Stogner v. Brooks

151 S.E. 48, 40 Ga. App. 598, 1929 Ga. App. LEXIS 665
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedNovember 13, 1929
Docket19933
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 151 S.E. 48 (Stogner v. Brooks) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stogner v. Brooks, 151 S.E. 48, 40 Ga. App. 598, 1929 Ga. App. LEXIS 665 (Ga. Ct. App. 1929).

Opinion

Luke, J.

“A. B. Mobley, for the use of Jesse R. Stogner,” brought an action against J. B. Barnes, L. E. Wilson, W. L. Brooks, and J. G. Smith, residents of Carroll County, Ga., and National Surety Company, a foreign corporation having an office and place of business in Fulton County, Ga. The petition was twice amended, once on November 21, 1928, and again on June 11, 1929. J. B. Barnes was not served with process. The other defendants demurred generally and specially. On June 11, 1929, the court sustained the demurrers and dismissed the case. By proper exceptions the defendants question the correctness of this judgment.

We shall not set out fully the lengthy petition in this case. We deem it necessary, however, to give the gist of it, beginning with paragraph 2. The original petition, brought to the September term of the city court of Carrollton, 1928, alleges: That Jesse R. Stogner was a creditor of the Georgia State Bank, at Bowdon, Ga., and that said bank is indebted to him in the sum of $1,088.80, represented by time certificates, and the further sum of $300, deposited in said bank on a checking account.

That on July 13, 1926, said bank was surrendered to- T. R. Bennett, superintendent of banks, for liquidation.

That on October 11, 1926, said Barnes, Wilson, Brooks, and Smith purchased from said superintendent of banks the assets of said bank for the purpose of reducing them to cash and distributing them among the creditors entitled thereto, said “trustees entering into said contract in consideration of the settlement and satisfaction of the claims of the depositors and other creditors against the Georgia State Bank and its assets.”

That as part of said contract, which was attached to the petition as Exhibit A, said trustees accepted the conveyance of said assets in trust for the following purposes: “to sell, collect, and reduce to cash all of said assets, and to apply the proceeds thereof, first, to the payment of the expenses of taking over, auditing, and liquidating the said bank by the superintendent of banks; second, [600]*600to the payment of all claims entitled to priority of payment under the banking act of 1919 and the amendments thereto in order of priority as fixed by law; third, to the payment of the balance to the depositors and general creditors of said bank pro rata; fourth, any and all amounts collected by the parties of the second part (the trustees) from the assessments against the stockholders of the Georgia State Bank residing in Carroll County, to be paid pro rata to the depositors only, and to be used for no other purposes.”

That, as a part of said contract, said trustees entered into a contract in the penal sum of $15,000, with the National Surety Company as surety, with the superintendent of banks and his successors in office, whereby they, “as trustees,” undertook to liquidate the assets of said bank “and pay out the same in accordance with the priorities fixed by law, and under the terms of the conveyance of said assets this day executed,” and “to protect and save harmless the Georgia State Bank and the superintendent of banks against the claims of such of the creditors of said bank as had not signed power of attorney authorizing said trustees to represent them.” A copy of said agreement was attached as exhibit B.

That said trustees took over said assets and “began the active liquidation of said bank under said contracts and agreements.”

That said trustees did not send out any notices to the depositors and creditors of said bank to file proofs of their claims, and that said Stogner, who was then, and now is, in the penitentiary under a life sentence, did not receive any notice; but that his claims as set out appear on the books of the bank, and are to be taken as prima facie correct.

That said trustees applied said assets to the payment of their claims and the claims of other favored creditors and depositors in full, paying nothing to said Stogner.

That said trustees did not keep accurate records of their various transactions, and improperly expended the assets of said bank for automobiles, groceries, “and other individual expenses,” which were charged against the assets of said bank.

That said trustees conveyed to themselves and other favored depositors and creditors the greater part of the assets of said bank, consisting of real estate, notes receivable, and other property, in payment of their claims.

[601]*601That said trustees accepted from various debtors of said bank conveyances of properly, and transferred the same to themselves, or to other favored depositors, in settlement of their claims against said hank.

That said trustees used the funds of said bank which should have been distributed to creditors, to pay off liens against real estate belonging to said bank, “in order that they might transfer the unincumbered property to themselves or to other favored creditors.”

That most of the property transferred by said trustees to themselves and to other favored depositors was transferred for less than its appraised value, thereby entailing a loss to the other creditors and preferring said transferees.

That when said bank closed, J. B. Barnes and his wife had therein a joint deposit of $13,500, W. L. Brooks a deposit of $16,915.78, and L. E. Wilson a deposit of $8,400, represented by time certificates.

That by manipulation of the assets of said bank in the manner hereinbefore set out, all of said trustees, except Wilson, who claims a small deposit of $78.64, have secured payment in full of their claims.

That said trustees not only paid themselves out of said trust assets, leaving other creditors unpaid, but they paid most of the local depositors by transferring to them property of the bank which should have been paid ratably to the general creditors.

That said trustees, in the manner aforesaid, reduced the demand deposits in said bank from the sum of $139,943.03 to $14,-819.78.

That said trustees reduced the savings account from $36,-352.65 to $3,701.42.

That said trustees reduced the certificates of deposit from $148,521.26 to $28,368.11, said last sum including a certificate held by the town of Bowdon for $8,985.36; and that they violated their duty, to the injury and damage of petitioner, by paying the claim of said town before paying any other general creditors.

That said trustees reduced the cashier’s checks outstanding from $16,147.56 to $89.27.

That said trustees paid in large part the local accounts dm1 by said bank, leaving unpaid accounts due nonresidents; that when said bank closed, the accounts, amounting to $4,297,11, were re[602]*602duced by said trustees to $2,557.03; and that included in the amount paid was an attorney’s lee of $1,557.16, and an automobile account due trustee J. G. Smith, amounting to $163.

That said trustees “encouraged favored creditors to buy up claims of other depositors against said bank, and to use claims so purchased, in taking over the assets of the bank, these transactions resulting in gross inequalities between the depositors and illegal preference to those who were thus favored.”

That while said trustees, in the manner aforesaid, have taken care of themselves and paid off a large part of the depositors and local creditors of said bank, they have paid petitioner nothing.

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Bluebook (online)
151 S.E. 48, 40 Ga. App. 598, 1929 Ga. App. LEXIS 665, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stogner-v-brooks-gactapp-1929.