61 Neb. 100 | Neb. | 1900
Tbis was an action brought by Henry Gerner against Charles E. Yates, Charles W. Mosher and Richard C. Outcalt in the district court of Lancaster county. On the first trial the defendants were successful, but the judgment in their favor was reversed by this court and the cause remanded for further proceedings. Gerner v. Mosher, 58 Nebr., 135. A second trial of the issues resulted in a verdict and judgment in favor of Yates and against Mosher and Outcalt. Gerner brings the record here for review complaining of the decision in favor of Yates; and Mosher and Outcalt have filed a petition in error asking for a reversal of the judgment against them.
Comprehension of the questions raised will be aided by reproducing here a portion of the opinion of Commissioner Irvine reversing the first judgment. “The petition alleges that Mosher was the president of the Capital National Bank, Walsh its vice-president, and Outcalt its cashier, and that the other defendants named, together with Mosher, constituted its board of directors. The petition is in two counts, the first alleging that on May 18, 1887, a report was made by the defendants, to the comptroller of the currency, of the resources and liabilities of said bank as they existed May 13, 1887; that said report was sworn to by Outcalt as cashier and attested as correct by Mosher, Holmes, and Yates as directors; that the defendants caused said report to be published in the Slate Journal, a newspaper published in Lincoln, Tor the purpose of inducing others, and particularly this plaintiff, to deal with said corporation and to repose in it and them, its directors and managing officers, and to induce others, and particularly this plaintiff, to purchase its capital stock and make investments therein, and represented and held out said statement to be a true statement of the financial condition of said corporation.’ The report is then set out in terms, and it is alleged that said report was false, in that it overstated the mortgages, stocks and bonds held by the bank to the amount of $30,000, the amount due the bank from reserve agents, about $76,000, and its loans and discounts $50,-000; that said report and false representations were made
The defendants insist that the evidence neither shows, nor tends to show, that any material fact stated in either report was false. We shall consider in their order the several averments of the petition charging the defendants with having made false representations, and determine whether any of them is supported by competent proof. The first is as follows: “That instead of said bank having $44,018.84 of mortgages, stocks and bonds, other than United States bonds to secure circulation, it had no more than $14,018.84 of such securities as assets.” The jury might have found that this allegation was established by the evidence, but they could not have done so without at the same time finding that the liabilities of the bank were less than they appeared to be by the pub-
It is charged ttat tte report was also false because, “instead of taving tte sum of $119,280.88 due it from approved reserve agents, it had no more ttan $43,344.52 due from said source.” Tte evidence, however, conclusively stows ttat tte latter sum was due tte bank from two reserve agents, tte Chemical National Bank of New York and tte Commercial National Bank of Chicago, and ttat ttere was due from otter reserve banks $86,926.82, or altogether, $130,271.34.
It is further alleged in tte first count of tte petition that tte Capital National Bank, “instead of taving $771,-972.87 of loans and discounts, tad no more ttan $721,-972.87 of suet assets.” It is indisputably established by the admission of Q-emer and otter evidence ttat tte bank’s overdrafts, at tte time tte first report was made out, amounted to $58,071.35 and ttat $50,000 of this sum appeared in tte report under tte head “loans and discounts.” Counsel for plaintiff contends ttat it should not have appeared under ttat head, and ttat tte report was, therefore, false. Ttat overdrafts are loans is, of course, too obvious to admit of dispute; and ttat they are regarded by bankers as first class loans and frequently reported to tte comptroller of tte currency under tte caption “loans and discounts” is shown by tte evidence of Charles T. Boggs and Oscar Callahan, who were tte only witnesses who testified on that point. These witnesses also testified, and their testimony is not contra-
In the second count of the petition it is alleged that
It is also alleged in the second count that the published statement of September 30, 1889, “failed to show payment of interest on funds by said bank borrowed during the preceding month, which aggregated $2,895.64, said item being wholly omitted and the item of undivided profits being falsified, raised and increased in the sum of $2,895.64.” The item omitted from the report appears on the bank’s books as a resource, while undivided profits, discount, interest and exchange, amounting to $17,-107.37, appear on the books as liabilities. Instead of entering on the report to the comptroller the item of interest paid as a resource, it was deducted from the aggregate of the items of liability just mentioned, and the balance, being $14,211.73, was entered on the report as undivided profits. The result was precisely the same as though all the items had been set out. We know of no law or regulation established by the comptroller of the currency, which required the item of interest on re-discounts to appear specifically in the report.
The contention that Yates is not liable because Gerner did not specially rely upon Mm in purchasing stock of Hammond and Lewis is, we think, without merit. The
The action is not barred by the statute of limitations. It was an action for relief on the ground of fraud and the statute did not begin to run until the fraud was discovered. Code of Civil Procedure, sec. 12. The defendants intentionally conveyed to the public the impression that they had actual knowledge of the facts stated in the reports which they attested. They had no such knowledge, and they were aware of it. By representing as true that of which they were consciously ignorant, they committed a fraud for which they are liable in a common law action of deceit. A man is guilty of willful falsehood when he asserts as of his own knowledge a matter of which he knows he is ignorant. Hexter v. Bast, 125 Pa. St., 52; Nauman v. Oberle, 90 Mo., 666; Bullitt v. Farrar, 42 Minn., 8.
Richard C. Outcalt pleaded a discharge in bankruptcy, but the trial court held that, under the facts of this case, such a discharge was not a. defense. On the authority of Chapman v. Forsyth, 2 How. [U. S.], 202, the ruling is approved.
The evidence failing to conclusively establish the correctness of the judgment in favor of Yates, it is reversed as to all the defendants.
Reversed and remanded.