Wise v. Citizens Nat. Bank at Brownwood

107 S.W.2d 715, 1937 Tex. App. LEXIS 724
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 16, 1937
DocketNo. 8522.
StatusPublished

This text of 107 S.W.2d 715 (Wise v. Citizens Nat. Bank at Brownwood) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wise v. Citizens Nat. Bank at Brownwood, 107 S.W.2d 715, 1937 Tex. App. LEXIS 724 (Tex. Ct. App. 1937).

Opinion

BAUGH, Justice.

Appeal is from a judgment of the trial court, predicated upon special exceptions sustained to plaintiff’s petition, in a suit by Wise against said bank for $790, claimed by him as salary due for services as active vice president of said bank during the months of July, August, and September, 1934.

The material allegations of his. petition were substantially as follows-: That the Citizens. National Bank at Brownwood was in June, 1934, organized for the purpose of taking over the assets, assuming the liabilities of, and succeeding to the business of the Citizens National Bank in Brown-wood, theretofore closed and then in the hands of a conservator appointed by the Comptroller of the Currency. That on June 13, 1934, the organization certificate provided for in section 22, title 12 U.S. Code (12 U.S.C.A. § 22), was duly executed by the organizers of said bank and transmitted to the Comptroller of the -Currency; that though the agreement made with F. S. Abney, as acting' executive officer of said new bank, was made on June 12, 1934, whereby appellant was employed at $300 per month, said agreement was ratified by the board of directors on June 18, 1934, and again on July 7, 1934, when said board of directors approved same by resolution and elected appellant vice president of the new bank; that because of objections of the chief bank examiner to the new • bank’s schedule of salaries, appellant’s salary • under said agreement was on July 14, 1934, reduced from $300 per month to $275 per month, on which latter date the articles of association of said new bank were on file in the office of the Comptroller of the Currency. ' ,

*717 It was also alleged that appellant began work for said new bank on July S, 1934; that as a part of said agreement appellant was to, and did, purchase and pay cash for $2,800 of capital stock in said bank; that the employment of appellant was accomplished to meet the demands of the national bank examiner that an outside executive, not - formerly connected with the old bank, be employed before the organization of the hew bank would be approved; that such employment was incidental and necessarily preliminary to its organization; that a certificate of authority to said new bank to commence a banking business, provided for in section 27, title 12 U.S.Code (12 U.S.C.A. § 27), was issued by the Comptroller of the Currency on September 28, 1934; and that the new bank actually opened its doors and began transacting business on October 1, 1934.

It was also alleged that prior to appellant’s employment, the Reconstruction Finance Corporation had agreed to purchase for cash $50,000 preferred stock in said new bank, on condition that an outside executive be employed; that said employment of appellant to meet this requirement was made, approved by the Reconstruction Finance Corporation, and such stock so purchased by it. That among other requirements made by the chief banking examiner were those that the new bank have $100,000 common stock all paid; $50,000 preferred stock; and $40,000 surplus; and that such surplus, larger than usually required for new banks, was required of appellee bank in contemplation of its defraying all necessary organization expenses, such as the item herein sued for, without impairment of its capital stock.

It was further alleged that by virtue of said employment contract said new bank became obligated to pay appellant such ' salary earned by him during the three months prior to the time it opened for business; that on or about October 15, 1934, appellant withdrew from said bank and deposited to his credit such salary for the months of July, August, and September; that a few days thereafter, at a meeting of the board of directors, F. S. Abney, also a vice president of said bank, raised the question as to whether said bank could legally pay appellant a salary for these three months. Whereupon it was agreed, in effect, that if the Comptroller of the Currency should rule adversely to such payment, then that appellant would forego the collection thereof. That neither the Comptroller nor any of his representatives ever objected to such payment, but, on the contrary, R. H. Collier, examiner for the banking department, advised that no such objection would be1 made.

The appellee filed numerous exceptions, two of which were sustained, and upon refusal of appellant to amend, judgment was rendered that he take nothing; hence this appeal. The exceptions sustained were as follows:

“4-A. Defendant specially demurs and excepts to said petition and each and every paragraph thereof, for the reason that the same shows upon its face that plaintiff is attempting to collect a sum based upon an alleged agreement made, for services alleged to have been rendered, prior to the time defendant received its certificate of authority to commence a banking business, and shows upon its face that said contract is illegal, ultra vires and void, and fails to state any cause of action of any character as against this defendant.
“4-B. Defendant specially demurs and excepts to said petition and each and every paragraph thereof, for the reason that said petition alleges a contract which on its face is illegal, ultra vires, void and of no effect, for the reason that said pleading shows on its face that said contract operated to impair the capital stock and surplus of said defendant bank to the extent of $825.00, prior to the time it received its certificate of authority to commence a business of banking, and by reason thereof said petition shows upon its face that said contract was a legal fraud on the defendant bank, and upon the stockholders of the defendant bank, and was in violation of the National Banking Laws, and cannot be made the foundation of a cause of action based thereon.”

Under the first paragraph of section 24, title 12, U.S.Code (12 U.S.C.A. § 24, first par.), appellee bank, upon compliance with the two preceding sections of said title, when its articles of association and certificate were filed with the Comptroller of the Currency, became a body corporate as of the date of the execution off its organization certificate. But under the last paragraph of said'section 24 it was expressly forbidden to “transact any business except such as is incidental and necessarily preliminary to its organization, until it has been authorized by the Comptroller of thq *718 Currency to commence the business of banking.”

Consequently the rights of the appellant are dependent upon the question of whether or not his services as an official of the bank, and the salary therefor, were incidental and necessarily preliminary to the organization of said bank, as that term is used in the U.S.Code. It is now settled law that national banks derive their powers from the Acts of Congress and that in the interpretation of their powers under such acts the decisions of the federal courts control. .It is the contention of appellee that the contract here involved, so far as payment to appellant of any salary prior to September 28, 1934, when it was authorized “to commence the business of banking” was not only , ultra vires, but was expressly prohibited by section 24, and was therefore void. Even though the chief examiner may have considered such salary during the tjme prior to September 28, 1934, as incidental and preliminary to its organization, the question here raised is, we think, controlled by the decision of the Supreme’ Court of the United States in McCormick v.

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Bluebook (online)
107 S.W.2d 715, 1937 Tex. App. LEXIS 724, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wise-v-citizens-nat-bank-at-brownwood-texapp-1937.