United States Stamping Co. v. Gall

2 S.E.2d 269, 121 W. Va. 190, 122 A.L.R. 260, 1939 W. Va. LEXIS 36
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 23, 1939
DocketCC 598
StatusPublished

This text of 2 S.E.2d 269 (United States Stamping Co. v. Gall) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States Stamping Co. v. Gall, 2 S.E.2d 269, 121 W. Va. 190, 122 A.L.R. 260, 1939 W. Va. LEXIS 36 (W. Va. 1939).

Opinions

Fox, President:

This case involves the sufficiency of an amended bill, filed by the.United States Stamping Company, a corporation, against O. H. Gall, Receiver of the Mound City Bank, and the Mound City Bank, a corporation. A demurrer of the defendant to said bill was sustained by said court, and the correctness of its ruling certified.

The amended bill alleges that on the 9th day of March, 1933, at a time when, unknown to the plaintiff, the Mound City Bank was insolvent, the said bank negotiated for a loan of $15,000.00 in fourth loan 4%%.liberty bonds of the government of the United States, for which the said bank was to execute to the plaintiff its note for the sum of $15,000.00, to be endorsed by four directors of said bank, and further secured by the deposit as collateral of notes owned by the bank aggregating $30,000.00 and secured by first lien trust deeds. The loan was authorized by a resolution adopted by the plaintiff’s board of directors on March 9, 1933, from which resolution it clearly appears that, as the plaintiff understood the transaction, the note to be taken was to be endorsed personally by four bank directors, and secured by collateral of “two to one” in trust deeds; and with the understanding that the *192 note should be paid as soon as the bank obtained a loan from the Reconstruction Finance Corporation, and to be paid in bonds, “the same as loaned.” To show the understanding of the transaction on the part of the Mound City Bank, it should be noted that according to a paper purporting to be a copy of a resolution of the board of directors of the bank and furnished to the plaintiff on May 17, 1933, the date of the resolution not being disclosed, a resolution was adopted by it in the words and figures following:

“On motion of Mr. Henderson, seconded by Mr. McNinch that this bank borrow from the U. S. Stamping Co. $15,000.00 Liberty Bonds and that we secure this loan of bonds by putting up the following notes: Monroe County Lumber Co. $12,500.00, W. W. and J. W. Henderson $9,000.00 and J. E. Bloyd, Jr. $5,000.00.
“This note was signed by Mound City Bank and endorsed by J. A. Bloyd, W. W. Henderson, F. A. McNinch and O. H. Hunter. These bonds were later to be used with the National Exchange Bank of Wheeling to secure $15,000.00 currency. No further business. Meeting adjourned.”

The plaintiff complied with its part of the loan agreement by delivering the bonds to representatives of the Mound City Bank, in the City of Wheeling, on March 9, 1933. The note endorsed by the directors, although undated, was delivered to the plaintiff on that day, and later the proper date inserted. Demand for the agreed collateral was made on March 9, 1933, and it was then agreed between the parties that the collateral to be delivered was that described in the bank’s resolution. The transaction having been consummated in Wheeling, and the collateral so agreed upon being then in Moundsville, it is alleged that it was then and there further agreed that the said collateral would be delivered on the day following. At that time the bank was closed on account of the bank moratorium enforced under the proclamation of the President of the United States, but it was expected that it would be opened within a short time. The *193 bank never opened, the collateral aforesaid was never delivered, and a short time thereafter, April 3, 1933, the bank was turned over to the banking department of the State of West Virginia and subsequently, in May 1933, a receiver appointed therefor.

At September Rules 1934, the United States Stamping Company, the plaintiff herein, instituted its action of detinue against the then receiver of the Mound City Bank, in the circuit court of Marshall County, and at January Rules 1935, filed its amended declaration therein, the purpose being to secure the possession of the collateral agreed to be delivered at the time the loan above mentioned was consummated. • In these declarations, possession of a note of $7,5.00.00, executed by the Monroe County Lumber Company, is sought instead of the note of $12,500.00 mentioned in the bank’s resolution above quoted, presumably because the Monroe County Lumber Company notes had been incorrectly described in the bank resolution aforesaid. This action was prosecuted to trial with the result that on March 9, 1935, judgment was entered for the defendant, and that judgment is asserted to be res adjudicata as to the plaintiff’s claim in this suit against the present receiver and the Mound City Bank, a corporation. The plaintiff herein rests its case upon what it alleges to be (1) an unjust enrichment of the defendant bank at the expense of the plaintiff, and (2) a constructive trust in favor of the .plaintiff, and asks that the agreement under which it alleges that specific collateral was to be delivered should be specifically enforced.

The demurrer to the bill rests upon the following propositions: (1) That there is an adequate remedy at law; (2) that the bill is ambiguous, indefinite and uncertain; (3) that it fails to allege any grounds upon which a preferential claim against the assets of the bank can be based; (4) and that upon the question of specific performance of the alleged agreement for the delivery of the collateral in question, the judgment in the detinue action above mentioned is res adjudicate as to the plaintiff’s claim herein.

*194 The demurrer also avers that there is no allegation that the bonds were loaned by the plaintiff out of surplus funds, nor is there any allegation that a loan was obtained by the defendant bank from the Reconstruction Finance Corporation, it being alleged in the amended bill that the plaintiff had the right under its charter to loan its surplus funds and that in the plaintiff’s resolution authorizing the loan, it was stipulated that the same was to be repaid when a loan would be obtained from the Reconstruction Finance Corporation. However, we do not think either of these matters in any wise affects the right of the plaintiff to maintain this suit.

It is clear from the allegations of the amended bill that the loan of the bonds in question was made upon the express condition that the stipulated collateral should be attached to the note which the bank was to give as evidence of the loan; it is clear, also, that neither the plaintiff nor the defendant bank understood that the plaintiff was to assume the status of a common creditor or to become a depositor of the bank. To the contrary, what the plaintiff intended was to accommodate the bank with a temporary loan of securities which were to be later returned in the same form in which the loan was made, namely, bonds of the federal government of the same issue. It is not a case where money was deposited in the bank under circumstances which gave rise to a question afterwards as to whether that deposit was entitled to preferential consideration; such a situation, or some phase of it, existed in Ream’s Drug Store v. Bank, 115 W. Va. 66, 174 S. E. 788; Cambridge Gas Co. v. Lamb, 117 W. Va. 174, 184 S. E. 566; Metropolitan Life Ins. Co. v. Lamb, 117 W. Va. 306, 185 S. E. 197; Hatfield v. Lamb, 117 W. Va. 275, 185 S. E. 229; Bowne v. Lamb, 119 W. Va.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2 S.E.2d 269, 121 W. Va. 190, 122 A.L.R. 260, 1939 W. Va. LEXIS 36, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-stamping-co-v-gall-wva-1939.