay the note; that on .July 17, 1942, he executed the note sued on in renewal of the balance due on the prior note, Thomas representing that only $1,000.00 had come in for the brick company on the ordnance plant contract and renewing the other representations made when the original note and its first renewal were executed. He alleged reliance upon these representations in each instance and that otherwise he would not have executed the original note or either of its renewals. He alleged that the agreement had with Thomas when he executed the original $3,000.00 note operated as an assignment of enough of the money to become due on the brick company’s contract to liquidate the note, and that when the bank received that money it took the same in trust for his benefit to hold him harmless on the note. He alleged that from January 13, 1942, to March 27, 1942, $36,084.39 was paid “to the Brick Company and to the plaintiff” on the ordnance plant contract, but that, in violation of the agreement with him, these sums were withdrawn by petitioner from the brick company’s account and applied to the payment of the overdrafts and other obligations owing it by the brick company.

Petitioner answered that if the agreement was made it presented a scheme by Tittle and Thomas to evade the national banking laws, and “to deceive the stockholders of plaintiff Bank, as well as its creditors and those in public authority”; that thereby Tittle “joined in máking a false material statement, or causing the over-valuation of security or assets, which he knew or was charged with knowledge would be reported as a part of the assets of plaintiff Bank”; that the agreement was against public policy because it was an effort to conceal the true condition of petitioner’s assets and the brick company’s account. Further, petitioner denied that it was accommodated by the transaction, which was for the benefit of either Thomas or the brick company in which Thomas was financially interested; • that the proceeds of Tittle’s $3,000.00 note were by him loaned to Thomas in return for the latter’s promissory note for that amount; that Thomas’ effort to bind it in the matter of the brick company’s overdraft was beyond his authority and so foreign to customary banking transactions as to charge Tittle with notice that Thomas could not bind petitioner thereby; and that Thomas was acting either for the brick company or himself in *239 a matter wherein their interest was wholly adverse to petitioner’s interest.

Tittle replied that in making the note he was merely lending his credit to petitioner to make a lawful disposition of the brick company’s overdraft, already in existence, believing that petitioner would show by its record the conditions under which it was given; and that if petitioner’s allegations were true it took his note and made its agreement with him as a part of an “illegal and fraudulent scheme” of which he had no knowledge and with which he had no connection, other than as its innocent victim. He replied, further, that after the agreement had been made Thomas wrote the note, gave a deposit slip, prepared a check of the proceeds from Tittle to himself, and said that he would use the money to liquidate the overdraft of the brick company; that Thomas then voluntarily executed to Tittle his personal note for $3,000.00 and told Tittle “to keep it for his record and for the personal guaranty of Thomas that the Brick Co. and plaintiff would keep its agreement with defendant.”

Petitioner answered that if Tittle was seeking to lend it his credit, he knew or was charged with notice that Thomas had no authority to borrow money in its name except upon express authorization of its directors, which had not been conferred; that Thomas did not conceal from Tittle the purpose for which the note was given; but that if Thomas failed in any respect as to any agreed limitations on Tittle’s notes he was, as to such “defalcations,” Title’s agent and not petitioner’s.

Tittle's testimony substantially supported his allegations. Thomas testified that the note transactions were entirely personal between him and Tittle and that there was no agreement for petitioner to apply on the ordance plant contract any funds deposited with it to the brick company’s credit. He further testified, “Well, I told Mr. Tittle I was interested in the brick plant down there, they owed me about $25,000.00 and the bank let them have all they could and wanted me to let them have some more money and I wanted to borrow $3,000.00.” He said that the $3,000.00 realized on the Tittle note went into the brick Company’s account.

The jury found (1) that when Tittle executed the original note, Thomas agreed with him that it would be paid out of funds received by the brick company under its contract to furnish materials to construct the ordnance plant; (2) that this agreement was not the sole consideration to Tittle; (3) that it did *240

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
183 S.W.2d 720, 143 Tex. 235, 1944 Tex. LEXIS 255, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-national-bank-of-marshall-v-tittle-tex-1944.