Warren v. Boston National Bank

252 Mass. 523
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedMay 22, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 252 Mass. 523 (Warren v. Boston National Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Warren v. Boston National Bank, 252 Mass. 523 (Mass. 1925).

Opinion

Pierce, J.

This is an action of contract, tried before a judge of the Superior Court and a jury, to recover the value of professional services rendered and certain disbursements expended on behalf of the defendant. The declaration is in two counts, an account annexed and a quantum meruit. The jury found for the plaintiffs, and the case comes before this court on the defendant’s exceptions. The defendant submitted fifty written requests for rulings. Thirty-two exceptions were taken to parts of the charge. Exceptions were taken to the failure of the trial judge to give certain requests, to certain comments by the judge upon the requests given, and to the admission and exclusion of certain testimony.

The pertinent facts are in substance as follows: The defendant was organized with an authorized capital of $200,000 and opened for business February 1, 1921. The plaintiff Whiteside was a stockholder, became a director and acted as such for the whole period in which the matter here in controversy occurred. The principal item involved is a charge for professional services in connection with a project to take over the Hanover Trust Company, which was at the time in the bank commissioner’s hands. Before April 28, 1921, the discount committee of the Boston National Bank, consisting of the president, two vice-presidents, three members of the board of directors and three members of the board who served for a month and then were replaced by three other members (in all nine members of the board of directors consisting of twenty-three members) had under consideration the proposition that the bank should purchase the assets of the Hanover Trust Company. A committee of the discount committee, acting upon the suggestion of the State bank examiner, entered into negotiations with the bank commissioner of Massachusetts and the board of directors and members representing the Hanover Trust Company. The plan of the committee was to establish a branch bank of the Boston National Bank in the office of the Hanover Trust Company.

At that time there was no national bank in Boston that had a branch, although there were a number in New York [527]*527and other places. The United States law made it difficult to have branches. To accomplish this result it was necessary that the impairment of the capital stock of the trust company should be made good; that it should be reopened and with the consent of the bank commissioner have a branch. Then, after it had been established as a going trust company with a branch, it was necessary for it to turn itself into a national bank with a branch, and it could consolidate with or sell itself to the Boston National Bank; then the Boston National Bank would have all its assets, would have its branch, and would continue to operate as a national bank with a branch.

On April 28 the president of the bank, speaking to the discount committee, stated “that the matter was enormously complicated on the legal side,” that he could not hope to proceed at all without the advice of counsel, and that so far as he could see they would have to use Mr. Whiteside as he was the only counsel in Boston who had had a similar experience with a consolidation or purchase of assets of other banks. On April 28, 1921, the president called at the office of Mr. Whiteside and said he had been discussing for several weeks with the bank commissioner the possible purchase of the Hanover Trust Company; that he had reached a point in his negotiations where he felt the transaction would go through, and he wanted Mr. Whiteside to act as counsel for the bank in the matter. “He said it would involve some financing, and he wanted to accomplish it in such a way as to give the Boston National Bank the best possible standing in the matter before the community. He said he believed it was of very great advantage to the community to have another of these closed trust companies opened, and the depositors given a chance to get their money, particularly the savings depositors, and he thought that it would not only result in increased deposits to the Boston National Bank but it would save a good many of the deposits of the Hanover Trust Company and would be the best possible advertisement for the Bank, and he wanted . . . [Mr. White-side] to assist in that end of the matter, as well as the legal end.” Mr. Whiteside and his partner Mr. Garfield immediately gave their attention to the many complicated [528]*528questions involved, they had numerous conferences with the bank commissioner, his special counsel Mr. Wyman, the liquidating agent of the Hanover Trust Company, the counsel for the Irving National Bank, the president of the First National Bank of Boston, the comptroller of the currency in Washington, many meetings with the directors and stockholders of the defendant bank, conferences with representatives of the Hanover Trust Company and various informal hearings in court.

At this time the Hanover Trust Company had been closed for many months and was in process of liquidation, a good part of its assets had been liquidated, there was between $1,000,000 and $2,000,000. in cash. It had deposits of about $3,000,000, and its assets in paper were somewhat larger. It might pay its savings deposits in full but not its commercial deposits, dollar for dollar. The capital stock of the Hanover Trust Company was not worth its par value; it had been entirely wiped out, “the stockholders were not going to get a single cent.” The plaintiffs conceived a plan whereby the purpose of the defendant bank to purchase the assets of the Hanover Trust Company and re-establish it with a branch could be accomplished. This conception necessitated that the bank commissioner should file a petition in the Supreme Judicial Court and be authorized to sell all the assets and property of the Hanover Trust Company to the committee representing the Boston National Bank, in accordance with an agreement with said committee, by reference incorporated in the petition. The agreement dated July 15, 1921, in terms subject to a decree of the Supreme Judicial Court approving the plan and the sale, conveyance and transfer to the committee, the approval of the comptroller of the currency of the United States, and upon the resignation of all officers and directors of the Hanover Trust Company, was executed in triplicate by the Hanover Trust Company, by the commissioner of banks, the executive committee of the Boston National Bank, and the Boston National Bank by its president. This agreement, which never went into effect because it never received the approval of the Supreme Judicial Court, provided [529]*529in substance that the bank commissioner was to sell all of the assets of the Hanover Trust Company to a committee of the Boston National Bank; that the Boston National Bank was to assume and guarantee the payment of the obligations of the Hanover Trust Company, first, paying all the savings deposits and the Christmas Club in full, second, all taxes in full, third, the expenses of the liquidation of the Hanover Trust Company, fourth, sixty per cent of all the commercial deposits and other liabilities of the Hanover Trust Company.

Subsequently the plaintiffs prepared a new agreement in substitution of the unapproved agreement of July 15, 1921, wherein the guaranty of the payment to the Hanover Trust Company’s commercial depositors and general creditors was reduced to fifty-one per cent, and the Boston National Bank agreed to increase its capital by an additional $100,000. The Hanover Trust Company stockholders’ liability which the former agreement had transferred to the buyer was to be retained by the bank commissioner and there were other lesser and minor changes.

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Bluebook (online)
252 Mass. 523, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/warren-v-boston-national-bank-mass-1925.