38 Ga. App. 798 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1928
A. B. Mobley, superintendent of banks for the State of Georgia, brought an action against certain officials of the Bank of Cusseta to recover money alleged to have been lost on account of the negligence of the defendants. The defendants demurred to the petition upon both general and special grounds. The court adjudged “that said demurrers be sustained, and said petition of the plaintiff be dismissed/’ and the plaintiff excepted.
The petition by paragraph is substantially as follows: (1) Petitioner took charge of said bank in his official capacity on July 14, 1926. (2) At the time petitioner took over the affairs of the bank, its officers were C. C. Minter, president; O. C. Stephens, vice-president, and W. A. Gaylor, cashier; and said officers and E. M. Lightner and S. D. MeMurrain constituted its directors; said Minter, Stephens and MeMurrain having been members of the board of directors of said bank continuously for more than fifteen years before the closing thereof; and said Gaylor and Lightner having been members of said board continuously for more than seven years before the closing thereof. (3) “All of said directors are residents of Chattahoochee county, and all of said parties are named as defendants in this suit.” (4) As directors and officers of said bank, defendants were charged with the administration of its affairs, the investment of its funds, including amounts deposited with it, and the protection of its depositors and stockholders, and it was their duty to give their personal attention to the trust eommitteed to them, and to use their best judgment and business ability in the handling of the affairs of said bank, and the investment of its funds so that the business might be safely conducted without loss to depositors and with profit to the stockholders of the bank. (5) “Said officers and directors as aforesaid grossly neglected the duties devolving upon them . . and so mismanaged and neglected tlie affairs of said bank as that it became insolvent and was forced to close its doors; by reason of which neglect and misconduct the depositors sustained large losses, investment of the
(13) “The paper which had been placed in the bank by the Bankers Trust Company which was held among its assets at the time it closed and upon which the bank sustained large losses was as follows: (a) Amortization Corporation, Atlanta, Ga., endorsed by Georgia Bealty Company, $2,060. This loan was placed in the bank on November 1, 1922, and had been renewed eight times prior to the closing of the bank. The Amortization Corporation was organized by the officers of the Bankers Trust Company for the purpose of financing large losses which they had sustained in an automobile enterprise. The company at no time had any substantial assets, but did assume very heavy liabilities. Its officers were officers of Bankers Trust Company, and its business was conducted from the office of the Bankers Trust Company. It has been liquidated through a receivership in Fulton superior court, and no dividends whatever have been paid to general creditors. Georgia Bealty Company, a real-estate corporation organized by the Bankers Trust Company, and the business of which was conducted from the office of that company. It was insolvent at the time this loan was placed in the bank and had been insolvent some time prior thereto. It has been adjudged a bankrupt and has paid its eredtors 4%. Except for the small dividend paid by the Georgia Bealty Company, this loan will be a total loss to the bank. (&) Bankers Investment Company, Jacksonville, Fla., secured by stock in Bankers Guaranty Company, Miami, Fla., $2,000. Both these corporations were subsidiaries of the Bankers Trust Company, through which it served Florida banks belonging to its chain, and financed its Florida operations and speculations. Both companies have been adjudged bankrupt. The liquidation of the Bankers Investment Company has been completed and creditors have been paid no dividend. The stock of the Bankers Guaranty Company of Miami is worthless. The loan was placed in the bank June 25, ’ 1925, and was renewed three times. The loan will be a total loss to the bank, (c) Bankers Financing Company, Atlanta, Ga., secured by stock in sundry banks, $4,000. The stock of the Bankers
(14) “The Bank of Cusseta had a capital stock of $15,000, and claimed a surplus of $7,500, and ‘could not lend over 10% of that amount’ to any one person or corporation, unless the loan was secured and approved in writing by a majority of the board of directors. Each renewal note exceeding $1,500 was so approved by a majority of the directors, but said defendants were so negligent in the discharge of their duties that they approved these several loans, with the constantly recurring renewals, without making any investigation or inquiry, and without any regard to the solvency of the makers and endorsers of the security back of the notes.” (15) “The
(17) “Defendants also allowed the said trust company to lend other funds belonging to it to banks belonging to the Bankers Trust Company chain of banks on call, the Bankers Trust Company placing funds from time to time with such banks as it saw fit, the defendants having no voice in the placing of the funds or with their repayment. At the time the bank closed it had $11,500 so placed; $3,000 with the Bank of Omega, $2,000 with the Bank of Palmetto, Georgia; $1,000 with the Bank of Pineview, Pineview, Ga.; $3,000 with the Farmers State Bank, Temple, Ga.; $1,500 with the Georgia State Bank, Mansfield, Ga.; and $1,000 with the Georgia State Bank, Bronwood. All of the above banks have closed and very small dividends will be paid to their creditors. The Bank of Cusseta will sustain a loss of approximately $9,000 on account of these loans which the directors negligently allowed the Bankers Trust Company to make on account of said bank.”
