Wentz v. Scott

10 F.2d 426, 1926 U.S. App. LEXIS 2217
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedFebruary 5, 1926
Docket4486
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 10 F.2d 426 (Wentz v. Scott) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wentz v. Scott, 10 F.2d 426, 1926 U.S. App. LEXIS 2217 (6th Cir. 1926).

Opinion

KNAPPEN, Circuit Judge.

This appeal is from an order of the District Court allowing a claim against the Houston Farm Company, insolvent, in favor of the superintendent of banks of the state of Ohio, in charge of and in process of liquidating the Houston Bank. The claim in question and the controversy thereover arise out of this situation:

The Houston Farm Company was incorporated under the laws of Ohio in 1908. Its purpose was the acquiring, holding, leasing, managing, renting, selling, and otherwise dealing in farm property, real and personal, *427 and other real.estate, and rights and interests therein or secured thereby. Its authorized capital stock was $100,000, consisting of 1,000 shares of $100 each; Leon H. Houston and Edwin D. Houston, brothers, holding approximately two-thirds thereof. The Houston Bank was organized in the year 1890, with a capital stock of $50,000. Although -a partnership, the capital stock was divided into shares; the principal stockholders being the two brothers just referred to. The Farm Company acquired farm property from time to time until, prior to -March, 1921, it had accumulated slightly in excess of 3,000 acres in Ohio and about 1,440 acres in Colorado ; the latter being practically without value. Leon H. Houston died in 1909, and Edwin D. in 1910. They were evidently able and successful business men, and the affairs of the bank and the Farm Company prospered while they lived. After their death their younger brother, Foster B. Houston, who was beneficially interested in the estate of each of them, became head of the banking partnership and president of the Farm Company. He organized several subsidiary companies, some being partnerships, others corporations.

On November 13, 1920, the bank was closed and taken over by the state superintendent of banks for liquidating purposes. The Farm Company was placed in receivership August 15, 1921. Foster B. Houston died March 15,1922, and before the litigation over the Farm Company’s notes hereinafter referred to. The total amount of the Farm Company’s debts at the time of the receivership was $1,158,423.30. Of this amount the bank held notes of the Houston Farm Company, executed and delivered in its name to the bank by Foster B. Houston, its president and general manager, aggregating $588,588.-35; also several other notes, executed by' various subsidiary companies and others, amounting to $20,745.92, on which the Farm Company was only contingently liable.

Appellants represent claims included in the remaining $549,089.03 of Farm Company claims, not held by the Houston Bank by way of either direct or contingent liability. The value of the total assets of the Farm Company is about $302,000. The master commissioner (to whom a reference was made in the suit in which the receivership over the Farm Company had been ordered) allowed the claims of the superintendent of banks (representing the Houston Bank) on both direct and contingent liability paper. The District Court affirmed the master’s action as to the direct liability paper, but reversed it as to the contingent liability notes. The latter thus dropped out of this-case. No contention is here made as to the provability of the notes made by other banks by way of direct loans to the Farm Company and evidenced by promissory notes executed through Foster B. Houston, nor with respect to Farm Company paper originally taken by the Houston Bank .and rediscounted, and now held by other banks, which received it in due course before maturity. The contest here relates only to the direct liability Farm Company paper held by the Houston Bank before it went into liquidation, at which time the estates of Leon H. and Edwin D. Houston owned, between them, $49,300 of the $50,000 capital, Foster B. Houston owned $200, his wife, his son, and his daughter owned $100 each, and the widow of Edwin D. Houston owned $100 of the remaining $200.

With respect to the direct liability paper held by the Houston Bank, the superintendent of banks has offered merely the negotiable notes themselves, with proof of the signature of Foster B. Houston, by whom all were either signed or indorsed on behalf of the farm company. Appellants contend that much of this paper was given without consideration, and that, in view of the fact that the affairs of the Houston Bank, the Farm Company, and some of the subsidiary companies, were somewhat confused, each with the other, and in further view of the fact that Foster B. Houston was president of the farm company and also acted as president and manager of the bank which discounted the notes (as well as so-called president of other enterprises through whose operation part of the indebtedness arose), the presumption that these notes were given for valuable consideration does not obtain, and that the burden of proof is upon the superintendent of banks to show in each case that they were given for full and valuable consideration, and that the transaction which led to the issue of the paper was fair and free from fraud.

Appellants have not, by pleading, challenged the validity or denied lack of consideration of any of the notes so presented by the superintendent of banks, nor was any evidence offered even tending to show fraud or lack of consideration as to any of such notes, •and no claim was presented of any defect in any of the same or of any equity attaching thereto, or of any personal benefit to Foster B. Houston from any of the transactions in question. Moreover, there was direct evidence that in each instance when any of the *428 notes of the Farm Company in question were discounted by the Houston Bank the Farm Company was given actual credit on the bank’s books for the proceeds of the note.

In the statement of facts included in the transcript it is said that the sole question presented is “whether the single fact that Foster B. Houston was president of both the Houston Bank and the Houston Farm Company at the various times When said notes were executed, in and of itself, in the absence of any designation of any particular note or notes as invalid, and of any evidence of fraud, lack of consideration, defect in any note, or equity attaching thereto, or personal benefit to Foster B. Houston, and notwithstanding that the Farm Company received credit for the proceeds of each note discounted by the Houston Bank in each ease, required the superintendent of banks to assume the burden in the ease of each note presented by him of showing by evidence, in addition to that of the note itself, that in each case there was no lack of consideration, and that the transaction was free from fraud.” This narrow question is all that is involved in this appeal.

In support of the contention that under the facts of this ease the burden is on the . superintendent of banks to prove the absence of fraud and the presence of consideration in the giving of the notes, appellants cite several cases, prominent among which are Ginn v. Dolan, 90 N. E. 141, 81 Ohio St. 121, 135 Am. St. Rep. 761, 18 Ann. Cas. 204; Geddes v. Anaconda, etc., Co. (D. C.) 197 F. 860, 865; Marcy v. Guanajuto Development Co. (D. C.) 228 F. 150, 151.

Passing for the moment the special considerations applicable to suits upon promissory notes, we greatly doubt the existence of the general rule stated in the cases cited by appellants, unless such rule is coupled with the corollary that, in the absence of evidence tending to show fraud, inequity, or lack of consideration, the burden of proof resting upon plaintiff is.

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Bluebook (online)
10 F.2d 426, 1926 U.S. App. LEXIS 2217, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wentz-v-scott-ca6-1926.