The proceeding below was by bill in equity to compel the appellant receiver to pay the Missouri State Life Insurance Company the 67 per cent, dividend accorded to other creditors upon two certificates of deposit totaling $500,000, issued by the National Bank of Kentucky as of August 23, 1930. The receiver had refused to pay the dividend on the ground inter alia that the Missouri State Life was not a bona fide holder of the certificates, and on tho further ground that it had agreed to apply the proceeds of the certificates upon the existing debt to the bank of another company. After an extended statement by counsel for *796 the receiver outlining his defenses and incorporating the allegations of his answer, the court without receiving evidence gave judgment for the plaintiff in the full amount claimed, together with interest, and directed the issue of a mandatory injunction for the payment of dividends thereon.
The history of the certificates of deposit, and the relationship of the parties, as claimed by the receiver, follows: Rogers Caldwell was a broker and promoter operating on an extensive scale, and controlling through stock ownership, interlocking boards of directors, and dummies, a large number of important banking and insurance corporations. Among the companies dominated and controlled by Caldwell were Caldwell & Co., a brokerage corporation with offices in Nashville, Tenn., the Associated Life Company, the Bank of Tennessee, said to be a bank in name only, without -a banking house, vaults, or fixtures, and with no general banking business, the Inter-Southern Life Insurance Company, and other banks and insurance companies, including the Missouri State Life Insurance Company. For a number of years he had been shifting the funds of all these banks and companies among each other to avoid unfavorable reports of bank examiners and insurance commissioners. Through Caldwell & Co. he was selling the Missouri State Life a large share of the securities purchased by it, many of them doubtful in character and not legal investments under the laws of Missouri, where the company was chartered, and including many mortgages already in default.
It would extend this opinion unduly to recite the whole story of his financial juggling and the irregular, if not illegal, operations of the several corporations unfolded in the opening statement of counsel. It is sufficient at this point to say that it is a tale of frenzied finance at its boldest and most reckless worst. Briefly, however, this was the general character of Caldwell’s activities in connection with the several named corporations when on August 21,1930, the Associated Life Company, through its president, Amet, and Caldwell, negotiated a loan of $500,000 from the National Bank of Kentucky, giving its note for that amount secured by certain collateral. At the same time it purchased from the bank two certificates of deposit, each in the sum of $250,000, issued to Caldwell & Co., and as a condition precedent to the issuance of the eer-ticates it delivered to the bank a letter stating that it had purchased the certificates from the proceeds of the loan in the name of Caldwell & Co., and incorporating this undertaking: “We hereby agree and guarantee that the certificates of deposit will not be cashed only in the reduction of the above mentioned loan.”
Shortly thereafter the two certificates of deposit were purchased from Caldwell & Co. by the Missouri State Life for the sum of $500,000 cash. Acting ostensibly at least for the Missouri State Life was its executive committee, to whom broad powers had been delegated. This committee consisted of Rogers Caldwell, G. C. Amet, president of the Associated Life, James E. Caldwell, the father of Rogers Caldwell, and Hillman Taylor, president of the company. Caldwell & Co. had at one time owned 70 per cent, of the Missouri State Life capital stock, and at the time of this transaction owned 30 per cent. Through Rogers Caldwell it dominated the Missouri Life. Whether there were other directors than the members of the executive committee does not appear.
Shortly after its purchase of the certificates from Caldwell & Co., the Missouri State Life sent them to the Kentucky Bank with a request that they be exchanged for new certificates issued to itself. When the first certificate was received the bank did not immediately reissue it, but waited for some seven or eight days until it could confer with Rogers Caldwell, who was expected in Louisville. At a conference between Caldwell and officers of the bank, Caldwell was told that the reissuing of the certificates was not according to the agreement, which provided that they would not be cashed except in payment of the Associated Life note. Caldwell then agreed that the agreement made by the Associated Life would be binding upon the Missouri State Life, and that the Missouri State Life would not cash the new certificates except and unless the note was paid. It was only after Caldwell, presuming to act for the Missouri State Life, had made this agreement that the bank issued the new certificates, dating them back to August 21st, the date upon which the originals were issued.
The case thus briefly reviewed presents two phases, the first involving the written agreement between the bank and the Associated Life, and the second involving the oral agreement between the bank and Caldwell in respect to the issue of the new certificates, which are the securities here sued upon.
Upon the first phase the District Judge concluded that if there was any infirmity attaching to the original certificates of deposit by reason of the written agreement between the bank and the Associated Life, such infirmity was not within the knowledge of the
*797
Missouri State Life; that even though Caldwell knew of it, he had acquired his information while acting for himself or for Caldwell
&
Co., and not for the purchasing company; that since it was against his interests to have the latter know of the agreement, but rather to his interest to conceal it, it could not, under the familiar rule of agency, be presumed that he would communicate his knowledge to liis principal, and that the 'Missouri State Life was not therefore chargeable with such knowledge. American National Bank v. Miller,
With respect to the first phase of the case., we find no error in the court’s statement of the law, nor with its application to the facts as they were assumed to be. A much broader and more sinister situation, however, than was assumed to exist seems to us well within the fair intendment of the allegations in the pleading and the statement of counsel, and it is axiomatic that in order to sustain a judgment upon a mere statement, admissions must clearly preclude recovery or defense, and broad and liberal interpretation must be made without too precise limitation of the meaning of specific words and phrases.
