136 Ky. 546 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1910
Lead Opinion
Opinion of the Court by
Affirming.
On the 1st day of November, 1906, the First State Rank and the Livingston County Bank entered into a written contract, by the terms of which the state ■ bank purchased all the assets and property of the Livingston Bank. So much of the contract as is material to the issues here involved is as follows:! “ This contract and agreement made and entered into this 1st day of November, 1906, by and between the Livingston County Bank, * * * and the First State Bank,
In April, 1907, the First State Bank filed its petition in equity against the Livingston County Bank, in which, after setting up the contract, it averred that the Livingston bank refused to deliver to it two judgments, aggregating $2,600 it had obtained against
Taking up first the matter of the judgments, we agree with the lower court in its conclusion respecting them. These judgments were obtained by the Livingston bank long before it entered into the contract with the state bank, and at that time they were regarded as practically worthless, as the bank had made a number of efforts, but without success, to collect them, but in December, 1906, it sold these judgments
The point is made by counsel for the Livingston bank that it was to deliver to the state bank all notes and bills of discount, cash, and accounts which belonged to it, and which should be on hand January 1, 1907; and it is argued that the $260 received for these two judgments was not on hand on January 1, 1907, as it had been distributed'to the stockholders to reimburse them in part for the dividends they had previously lost by reason of the failure to realize on these judgments. We are not impressed with the soundness of this argument. The Livingston bank could not, after November 1,1906, convert into money any of the property it owned on November 1st, and distribute the same among its stockholders, and then set up that because the money so distributed was not on hand on January 1, 1907, the First State Bank was not entitled to it. The Livingston bank had as much right and authority to convert into money any note or bill in its vault, and distribute the proceeds among its stockholders and refuse to account for it to the First State Bank, as it did to dispose in this way of the money realized on these judgments. They were as much the property of the state bank as any other asset owned by it on November 1, 1906;
In considering whether or not the state bank is entitled to that part of the interest that accrued after January 1, 1907, on notes taken prior to December 31st, we may with propriety look to the purpose the parties had in mind in entering into the contract, with a view to ascertaining the meaning of the word “earnings” as used in the writing between them,
The word “earnings” in the contract should be given such a meaning as will effectuate the intention of the parties when the contract was entered into, and manifestly it could not have been in the contemplation of the parties that the Livingston bank, on January j , 1907, might hand over a lot of noninterest-bearing paper, or rather paper upon which the state bank would not receive any interest at all. Unless it was
"Wherefore, the judgment is affirmed on the original appeal, and reversed on the cross-appeal, with, directions to proceed in conformity with this opinion.
Rehearing
Response for petition for rehearing — Overruled.
In the opinion we said: “And giving to this contract such construction, our conclusion is that the State .Bank was entitled to receive from the Livingston Bank on all notes and bills discounted by it after November 1, 1906, and that did not mature until after January 1, 1907, that proportionate part of the interest that was collected or received by the Livingston Bank for the time between January 1st and the maturity of the notes.”
We thought this language made it clear that the State Bank was only entitled to interest on notes and bills discounted by the Livingston Bank after November 1st. But, that there may be no possible room for doubt, we now add that the State Bank is not entitled to any interest or discount collected or received by the Livingston Bank before November 1st on notes or bills discounted by it before November 1, 1906, no matter when such notes or bills matured. These bills and notes the State Bank knew the condition of when it made the purchase.
Petition for rehearing overruled.