Weicker v. Bromfield

34 F.2d 377, 1929 U.S. App. LEXIS 3243
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit
DecidedAugust 7, 1929
DocketNos. 29-34, 36, 37
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 34 F.2d 377 (Weicker v. Bromfield) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Weicker v. Bromfield, 34 F.2d 377, 1929 U.S. App. LEXIS 3243 (10th Cir. 1929).

Opinion

McDERMOTT, Circuit Judge.

These eight appeals involve the same controversy. The eases were consolidated for trial and on thtó appeal. All are actions at law, tried to the court without a jury, and findings of fact made. The notes involved here are a part of a bunch of notes which were among the assets of the Globe National Bank at the time of its failure on September 19,1925. The receiver sued on the notes in six of the cases. In two of the eases the Globe National Bank had negotiated the notes to purchasers for value before maturity and the makers paid the notes. In one of such cases, No. 37, Donaldson sued the receiver to recover the payment made to such purchaser for value; in the other, No-. 2-9, Weieker was sued on two notes not in dispute, and counterclaimed for the amount of the note he had paid tó a purchaser for value, such note being one of those in dispute; and also counterclaimed for the amount of two small' deposits. If his counterclaim is good on its merits, his right to set it off is not challenged. In case No. 33, Knifton, denying the right of the receiver to- recover on the note sued on, counterclaimed for a deposit of $170'. In ease No. 36, Bartlett had given his note for $17,333.34 (one of the notes in dispute), had paid thereon the sum of $13,000, and was sued for the balance. He denied the right to recover on the balance, and counterclaimed for the amount paid. In case No. 30-, Bourk filed a similar counterclaim for a deposit of $1,827.-74. In the eases where affirmative relief! is •sought against the receiver, the note makers allege breach of contract, resultant damages, and pray for a money judgment, which they ask to have decreed a first lien upon all the assets in the hands of the receiver.

While the issues as joined involve some collateral matters, such as notes not in dispute and 'deposits, the only controversy presented is over eight notes, aggregating $186,-000 face value, which came into the possession of the Globe National Bank on July 6, 1925. In this opinion, the Globe National Bank will be referred to as the ¡Globe Bank, the Home Savings & Merchants’ Bank (a state banking institution) as the Home Bank, and the appellants aa the note makers.

The pleadings are not identical in form, but in substance they are the same. The note makers (a) deny that the receiver is the lawful owner of such notes; (b) allege absence of consideration; (e) allege that the notes were given in pursuance of an agreement by the terms of which the Globe Bank agreed to pay all the indebtedness of the Home Bank; agreed to forthwith deliver to the Home Bank notes of a par value in excess of $200,000; agreed to deliver to the Home Bank other notes of a par value in excess of $500,000 as soon as an aggregate sum of about $190,000' had been collected thereon by the Globe Bank; and agreed that it would not foreclose or dispose of the last-mentioned notes without first giving 120 days notice to representatives of the Home Bank. The an[379]*379swers allege that the Globe Bank violated this agreement in all particulars. One or two of the makers allege a wrongful delivery of the notes to the Globe Bank.

The trial court found for the receiver, and this appeal follows.

The essential faets are not in dispute. The note makers were directors and stockholders of the Home Bank, and early in 1925 were .undertaking to dispose of the bank to some institution which would assume and pay its obligations, and thus reheve them of their statutory liability as stockholders and at the same time protect their business reputations. In May of that year they asked Mr. G. E. Armstrong, a national bank examiner, to examine their bank. His report estimated the losses to be $891,235.57. The capital, surplus, and undivided profit account amounted to $503,803.84. He reported that the bank was insolvent, as in fact it was. July 1st was an interest-paying date on savings accounts, and, as that day approached, the efforts to sell the| bank became more marked. Other efforts failing, negotiations were opened with the Globe Bank, a smaller but then solvent institution. Any deal with the Globe Bank necessarily involved the approval of Mr. Armstrong, who was in touch with the situation at all times. On July 2d a meeting was held, attended by the officers of both banks, their counsel, and all of the directors •of both institutions excepting three or four. What happened at that meeting is testified to by the directors of the Home Bank and is not denied by the directors of the Globe Bank, although some of them were on the stand. Out of that meeting there emerged a plan, agreed to by both institutions, which was that a new state banking institution should be incorporated, to be called the “Globe Trust Company,” which was to take over both the Globe and Home Banks, and which would start business in the quarters of the Home Bank on Monday morning, July 6th. Officers of the new trust company were agreed upon and the trust company chartered on July 3d. The Globe Bank could not go into the merger, however, until the assets of the Home Bank were replenished. This was provided for by an agreement of the note makers to put up $186,000. For this $186,-000, the note makers were to receive approximately- $700,000 face value of notes and securities then belonging to the Home Bank, and which Mr. Armstrong had criticized. In addition, they were to réeeive 172 shares of the stock of the Globe Trust Company, and the Globe Trust Company was to assume the obligations of the Home Bank, and take over all its other assets. The note makers agreed to repay themselves for their $186,000 advanced out of thel $700,000 ofi criticized paper, the balance realized thereon to go to the stockholders of the Home Bank, In pursuance of that agreement, the notes in suit, and others, were executed. They were “myself” indorsed notes, transferable by delivery. They were intrusted to one of their number, Carl Ph. Schwalb, for delivery to the Globe Trust Company, in accordance with the agreement, excepting one or two which were made after it was known that the Globe National would go ahead with the plan, instead of the trust company; but as to these one or two notes, that was the only change in the conditions authorized by the makers.

On Saturday July 4th and Sunday July 5th the Globe Bank moved into the Home Bank. When they moved in, the plan was to open the morning of July 6th as the Globe Trust Company. Sunday evening the plan was changed by the officers of the Globe Bank and Mr. Armstrong, the bank examines Mr. Gates, the president of the Globe Bank, and a witness for the receiver, testified as to who made this fundamental change in the plan agreed to by the directors of both institutions. The men who undertook to change the plan were Mr. Gates, the president of the Globe Bank, Mr. Boot, the cashier of the Globe Bank, Mr. Staley, one of its directors, and Mr. Armstrong, the national bank examiner. Apparently it was not thought necessary to consult any one representing the Home Bank as to this change in their mutual agreement, for Mr. Gates testified:

“There was a discussion at the old quarters of the Home Savings & Merchants’ Bank, and there was a conference which I referred to between Mr. Armstrong and Mr. Staley and Mr. Boot and myself when we decided to go ahead as a national bank because we would have to do practically the same things, in fact, the same things; eliminate the questionable paper in the trust company, as we would in a national bank, and in that discussion it was thought best to go ahead as a national bank for the reason that we could retain some of our various bank accounts which otherwise we could not retain.

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Bluebook (online)
34 F.2d 377, 1929 U.S. App. LEXIS 3243, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/weicker-v-bromfield-ca10-1929.