Union National Bank v. Hunt

7 Mo. App. 42, 1879 Mo. App. LEXIS 42
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 8, 1879
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 7 Mo. App. 42 (Union National Bank v. Hunt) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Union National Bank v. Hunt, 7 Mo. App. 42, 1879 Mo. App. LEXIS 42 (Mo. Ct. App. 1879).

Opinion

Bakewell, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an action on a promissory note made by the defendant Theodore Hunt and indorsed by Charles L. Hunt. There is an allegation that the indorser waived demand and notice. As to this the jury found for the indorser, and as to his liability nothing more need be said. The petition alleges that the defendant Theodore Hunt purchased of Aull & Pollard one hundred shares of stock in the bank of the corporation plaintiff, at eighty cents on the dollar, in consideration of which a note at four months for $8,000, made by Theodore and indorsed by Charles Hunt, was given to Aull & Pollard, and the stock transferred to Theodore Hunt; that the note was assigned to plaintiff for value, before maturity, by Aull & Pollard ; that at the maturity of that note, [45]*45defendants requested an extension, and in consideration thereof executed the note in suit, which is dated June 4, 1873, and is for the same amount and time as the note of which it is a renewal.

The defendants admit the execution and indorsement of the note in suit, and that plaintiff was a banking corporation under the laws of the United States ; and deny the other allegations of the petition, and set up two distinct grounds of affirmative defence. First, they say that the plaintiff had purchased seven hundred and eighty shares of the stock of its own corporation, in violation of the act of Congress which prohibits such a bank to purchase or hold its own shares, or to make a loan upon them, except such security or purchase shall be necessary to prevent loss of a debt previously contracted in good faith; and that, having and illegally holding these shares, plaintiff contrived that one hundred of these shares should be regarded as the property of Theodore Hunt, and that he should borrow from the bank $8,000 on such shares, and deposit them as collateral security for his note ; and that the note sued on was a renewal of the note given to carry out this illegal transaction, and represents a discount made by the bank on the security of its own shares, in violation of law. The second affirmative defence is that the note was obtained by false and fraudulent representations, and that the consideration has failed. The particulars of this defence are set out in the answer with great detail.

The testimony of Charles Hunt was to the effect that he is the father of his co-defendant, Theodore Hunt; that he was on terms of intimacy with Aull, the president, and with Pollard, the vice-president of plaintiff, and with some of the directors ; that he kept his account in plaintiff’s bank; that his son Theodore, a man of about thirty years of age, had a separate estate, owned five shares in plaintiff’s bank, was on intimate terms with the officers of plaintiff, and kept his account in plaintiff’s bank ; that Pollard, in the presence of [46]*46Aull, represented to Charles Hunt that the hank had been compelled to purchase from the estate of O’Fallon & Hatch, in bankruptcy, a large number of its own shares ; that this had been done by the bank to protect itself, O’Fallon & Hatch being very heavily indebted to the bank. Pollard said that he was desirous to sell these shares to friends of the directory; and mentioned two or three men who would take one hundred shares each. The bank, Pollard said, was in a flourishing condition, making money: its shares were selling at eighty-two, and were worth a hundred, and would soon be sought for at that price. Pollard requested Charles Hunt to get his son Theodore to take one hundred shares, out of friendship for the officers of the bank; the dividends would pay the interest. Pollard said that Theodore would never be called upon to pay the note; that if he did not wish to hold the shares, they would find some one to take them off his hands. This conversation was repeated by Charles Hunt to Theodore, word for word, without advising him in regard to the matter. Charles Hunt told his son that if he desired to comply, with Pollard’s request, he, Charles, would indorse the note. From his intimate friendship with Pollard, Charles Hunt believed that he was not deceiving him in these statements. The note was executed and indorsed ; the certificates of stock were assigned by. Theodore in blank, and the note and stock were rolled up together and put away in the vaults of the bank by Aull & Pollard, with the remark that if Theodore wanted the stock at any time for sixty or ninety days, to raise money on it, he could have it. The testimony of Theodore Hunt corroborated that of his father. He said he relied implicitly on Pollard’s statements ; that he did not want the stock, and had no idea of buying it, except to accommodate his friend Pollard ; that the statement that the stock would soon be worth a hundred did not influence him, except so far as it went to show that there was no risk. When the first note matured, he had a considerable .sum in plaintiff’s bank, and Pollard [47]*47asked him whether he would pay anything on the note. Theodore said of course he would not. Pollard said, “All right. I thought perhaps you might wish to do so.” The note was then renewed by the note in suit. Theodore paid accrued interest by his checks on plaintiff. He did this anticipating a dividend. The dividend was credited to him. He voted the stock on one occasion, when the question was as to the bank’s going into liquidation. The bank failed in October, 1873, just before the maturity of the note sued on. Pollard died about a month after the failure.

There was evidence in the case from which a jury might infer that this stock at the time of the transaction belonged to the bank, being a part of seven hundred and eighty shares purchased by the bank, in the name of Aull & Pollard, from the assignee of O’Fallon & Hatch, to protect the bank, and to prevent loss from a bona fide indebtedness of the bankrupts to the bank. There was also evidence tending to show that the stock in question did not belong to the bank at any time, but was owned by Aull & Pollard, who were doing a brokerage business and speculating in stocks and bonds. There was evidence tending to show that Aull & Pollard owed the bank, when it failed, about $200,000; that their debt to the bank was paid before the suit. The evidence put the value of the stock, about the date of the alleged sale to Theodore Hunt, at from $75 to $82. It had been gradually rising for some time. Some years before the transaction, it had been down to $65, and it seems to have reached its highest point about the date of the sale to Theodore Hunt.

The jury found for the plaintiff as against Theodore Hunt, and the cause is here by appeal.

If the utmost weight is given to the testimony in support of the defendants, it does not establish a defence to the note. If, as they say, the transaction was wholly with the bank, the bank had an undoubted right to sell the shares. In fact, by law it was bound to sell them within [48]*48six months from the time of their purchase. There is no evidence in the case from which the jury could find that this was a loan of money by the bank to Hunt on the security of its own shares.

It is contended that the sale to Hunt was effected by false and fraudulent representations, tipon which Hunt relied, and that the sale, for this reason, is void, and the note without consideration.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
7 Mo. App. 42, 1879 Mo. App. LEXIS 42, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/union-national-bank-v-hunt-moctapp-1879.