(18) “Said defendants negligently and wrongfully advertised
The first thirteen grounds of the defendants’ demurrer may be conveniently treated together. The substance of each of them follows by paragraph: (1) The petition is insufficient in law. (2) There is no right in the plaintiff to maintain the action. (3) No breach of duty by the defendants as directors is plainly, fully, and distinctly set forth. (4) The alleged acts of omission and commission of the defendants as directors are not shown to be the proximate cause of any actual loss to the depositors of the bank. (5) The petition is prematurely brought, in that the alleged acts of the defendants are not shown to be the proximate cause of any actual loss or damage sustained by the depositors of the bank. (6) The actual loss to the depositors at the time of the filing of said petition is vague, indefinite, uncertain, and unascertained. (7) The liquidation of the bank has not proceeded far enough to determine the actual loss to the depositors. (8) The amounts which will be realized for the depositors of said bank from its assets, other than the claims of the plaintiff against the defendants, are uncertain, vague, and indefinite. (9) The petition is duplicitous beeause.it seeks to embrace in one count an action for a breach of the defendants’ statutory duties as directors under the banking act approved August 16, 1919, and an action for a breach of the defendants’ common-law duties as directors. (10) The petition is duplicitous because the plaintiff seeks to embrace in the same count in the same action the liabilities of all the defendants as directors, and the liabilities of C. C. Minter as president, O. C. Stephens as vice-president, and W. A. Gaylor as cashier. (11) The petition is duplicitous, vague, indefinite, and uncertain in that the plaintiff seeks to maintain an action against all of the defendants as a board of directors, and against certain of the defendants for their alleged acts as president, vice-president, and cashier. (12) The petition
The petition abundantly sets out a cause of action, and if there had been any doubt as to this, such doubt would be completely dispelled by the ruling of the Supreme Court in the very similar case of Shannon v. Mobley, 166 Ga. 430 (143 S. E. 582). The petition is not duplicitous, and is not subject to any of the foregoing objections. Neither is paragraph 4 of the petition duplicitous, as alleged in paragraph 14 of the demurrer, because it embraces complaints against the defendants as directors and against some of them as officers of the bank.
The numerous attacks made on paragraph 4 of the petition, in paragraphs 15, 16, 17, and 18 of the demurrer, may be summarized as contending that the duties of the directors are overstated, and the diligence required of them made to exceed that which the law demands. “The general rule in’ this State is that directors of a bank must exercise ordinary care and diligence in the administration of its affairs.” Woodward v. Stewart, 149 Ga. 620 (101 S. E. 749). The duties of bank directors are discussed at length in the case cited. In the case of Shannon v. Mobley, supra, Justice Gilbert, speaking for the court, says: “If the qualities of integrity, diligence and loyalty are required in any institution more than in others, it would seem to be in banking institutions.” Under the authorities cited, paragraph 4 of the petition is not objectionable for any reason assigned in the demurrer.
Bearing in mind the nature of the case, the number of transactions involved, the patent fact that the entire action can not be set out in one or even a few paragraphs, paragraph 5 of the petition is not subject to any of the objections raised by paragraph 19 of the demurrer, these objections being mainly that the allegations of paragraph 5 are too general, and are opinions without sustaining facts.
Grounds 22, 23, 24, 25, 26, and 27 of the demurrer to paragraphs 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, and 12, respectively, of the petition, for the most part attack these paragraphs of the petition for the alleged reason that they are vague, indefinite, and uncertain, are conclusions, and do not allege requisite facts. Considering these paragraphs in the light of the nature of the action and of the allegations in other paragraphs of the petition, these grounds of the demurrer are not good.
