Webb v. Cash

250 P. 1, 35 Wyo. 398, 1926 Wyo. LEXIS 25
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 26, 1926
Docket1239
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 250 P. 1 (Webb v. Cash) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Webb v. Cash, 250 P. 1, 35 Wyo. 398, 1926 Wyo. LEXIS 25 (Wyo. 1926).

Opinion

*401 Blume, Justice.

This is an action brought by the plaintiff against the defendants, who were the directors of the Powder River State Bank. Judgment was recovered against the defendants and from this judgment they appeal. The action is based upon an alleged violation of section 5150, W. C. S. 1920, and particularly for violating the law in making excessive loans. The parties will be referred to herein in the same manner as in the court below. A summary of the facts is as follows:

Adams Webb, the plaintiff in this ease, deposited the sum of $10,000 in the Powder River State Bank of ICaycee, Wyoming, in the years 1917 and 1918, but he withdrew, sometime prior to August, 1920, the sum of $3500, leaving in the bank $6500, the amount in controversy in this case and for the recovery of which the defendants are sued in this case. According to the claim of plaintiff, he was an ordinary depositor in the bank. It was agreed, however, between him and J. J. Cash, the cashier of said bank, that he should receive interest thereon at the rate of eight per cent per annum. According to the testimony of Cash, the bank borrowed this sum of money from the plaintiff for the purpose of investing and reinvesting it for him from time to time. The money was taken out of the account of plaintiff and invested in loans made, and the note or notes representing the loan or loans were thereupon placed among the papers of the plaintiff. Cash himself ultimately became, or perhaps always was, the borrower of this money. Two loans, aggregating the sum of $6500, were represented by notes made by Cash himself, one for $5,000, made August 30, 1920, and one for $1500, made November *402 10,1921, both of these notes being made to J. Elmer Brock, endorsed by the latter and placed among the private papers of plaintiff. These notes were renewals, as testified to by Cash, of notes made by him previously. The loan or loans so made for plaintiff were, however, shown on the books of the bank and as though made by it directly and then sold to plaintiff. The defendants, aside from Cash, testified that they had no knowledge whatever that the plaintiff had any money in the bank aforesaid, or that any loan whatever was made to Cash out of the money of the plaintiff. Cash himself testified that he did not know whether the plaintiff’s money, or the loan or loans made for plaintiff,, were ever mentioned by him to the Board of Directors. The plaintiff filed a claim with the receiver as an ordinary depositor, and the receiver allowed it as a general claim.

The Powder River State Bank, hereinafter frequently referred to simply as the bank, became insolvent and went into the hands of a receiver on February 2, 1922. It had, during the period in controversy in this ease, a capital stock of $50,000 and a surplus of $50,000. A loan to any one party was, .accordingly, under the statutes of this state, limited, in any event, to the sum of $20,000. It appears that the bank made numerous loans from time to time, generally secured by mortgages on live stock or land or both; that a number of customers of the bank, however, were in need of more money than the bank itself was able to loan. Arrangements were, accordingly, made — in accordance with a custom all over the United States' — under which loans made to any one party in excess of the amount which the bank itself was authorized to loan, would be transferred to and held by correspondent-banks without recourse. After the organization of the Federal Reserve Banks, a ruling was made by these banks that they would not handle any commercial paper without recourse. This ruling, so the testimony shows, disarranged the system *403 theretofore in vogue among the banks of the country, and the bankers in the reserve cities advised and instructed the bankers in other places that thereafter loans in excess of the power of a bank to carry, should be taken in the name of an individual, by him endorsed and forwarded to the correspondent-banks to be held and carried by the latter, who, in turn, would be enabled to discount these loans in. the Federal Reserve Banks. According to the testimony, this practice was adopted and in vogue all over the United States, with the approval of the Federal Reserve Banks. This method, in other words, was a method adopted to take the place of the former method whereby banks outside of the reserve cities sold loans to banks in such cities without recourse. In the case at bar, most of the loans of this character were taken in the name of J. Elmer Brock, were by him endorsed and forwarded to and bought by the correspondent-banks of the Powder River State Bank. These correspondent-banks, however, exacted from the directors of the Powder River State Bank —and that, too, in accordance with a prevailing custom in the country generally — additional security by means of a so-called directors’ guaranty; that is to say, the payment of the loans negotiated and sold to correspondent-banks, was guaranteed by the members of the Board of Directors of the Powder River State Bank. Under this guarantee the defendant Young paid, after the failure of the Powder River State Bank, the sum of approximately $136,000, and the defendant W. J. Thom surrendered all of his property, but whether for the purpose of liquidating part of the notes so guaranteed, or for the purpose of liquidating other debts of the bank is not shown.

Despite the fact, however, that the loans so negotiated were not made to the bank in question here, it was the custom, as testified to by Thom, for the correspondent-banks to treat the bank in question here — and other banks *404 similarly situated — as responsible for the loans so sold and negotiated, and would, when any loan would become due, send the note or notes to the bank to be collected or renewed. Under this practice the Powder River State Bank made many loans, the Omaha National Bank alone holding at one time about $100,000 of such paper. The notes would be taken at ten per cent interest per annum, and were carried by the correspondent-banks at seven or eight per cent per annum, the Powder River State Bank receiving the benefit of the difference in the rates of interest. The business so conducted was very profitable for a time. Up to the year 1921, the correspondent-banks were anxious to hold and carry loans so sold to them, and no difficulty was experienced by the Powder River State Bank in negotiating all the loans that it was able to make. But some of the winters were severe; poison on the mountains killed many of the cattle on which the bank had security; a considerable slump in prices of cattle occurred in 1920, and commencing with 1921, according to the testimony, the correspondent banks insisted upon payment of the loans held by them, followed by a refusal to take any renewal notes or any new loans. The notes, accordingly, previously sold to the correspondent banks, were sent back to the Powder River State Bank, and accumulated therein in the latter part of 1921. But during October or November, 1921, a committee of the War Finance Corporation, which had been organized for the relief of banks, promised the defendants in this case and agreed to take the notes held by the Powder River State Bank, including those, or some of those, previously negotiated to correspondent-banks, in an amount of $200,000. Efforts, accordingly, to dispose of any surplus paper in the Powder River State Bank, ceased, in accordance with the agreement so made.

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Bluebook (online)
250 P. 1, 35 Wyo. 398, 1926 Wyo. LEXIS 25, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/webb-v-cash-wyo-1926.