Stickle v. Guardian Trust Co.

14 N.E.2d 600, 133 Ohio St. 472, 133 Ohio St. (N.S.) 472, 11 Ohio Op. 157, 1938 Ohio LEXIS 370
CourtOhio Supreme Court
DecidedApril 20, 1938
Docket26643
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 14 N.E.2d 600 (Stickle v. Guardian Trust Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stickle v. Guardian Trust Co., 14 N.E.2d 600, 133 Ohio St. 472, 133 Ohio St. (N.S.) 472, 11 Ohio Op. 157, 1938 Ohio LEXIS 370 (Ohio 1938).

Opinion

Myers, J.

This is an action instituted under favor of Section 710-92, General Code, whereby the plaintiff seeks to establish a preference in the sum of $543,432.13, being the balance due to plaintiff from defendant, the Superintendent of Banks, as liquidator of The Guardian Trust Company of Cleveland.

The question for decision is whether the second amended petition of the plaintiff states a cause of action. A demurrer thereto was sustained by the Court of Common Pleas and that judgment was reversed by the Court of Appeals. A motion by defendant to certify the record to this court for review was allowed. For brevity we shall hereinafter refer to the second amended petition merely as the petition.

There are three causes of action set forth in the petition. Space will not permit nor do we deem it necessary to repeat the vast number of allegations contained in the petition, but in order that the claim of the plaintiff and his theory of the case may be understood, we copy herewith most of his summarized statement of the ultimate facts in the petition as set forth in his brief:

The first cause of action in said petition states that the defendant, The Guardian Trust Company, was appointed and qualified February 10,1932, as executor of the estate of William Davey, Jr. About a year later, February 27, 1933, said trust company was ordered by the Superintendent of Banks to restrict withdrawals of deposits to one per cent, which restriction order continued until June 15, 1933, when the bank was put into liquidation. On April 8, 1933, a conservator was appointed for the bank, who remained in charge until' the order of liquidation was made on June 15, 1933.
*474 “In proceedings in the Probate Court The Guardian Trust Company was removed as executor on June 15, 1933, and, on exceptions to its account later filed by the Superintendent of Banks, the court found that the trust company was liable to decedent’s estate for $684,999.38 ‘with such preferences against the estate of said trust company as might be found to exist.’
“Plaintiff was appointed administrator de bonis non on June 27, 1933. He duly filed claim as such administrator with the Superintendent of Banks, with the same demands for preferences as now claimed in said petition. The claim was allowed by the superintendent liquidator as a general claim, but all preferences were denied, and thereafter the action here on appeal was commenced, pursuant to General Code Secti.on 710-92, to establish preferences' on the claim as allowed, which then had been reduced by payments to $543,432.13.
“The gist of the first cause of action as alleged is that such $543,432.13 is the balance of the sum of $812,489.11 that The Guardian Trust Company received into its possession as executor on February 10, 1932, and then turned around and made an unsecured loan to itself by depositing the whole amount on the banking side of its institution; that there was no power or authority in the bank as such executor to so loan to itself because of conditions then existing, which we later refer to; that title, legal or at least equitable, to the moneys so loaned, remained at all times in the executor, held in trust, and that the money itself which went into a pool of cash in the hands of the trust company on its banking side, remained in such pool and passed with the pool as it then existed in cash, to the superintendent as liquidator; and that plaintiff is entitled to an order on the liquidator to pay over, subject only to the rights of other claimants' establishing like rights in such pooled cash or its proceeds in the hands of the liquidator.
“The basis for the claim that the executor had no *475 valid power or authority to deposit with itself is that it, as executor, knew at all times that as a banking corporation its financial and ‘moral’ condition was as detailed in the petition, but which we summarize as follows:
“Said executor on February 10,1932, knew that The Guardian Trust Company as a bank was rapidly being drained of its assets; in effect there was a ‘run on the bank’; it had paid out about $53,000,000 in the previous thirteen months, and over $560,000 on the average for each banking day between January 1, 1932, and February 10, 1932; that such bank had exhausted its own available resources to meet demands upon it and had had to borrow $27,000,000, for which loans and to secure deposits of public funds, it had pledged $45,-000,000 of its best assets (practically all thereof); that it could not legitimately increase its borrowings without further hazarding the interests of its unsecured creditors, and could not borrow at all if its real condition were known to possible lenders; its assets were then of a value less them its liabilities; it had at least $24,000,000 of irrecoverable and known losses which it had not charged off; and, except for a comparatively small amount of cash necessary for it to maintain apparent ability to carry on at all, it practically had no free assets that were not completely ‘frozen.’ In addition to such financially bad condition it was morally bankrupt, because it had acted fraudulently in concealing its true condition from its own stockholders and the public by falsely reporting its earnings, concealing its losses and padding its public statements and defrauding its trust beneficiaries; and further, such executor knew that such bad condition of the bank’s affairs was1 gradually becoming worse and known to other bankers and the public, which, if fully known, would require immediate closing of the bank, resulting in great loss to ail its unsecured creditors.
*476 ‘ ' The second and third causes of action were, in the original petition, stated as one, but on motion of the defendants were ordered to be separated. We still think that they should be considered as one. They together constitute a claim of right to enforce the trust company’s 'bond’ as executor, as provided for by General Code Section 710-161. Each of such causes as stated makes part thereof the allegations of the first cause and further states that the unfaithfulness of the executor in loaning the estate funds to the bank, as it did, was the proximate cause of the failure of such executor to fully account to plaintiff.
''The gist of the allegations of the second cause of action is such breach of trust; failure to account; that the assets of the closed bank will not pay out more than sixty-five per cent to unsecured creditors; that said bank, before and at closing, had $7,000,000 of a paid in capital fund which must be considered as included within the approximate $80,000,000 of assets taken over by the Superintendent of Banks as liquidator; that such $7,000,000 fund was and is the ‘capital stock’ provided by Section 710-161, to be held as security for the faithful performance of the trust duties assumed by the bank, and the action is to enforce such security, subject to the equal rights' of other like claimants.

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Related

In Re Estate of Binder
27 N.E.2d 939 (Ohio Supreme Court, 1940)
Union Guardian Trust Co. v. Emery
290 N.W. 841 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1940)

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Bluebook (online)
14 N.E.2d 600, 133 Ohio St. 472, 133 Ohio St. (N.S.) 472, 11 Ohio Op. 157, 1938 Ohio LEXIS 370, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stickle-v-guardian-trust-co-ohio-1938.