Wright v. Fergus Falls Nat. Bank

50 N.W. 1030, 48 Minn. 120, 1892 Minn. LEXIS 384
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedJanuary 18, 1892
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 50 N.W. 1030 (Wright v. Fergus Falls Nat. Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wright v. Fergus Falls Nat. Bank, 50 N.W. 1030, 48 Minn. 120, 1892 Minn. LEXIS 384 (Mich. 1892).

Opinion

Mitchell, J.

This action was brought by the plaintiff, as assignee of the Page Flour Mills, under the fourth section of the insolvent law of 1881, (Laws 1881, ch. 148,) to set aside, as an unlawful preference, a judgment obtained by the defendant bank against the insolvent by default, and on the same ground to recover payments on the debt sued on, made by the insolvent after the commencement of -the action and before judgment. Our views as to the weight and effect of the evidence are so at variance with those of the learned judges who tried the case that it becomes necessary to state the testimony somewhat at length. The insolvent was a corporation engaged in the milling business at Fergus Falls. Henry G. Page was its president and treasurer and principal financial manager. He was also president of the defendant bank, having his office in the bank building, and being evidently also the controlling spirit of its financial policy. The mill company was a customer and depositor of the bank, and also a large borrower from it, being on September 25, 1890, indebted to it in about $45,000 on overdue paper executed by Page, as president, in its behalf. Its account with the bank had also been continuously overdrawn, since the previous May, from $1,000 to $2,000, and was then overdrawn to the amount of $1,777. It was at this date (September 25th) hopelessly insolvent, as the bank offi[125]*125cers well knew, its debts, mostly overdue, amounting to about $98,-000, and its property, consisting principally of its mill plant, not being worth to exceed $38,000 t'o $40,000. Two or. three days previously Boyd, formerly the cashier, and still.a stockholder, of the bank, had come from West Duluth, for the express purpose of attending to the claims of the bank against the mill company, and had been during that time in frequent consultation with Page on the subject. As to the precise nature of these conferences and the conclusion arrived at, Boyd and Page somewhat disagree, but what confessedly followed leaves no room for any reasonable doubt on the subject. On September 25th Page sent for Wright, the president of the First National Bank of Fergus Falls, which was a creditor of the mill company in the amount of $5,000, and on his arrival at the bank told him that the mill company had been losing a great deal of money, and was in bad shape, and that he desired to protect the local creditors, and that Boyd would explain the details to him. Page then called Boyd into the room. Boyd then said to Wright that there was some trouble; that the mill company had got to fail, and that there bad got to be a heavy loss; that he had a plan by which they could be protected as far as possible, but that under no circumstances would he disclose the plan to him without his giving his pledge of secrecy that he would not state it to any one else., Wright having given him this pledge, Page then (accepting as true his own version of it) told him the condition of the bank so far as the mill company was concerned, and that the plan was to obtain a judgment if they could, and make a levy on the property, and from the proceeds of that levy and sale to divide with him, the Citizens’ National Bank, (also a creditor of the mill company,) and their own bank, according to the amount of their claims. Wright testified that Boyd said that they must keep the matter very quiet, because if it got out it would upset the whole thing. Boyd really does not deny this, as he admits that he said that in conducting the suit it was unnecessary “to get out a brass band,” and inform the public that they had commenced it. Page was present during all this time, and at least made no objection to what was agreed on. Wright having assented to this arrangement, Page then sent for Compton, the president of the Citizens’ Bank, and when [126]*126he arrived the same thing was repeated that occurred with Wright, Page also being present. Compton, in behalf of his bank, also assented to the plan. It may also be stated that Compton was secretary of the mill company.

On September 24th or 25th Page took up one of the overdue notes which his bank held against the mill company, by giving the check of the mill company on the bank for.the amount, which increased the overdraft of the mill company’s account to $7,159.47. Immediately upon the conclusion of the arrangement between the three local banks, the defendant bank employed counsel and commenced suit against the mill company for its entire claim, including this overdraft. The complaint in the action was filed by the attorney, with an injunction to the clerk of the court to keep it out of the newspapers, which was done; all other actions commenced during the week being, as usual, given out for publication, this one alone being suppressed. The attorney himself also served the summons on Page as president of the mill company, and made affidavit of service before the cashier of the bank. Page put the summons in his pocket, and never conferred about the suit with the other officers of the mill company, or even examined the summons to see whether the amount for which payment was demanded was correct. In fact, judgment was demanded for several hundred dollars too much. A bank in St. Paul held a note against the mill company for $5,000, which matured October 9th. On October 8th, Page, in behalf of the mill company, executed and sent to that bank a renewal note payable in 80 days, but made no mention of the commencement of the suit by the defendant bank. On the 10th of October a creditor of the mill company called on Page for payment of a note against the mill company. Page and the creditor disagree somewhat as to what passed, but Page admits that he told him to call again when he was in town about the middle of October, and did not mention to him the pend-ency of the suit by the bank. ' It also appears, without contradiction, that the officers of the three banks and of the mill company kept the suit a profound secret until judgment was entered. Between September 25th and October 15th the mill company, from time to time, made various deposits to the credit of its account at the bank, [127]*127amounting in all to about $5,000, and during the same time had checked out various sums, amounting to over $1,300, so that on October 16th the overdraft of the account was much less than that on September 25th.

On October 16th, and as soon as the 20 days from the service of the summons had expired, the bank entered judgment against the mill company on default of an answer, for nearly $16,000, immediately issued execution, and levied on virtually its entire property, personal and real. On October 25th, the mill company, by Page, its president, and Compton, its secretary, executed an assignment for the benefit of creditors to Wright, who, it will be remembered, was one of the parties to the arrangement already referred to, and who was enjoined to secrecy. Page on one occasion testified, although rather evasively, that the reason he did nothing after the suit was commenced was that the mill company had no defense; but at another time he testified that he agreed with Boyd that the bank should have judgment, and that his object in keeping the matter secret was that the bank should get judgment, and thus obtain a preference over other creditors. Boyd and Evans, the cashier of the bank, testify that there was no agreement between them and Page that the suit should be kept secret in order that the bank might obtain a preference by securing judgment, but that secrecy was enjoined in order “to prevent a run on the bank.” They also testified that there was nothing said about the mill company not making an assignment until after the bank obtained judgment, and on this point there is no evidence contradicting them.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
50 N.W. 1030, 48 Minn. 120, 1892 Minn. LEXIS 384, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wright-v-fergus-falls-nat-bank-minn-1892.