Sykes v. Holloway

81 F. 432, 1897 U.S. App. LEXIS 2653
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Kentucky
DecidedMay 8, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 81 F. 432 (Sykes v. Holloway) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sykes v. Holloway, 81 F. 432, 1897 U.S. App. LEXIS 2653 (circtdky 1897).

Opinion

BARR, District Judge.

This is a suit brought by the receiver of the First Rational Bank of Starkville to set aside and cancel the transfer of 30 shares of stock in said bank which were owned by Annie W. Holloway, the wife of James M. Holloway, and transferred by her to her daughter Lettie Holloway on the 18th of May, 1893; the bank having suspended on the 14th of the following July, and the complainant appointed receiver in August, 1893. The facts are briefly these:. The defendant Annie W. Holloway purchased in October, 1889, at a premium, 30 shares of stock in the First Rational Bank ■of Starkville. At that time E. L.' Tarry was cashier of said bank, [433]*433and continued cashier for some time. Subsequently he became vice president, and was at the time of the purchase of the stock, and continuously until the time of the failure of the bank, the chief executive officer of said bank, and was the son-in-law of the defendant Annie W. Holloway and James M. Holloway, and the brother-in-law of the defendant Lettie Holloway. This bank had originally a capital of $50,-000, which was afterwards (about 1889) increased to $00,000. The defendant Annie W. Holloway and James M. Holloway went on a visit to Mr. Tarry arid wife at Srarkville in February, and remained with them about six weeks iu the months of February and March, 1893. Mrs. Holloway took with her her certificate of stock in said bank, with the intention of disposing of it. She did not, however, so far as the evidence goes, either dispose of it or attempt to dispose of it, and the reason given by her was that Dr. Ilolloway was too unwell while there to advise her in regard to the matter. It appeal's from the testimony that this bank was in fact in an embarrassed condition at that time, and gradually losing the confidence of the local public, and that there was no market for the stock, but it does not affirmatively appear that Mrs. Ilolloway or Dr. Holloway had any information of this fact Dr. Holloway himself is shown to have been confined to the house all the time while in Starkville, having gone there for the purpose of rest, and was much of the time confined to his bed. The bank becoming very much in need of money, about the last of April or the 1st of May, 1893, Mr. Tarry, the vice president, came to Louisville for the purpose of making some arrangement with Theodore Harris, the president'of the Louisville Banking Company, by which he could get accommodation to tide over the embarrassment. He met Dr. Ilolloway when he came to Louisville, and explained to him the needs of the bank, and the fact that the hank would be compelled to suspend unless he could make some arrangement for accommodation with the Louisville Banking Company. After this conversation with Dr. Holloway, he saw Theodore Harris, the president of the Louisville Banking Company, and, upon terms not clearly shown, he obtained from Mm a promise to accommodate him and carry him through his troubles. The fact that Harris had made the promise was communicated to Dr. Ilolloway. who, according to the statement of the witness, was much relieved thereby. After Tarry’s return home, Mrs. Holloway’s stock was transferred to her daughter Miss Lettie Holloway. The particulars of this transfer are not shown in the record, but presumably this certificate was sent from Louis mile with instructions to make the transfer, which was dono. The allega! ions of the bill are that the transfer ■was made on the 8th of May. The record, however, shows that the actual transfer was made on the 18th of May, 1893. The bank continued its business until the lltli of July, 1893, when it suspended, and shortly after it was taken possession of by a receiver appointed to wind it up. Afterwards there was an assessment made by the comptroller of 70 per cent, on all of the stockholders; and the purpose- of the bill is to cancel this transfer of Mrs. Holloway to her daughter, and recover from her the assessment of $70 per share on the stock. Miss Lettie Ilolloway was at the time about 23 years of age, living [434]*434with her father and mother, and was a young lady without any pecuniary responsibility. Mrs. Holloway, besides this stock, had other property, — how much is not definitely shown in the record, — and had other children, to whom she had given property, after their marriages, in sums more than the par of this stock.

The defendants, by joint answer, have made an issue upon the question of whether or not the First National Bank of Starkville was insolvent at the time of the transfer, and whether or not it was insolvent at the time of the suspension, in July, 1893. They have also made an issue as to whether or not Mrs. Holloway had knowledge of the insolvency of the bank at the time of the transfer, or such information as would lead her to inquire and know the real condition of the bank. The evidence upon the question of the insolvency of this bank is very, voluminous, but we conclude that the bank was in fact insolvent at the time of the transfer of the stock, in May, 1893, as well as in July, 1893, when it suspended, and had been for six months prior thereto, and that the debts which it owed in July, 1893, were substantially the same debts as existed on the 18th of May, 1893. On the subject of Mrs. Holloway’s knowledge or information on the condition of the bank in May, 1893, beyond her own statement the evidence is very meager. She has given her deposition, on which there were no cross interrogatories, and in the fourth interrogatory this question is asked her:

“Did you know or believe at the time you made the transfer of the thirty shares of stock in the First National Bank of Starkville, Bliss., to your daughter Lettie, in Blay, 1893, — being the transfer referred to in the complainant’s bill,— that said bank was insolvent, or in a failing condition? Answer. I did not know at the time the transfer was made of the 30 shares of stock, in Blay, 1893, that said bank was either insolvent or in a failing condition.”

And in answer to interrogatory 5, which is:

“Had anybody ever told or suggested to you, before said transfer, that said bank was insolvent or in a failing, condition, or had any one, before said transfer, suggested to you that you should transfer the stock to escape liability as a stockholder? Answer. I never had a word with any one on the subject. Nobody told me the bank was insolvent or in a failing condition, or suggested it, and nobody suggested that I should transfer the stock to escape liability as a stockholder.”

Neither the depositions of Dr. Holloway nor of his daughter Lettie (now Mrs. Higgins) have been taken. Mrs. Holloway in this deposition stated, as did the other defendants in their answer, that this transfer was made to her daughter as an advancement, as her daughter was then engaged to be married, and that the advancements made to her other children were more than the par of this stock. It, however, appears that the advancements made to the other children were made after their marriages, and it also appears that Miss Let-tie Holloway did not marry until October, 1895.

Thus, we have the positive denial of Mrs. Holloway, under oath, on the one side, with the facts shown that Dr. Holloway, her husband, had knowledge of the embarrassed condition of the bank a few days before the transfer of this stock, and the further evidence that she said to E. L. Tarry that she “never done anything [in regard to business] without the advice of her husband.” * But this evidence [435]*435is not sufficient to overcome the positive statement of Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
81 F. 432, 1897 U.S. App. LEXIS 2653, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sykes-v-holloway-circtdky-1897.