Taking the defendant’s ease, developed below as a whole, there seems to us to be clearly an o-ffer of proof that Rogers Caldwell, through the instrumentality of the various corporations dominated and controlled by him, was engaged in perpetrating a fraud upon the bank, and that the Missouri State Life was a willing instrument in its perpetration. In support, counsel offered to show numerous questionable transactions by the Missouri State Life during a number of years preceding the one here involved, and others contemporaneous therewith, that the Missouri Life had permitted its funds to bo juggled and its checks issued on banks in excess of deposits. Its office had been moved from St. Louis to Nashville, its investments made through Caldwell & Co., its meetings hold in Caldwell’s office. Caldwell’s original investment in Missouri State Life’s stock had been purchased with funds borrowed from it. He had named its directors, some of them never attending meetings or in any wa.y interfering with his control. Over a million dolíais was deposited in Caldwell’s Bank of Tennessee. At various times the Missouri State Life’s deposits in the Bank of Tennessee exceeded its total resources, and it bought questionable bonds from Caldwell & Co. for cash to permit Caldwell & Co. to raise the cash resources of its Tennessee bank. To deceive insurance commissioners and bank examiners the Missouri Life would draw checks on its Tennessee Bank account and deposit them with banks around the country, redepositing the money after examination and before the cheeks were cleared. The insurance commissioners in May, 1930, but a, few months before tlie transaction here involved, had severely criticized the purchase of securities from Caldwell & Co. Notwithstanding this criticism, the Missouri State Life substantially financed the so-called “Inter-Southern” deal, whereby Caldwell sold 116,00'0 shares of Missouri stock to the Inter-Southern Life Insurance Company, a Caldwell corporation, taking in exchange $4,000,-000 of securities and mortgages, many of them in default, and selling half of them on the same day to Missouri State life for cash realized by the latter on the sale of government bonds, and deposited in Caldwell’s Fourth & First Bank in Nashville. Among the securities thus purchased by the Missouri State Life were $300,000 worth of Florida bonds taken at par when the market price was between $50 and $60. Though this transaction was ordered rescinded by the insurance commission *798 er, it was never done. In June, 1930, the Missouri Life made a large deposit in the National Bank of Kentucky by means of a cheek on the Tennessee Bank, where it had a balance of nearly a million dollars, though the actual cash and credit resources of the bank were less than one-third thereof. To permit the Tennessee Bank to honor its cheek, the Missouri State Life had transferred by telegraph to Nashville some of its credits in the First National Bank of St. Louis, and from the National Bank of Kentucky part of the deposit account created by the very cheek on the Tennessee Bank which it now sought to protect. But it is unnecessary to follow this maze of financial legerdemain further.
Whatever may have been the actual knowledge of the members of its executive committee, or its president, or of any other officers or directors, of the particular transaction here involved, it cannot be denied that the evidence offered upon this record, unchallenged or surviving destruction by adverse proofs, fully demonstrates that the corporate will of Missouri State Life was exercised only by Caldwell, or at his bidding. If directors or committees abdicate, surrender their powers, and subordinate their judgments and their will to one dominating individual, hermetically seal their minds to the obvious, permit their corporation to be used as an instrumentality of deception, unlawfulness and fraud, pursued over a period of years, can it be said that the corporation may escape liability because there is failure of proof of specific knowledge of one irregular transaction, when many have been continuously engaged in ? We think this cannot be so. The loan from the bank by Associated Life, the agreement with respect to its payment, the immediate negotiation of the securities with the Missouri Life, the latter’s immediate endeavor to avoid their infirmities and to put itself into the position of a bona fide holder, were all steps within the fair meaning of the opening statement of counsel in a unitary plan to avoid the burden put upon the certificates when issued. As was said by the United States Supreme Court of steps taken in a different situation, “They have the unity of a common plan, each stage of the •transaction drawing color and significance from the quality of the other.” Shapiro v. Wilgus,
Nor do we see here any escape from the “sole actor” doctrine even in the limited application that was made of it by this court in the third phase of Kean v. National City Bank,
In relation to the second phase of the case, we think the court below was in error in holding that the issue of the substituted certificates by the bank was a waiver of any infirmity that attached to the original certificates. The burden of proof to establish waiver is upon the one who asserts it, and the intention to waive must be clear. Reynolds v. Detroit Fidelity
&
Surety Co., 19 F. (2d) 110 (C. C. A. 6); National City Bank v. National Security Company,
Nor was proof of the second agreement inadmissible under ihe parol evidence rule. The suit was brought by the Missouri State Life, and not by the receiver. Neither the answer nor the statement denies or contradicts the towns of the certificates sued upon. The defense is merely that such certificates do not constitute the whole agreement, and the receiver should have been permitted to show what the arrangement was. That contracts may rest partly in writing and partly in parol is too well settled to require exposition. It is only where the writing embodies the whole agreement that the parol evidence rule applies.
Inasmuch as the case must be remanded for trial, with appropriate findings of fact and conclusions of law, based
upon
the evidence, it is appropriate for us to say that in our opinion interest should not have been allowed upon the judgment beyond the dale of the receivership. Gamble v. Wimberly, 44 F. (2d) 329 (C. C. A. 4); White v. Knox,
Reversed and remanded for trial. 1
Notes
The late Judge HICKENLOOPER concurred in the result, though he did not see the opinion as announced.
