State v. . Lea

164 S.E. 737, 203 N.C. 13, 1932 N.C. LEXIS 301
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedJune 15, 1932
StatusPublished
Cited by107 cases

This text of 164 S.E. 737 (State v. . Lea) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. . Lea, 164 S.E. 737, 203 N.C. 13, 1932 N.C. LEXIS 301 (N.C. 1932).

Opinion

Criminal prosecution tried upon the following indictments: *Page 17

FIRST COUNT BILL No. 553.

In this count the defendants are charged with conspiracy, in that, it is alleged they feloniously agreed, conspired and confederated among themselves and with J. Charles Bradford and others, Wallace B. Davis being an officer, director and employee of the Central Bank and Trust Company, to cheat, defraud or injure the said Central Bank and Trust Company and to misapply its moneys, funds and credits to the amount of $300,000 on or about 8 October, 1930, contrary to the form of the statute in such case made and provided and against the peace and dignity of the State.

(There was a verdict of not guilty as to all the defendants on the second and third counts in said bill, while the fourth count was not submitted to the jury (because included in the fifth), and the verdict on the sixth count was set aside. All of these counts are of the same tenor as the first, except they differ in amounts and dates, and cover the period from 10 May to 23 October, 1930.)

FIFTH COUNT BILL No. 553.

In this count the defendants are charged with conspiracy, in that, it is alleged they feloniously agreed, conspired and confederated among themselves and with J. Charles Bradford and others, Wallace B. Davis being an officer, director and employee of the Central Bank and Trust Company, to cheat, defraud or injure the said Central Bank and Trust Company, and to misapply its moneys, funds and credits to the amount of $100,000 on or about 8 October, 1930, contrary to the form of the statute in such case made and provided and against the peace and dignity of the State.

SEVENTH COUNT BILL NO. 554.

In this count (single count bill), the defendants and J. Charles Bradford — Wallace B. Davis and J. Charles Bradford being officers and directors of the Central Bank and Trust Company — are charged, pursuant to a criminal conspiracy, with the fraudulent and felonious misapplication of more than a million dollars of the funds, credits and property of the said Central Bank and Trust Company on or about 19 November, 1930, contrary to the form of the statute in such case made and provided and against the peace and dignity of the State.

STATEMENT OF THE CASE.

Preliminarily, it may be stated that, at the times material to the charges laid in the indictments, Wallace B. Davis and J. Charles Bradford were president and cashier respectively, as well as directors, of the *Page 18 Central Bank and Trust Company, a banking corporation chartered under the laws of this State with its principal place of business at Asheville, N.C. The said Davis was also president of the Central Securities Company of Asheville, a company affiliated with the bank. The defendants, Luke Lea, Luke Lea, Jr., and E. P. Charlet, were residents of Nashville, Tenn., and interested, as officers, agents, employees, or otherwise, in a number of business enterprises in that State, including banks, newspapers, brokerage and insurance firms.

The Central Bank and Trust Company was in need of money. It was the thought of Luke Lea, expressed as early as 5 May, 1930, in a letter to Wallace B. Davis, that the "North Carolina situation" could be taken care of by the merger of a number of banks and increasing the original capital assets from time to time by the "Holding Company purchasing the increased capitalization of the Central Bank in North Carolina so as to acquire other attractive banking situations." The details of the proposed organization are not disclosed by the record, but it does appear that transactions of considerable magnitude were contemplated. On 16 May, Lea again wrote Davis, thanking him for booklet containing the "Banking Law of North Carolina" and enclosed two consolidated statements of "the North Carolina banks," evidently those under consideration for the merger.

Davis confided to W. D. Harris, manager of the bond department of the Central Bank and vice-president of the Central Securities Company, that "he hoped to work out some matters in cooperation with Col. Lea." His statement was, that he thought it would be to the advantage of both himself and Lea to cooperate on certain matters in New York, and hoped their plans would be successful. That he, Davis, was interested in commercial banking and would follow that; that Col. Lea was interested in newspaper publishing and would follow that; and that Mr. Caldwell (meaning Rogers Caldwell) would run the investment banking side of their enterprise.

A number of firms, in which the Leas were interested, opened accounts with the Central Bank and Trust Company and obtained banking accommodations, as did the Leas personally. Later, all became heavily indebted to the bank.

On 2 September, Lea wrote Davis that Rogers Caldwell would handle certain bonds, and by October, 1930, the general plan of the defendants had broadened out so as to include various interests in Kentucky. By this time, Luke Lea, Jr., is writing to Davis and suggesting that they could buy controlling interest in a bank in Kentucky for $60,000, pay a 300% cash dividend, sell a good part of nearly one million in bonds owned by the bank and substitute "our issues instead." *Page 19

The character of the transactions carried on by the defendants is disclosed by the following excerpt from a letter written by Luke Lea, Jr., under date of 10 October, 1930, to J. C. Bradford, cashier of the Central Bank and Trust Company:

"We have the $100,000 cashier checks Mr. Davis sent Colonel Lea. These cashier checks have the following endorsements on the back: $25,000 — Tennessee Hermitage, $45,000 — Commerce Union, $30,000 — Commerce Union. This, according to our figures, would leave an overdraft on Tuesday night of $70,000.

"Wednesday, 1 October, we deposited $76,000 to your account which leaves us a balance of $6,100. Friday, 3 October, we deposited $50,000 of cashier checks which left us overdrawn $44,000 and gave cashier checks to E. A. Lindsey, trustee, for $50,000, which makes us overdrawn $94,000 on 2 October. On 3 October, we transferred $50,000 by wire to New York and on Saturday, 4 October, gave a check for $20,000 on Central Bank and Trust Company, and payable to Central Bank and Trust Company and checked $10,000 direct on Central Bank and Trust Company, making a total of $30,000 which would leave us overdrawn $74,000. Deposited check on New York for $50,615.86, which leaves us overdrawn $125,515.86.

"On 9 October, we drew a draft on you for $80,000, making a total overdraft of $204,515.86, less deposit today of $60,500, total overdraft $144,015.86. This does not include any cashier checks except those I have outlined above, nor does it include any certificates of deposit, except the $80,000 which you originally sent us.

"Therefore, I am enclosing you deposit slip for $25,000, which you sent me as it does not check with our records. If you will send me statement of the Commercial Appeal's account, I will immediately work this out, as I deposited $90,000 to their credit today.

"We have to account to you for additional certificates of deposit of $100,000."

In all, the record discloses that the Leas and the companies in which they were interested borrowed from the Central Bank and Trust Company a total of $875,000; that, in the short period from 15 September to 1 November approximately $780,000 in certificates of deposit were issued and handled by the defendants; and that during the period covered by the evidence, from May to November, more than a million dollars in cashier's checks and drafts were issued and handled by the defendants.

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Bluebook (online)
164 S.E. 737, 203 N.C. 13, 1932 N.C. LEXIS 301, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-lea-nc-1932.