Robinson v. Parker
Robinson v. Parker
Opinion of the Court
The following opinion was filed January 11, 1927:
The vital issue herein resolves itself as follows: Was the loan of $50,000 a personal loan, to enable Pullen to enhance the assets of the bank by substituting cash for worthless securities, or was Pullen, when he procured the money from the plaintiff, acting for and in behalf of the bank, an undisclosed principal ? Briefly stated, was the loan
When the capital of a bank is either materially impaired or entirely wiped out by reason of worthless loans, a precarious situation is presented. It is practically, conceded by the parties herein that when the condition of the bank was revealed, upon an examination made by the banking department, the bank held -between $70,000 and $75,000 of worthless securities, an amount almost three times as large as the entire capitalization of the bank. Banks are not infallible in their loans, for, if they were, insolvency would seldom occur. For a bank capitalized at a million or more dollars, $70,000 worth of doubtful or worthless loans might represent a condition not uncommon; but if a bank capitalized at one million dollars held three million dollars of worthless loans in its assets, it must be conceded that the situation presented would be appalling.
This small country banking institution, which served the people of Evansville and the farming community in its immediate vicinity, in the course of the conduct of its business reached a point in its career where it could not safely be permitted to continue unless its capital were repaired within a reasonable time. The record does not disclose the length of time during which the bank was in fact insolvent prior to the examination made in the fall of 1923, but it is reasonable to assume that the defective assets represented an accumulation covering considerable time, during which period the insolvent condition was unknown to the banking department. It is practically impossible for the banking department to cause a minute investigation to be made of the value of the assets each time that a bank is examined, and therefore in many instances the paper condition of the bank is passed
Pullen not only misrepresented to the plaintiff the nature of the criticism of the banking department, but he committed an actual fraud upon him by stating that the banking department found fault with the size of plaintiff’s deposit. This was a rather shrewd and plausible representation, -for it requires no argument to show that one having a deposit of $50,000 in a bank with a $25,000 capital could readily embarrass the bank at almost any time when the cash assets are insufficient to meet an immediate demand. This proves that Pullen was not only shrewd and designing but also resourceful; that he evolved this scheme as a means by which he could deceive his most intimate, lifetime friend. Had he disclosed the true situation, as he claims, the plaintiff undoubtedly would have balked in assuming the enormous risk of placing the savings of a lifetime into an institution which appeared to be a hopeless wreck. The jury did not believe Pullen’s statement, and it was fully justified in its conclusion.
The banking department in this state was created by the legislature to serve a distinct and recognized public interest. Prior to the numerous bank failures which largely precipitated the panic of 1893, public supervision of banks as now
We are naturally, therefore, led to the inquiry of how a bank failure, under such circumstances, can be averted. In prescribing a remedy a physician attempts to reach and remove the cause of the ailment. It would be useless and idle for one suffering from bronchial trouble to resort to a prescription designed to relieve or cure an affection of the kidneys ; and what is true in medicine is likewise true of a bank ailment. A bank which suffers merely from a want of ready
No assessment of stock was attempted in the instant case; and, in fact, the evidence does not disclose that it was seriously considered. Therefore, the only other remedy available in the premises consisted of the voluntary contribution of Pullen or some other person, of good capital assets, as a substitute for the condemned ones. The bank was not closed, but Pullen was notified that unless the condition were rectified such action would necessarily have to follow. A mere loan to the bank of $50,000, or even of $100,000, would not have-converted this bank from a condition of insolvency to one of solvency, for while such a loan would increase the assets it would at the same time correspondingly increase the liabilities.
Pullen deposited the money obtained from Robinson, at the suggestion of the bank examiner, in a trust account. The purpose of such deposit in such form becomes apparent. It acted as an insurmountable-obstacle to his use of the sum
In sharp contrast to the view of the department and that of the plaintiff is the testimony of Pullen that in securing the loan he acted for and in-behalf of the bank. We consider his testimony incredible, not only in view of all the testimony in the case but of the physical situation and the surrounding facts and circumstances. We therefore conclude that there was no credible evidence upon which the jury’s answer to the first question of the special verdict can be sustained.
Great reliance is placed by respondent’s counsel on the case of Jones v. Johnson, reported in 86 Ky. 530, 6 S. W. 582. This case is one of the leading cases involving the rights of a lender of money against an undisclosed principal,
It can hardly be said, nor can it logically be inferred, that the banking department intended to commit a fraud upon the public; on the contrary, its action is in harmony with its public duty, and indicates an attempt to save a perilous situation which might seriously have affected a large portion of the community which was tributary to the bank’s business. It must also be assumed that the banking department did not intend to create a temporary makeshift, but that its efforts were directed to a permanent improvement in the bank’s condition with respect to the identical weakness" of the institution which it was its desire to have remedied.
If the money substituted in place of the securities may be deemed a mere loan to the bank, then the plaintiff, under the theory .advanced by respondent’s counsel, could have proceeded to secure a repayment at any time when he- discovered the use made of the money by Pullen. It must also be remembered that the trust account in the bank was closed and that the proceeds of the loan became assets of the bank, which made it possible for the continuance of the business of the bank. Any depositor doing business with the bank after the substitution of the money for the worthless assets had the right to rely upon the fact that the bank’s insolvency had been averted, and if it became possible for the plaintiff at any time to withdraw his money, then it appears to us that a fraud was committed upon the patrons of the bank who saw fit to place trust in the bank.
By the Court. — The judgment of the lower court is reversed, and the cause is remanded with directions to dismiss the complaint.
A motion for a rehearing was denied, with $25 costs, on April 5, 1927.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Robinson v. Parker, Commissioner of Banking
- Status
- Published