The demurrer raises approximately one hundred and fifty objections to the various subsections of paragraph 13 of the petition. Most of these objections may be summed up as follows: (1) There is not any statement as to when the particular loan was made, nor as to the value of the loan when it was made. (2) No allegation as to when the maker of the paper, or the security thereon, became insolvent. (3) No allegation of facts that would put the defendants upon notice that either the maker of the paper or the surety thereon was insolvent at the time the loan was made, or that the stocks or other security was worthless at such time, or at any time when the loan was renewed. (4) No statement as to when receiver was appointed, if one was appointed. No allegation of fact as to whether final dividend has been paid by insolvent maker or insolvent security, or as to when dividend alleged to have been paid was paid. (5) The particular claim is barred by the statute of limitations. (6) No allegation of actual loss to Bank of Cusseta. (7) The description and amount of stock securing the particular claim is not stated. (8) No statement as to what has been, or will be, realized from the security. (9) The allegation of loss
In order to avoid repetition, we now state that any transaction referred to in paragraph 13, or elsewhere in the petition, which does not affirmatively appear to be within the statute of limitations, is subject to demurrer, and will be stricken unless amendment curing such defect is made before the remittitur of this court is made the judgment of the trial court. If the original loan, or any renewal thereof, was made within four years from the time suit was filed, the particular claim is not barred by the. statute. See Shannon v. Mobley, supra.
Subsection (a) of paragraph 13 of the petition should be amended so as to meet the 28th ground of the demurrer, to the effect that the claim is not shown to be within the statute of limitations. Otherwise this subsection is not subject to the demurrer. Subsection (b) is not subject to any ground of the demurrer. The loan referred to in subsection (c) was placed in the bank December 1, 1920, and was renewed sixteen times. It appeal's that the petition in this case was filed in office August 3, 1927. Therefore it appears that the claim is barred by the statute of limitations, and the demurrer is sustained in this regard, with the right in the plaintiff in error, however, to meet the objection by proper amendment before the remittitur of this court is made to the judgment of the trial court. The other grounds of the demurrer as to this subsection are not meritorious, and the judgment sustaining them is reversed. The loan referred to in subsection (d) is subject to the ground of the demurrer that it does not come within the statute of limitations. This item may be saved by appropriate and timely amendment. In other respects the court erred in sustaining the demurrer. The loan referred to in subsection (e) is not subject to the demurrer for any reason assigned. The demurrer as to subsection (/), in so far as it attacks the loan as not coming within the statute of limitations, is sustained, with the right to make timely and appropriate amendment. The court erred in sustaining the demurrer as to this subsection in other respects.
What was ruled in regard to subsection (/) in the next preceding paragraph applies to subsection (g). Subsection(h) is not subject to the demurrer, and the judgment holding that it was is overruled. The demurrer as to subsection (i), for the reason
In view of the fact that the borrower is in the hands of a receiver and its property is of uncertain value, the allegation of “a loss of at least 50 % of the amount of the note ” is a conclusion not supported by facts; and the demurrer in this regard to subsection (to) is good. Timely and appropriate amendment may be made; and if this is not done the item is stricken. In other respects the judgment sustaining the demurrer is reversed. Subsection (n) does not bring the claim within the statute of limitations, and in this regard the demurrer is sustained, with the right to make timely and appropriate amendment. In other respects the demurrer as to this subsection is not good. Subsection (o) is subject to the demurrer in that no facts are pleaded to show what the loss is, or what it is likely to be. In this regard the demurrer is sustained, with the right to make timely and proper amendment. In other respects the judgment sustaining the demurrer as to this subsection is reversed. Subsection (p) was not subject to the demurrer, and the judgment sustaining the demurrer as to this subsection is error. Subsection (q) is defective in these respects: The amount of the loan is not averred; the claim is not shown
Paragraph 46 of the demurrer, that “the allegations in paragraph 13, and in all the subparagraphs thereof, are vague, indefinite, and uncertain, and are insfficient in law to show that the defendants have not diligently and honestly administered the affairs of the Bank of Cusseta,” is answered by the rulings above made as to the subsections of paragraph 13 of the petition. As stated, this ground of the demurrer is not good. Paragraphs 14, 15, and 16 of the petition are not subject to the demurrer. Paragraph 17 of the petition is subject to ground 50 of the demurrer, in that it fails to allege facts sufficient to show that the borrowers were not proper risks or that the loans referred to were negligently made, or to indicate when said loans were made. In other respects the demurrer was not good as to this paragraph and the judgment sustaining it was error. Paragraphs 18, 19, 20, and 21 are good as against the demurrer, and the same is true of paragraph 22 of the petition.
In the 55th and last ground of the demurrer it is urged that paragraphs 6 and 7 of the petition are insufficient in law, (a) because under section 2817 of the Civil Code (1910) Bankers Trust Company was empowered to act as the fiscal agent of the Bank of Cusseta; and (b) because under article 17 of the Banking Law of 1919, the Bank of Cusseta was authorized to appoint such agents as the business of the bank might require, prescribe their duties, and fix their compensation. This ground of the demurrer is not good.
The court erred in sustaining the general and certain of the special grounds of the demurrer. Whereupon it is ordered that
Judgment reversed, with direction.