Although plaintiff's petition does not refer in terms to a
federal statute which determines defendant's liability, if it
appears that the case made is essentially one governed by that
statute, the action inherently involves the federal question of
liability under the statute.
Even though the defendant in such a case may have averred in his
answer that his liability, if any, must be determined under that
statute, that assertion is simply a contention as to essential
elements of the plaintiff's claim, and where the state court has
denied liability under the federal statute this Court has
jurisdiction to review the judgment of the state court under §
237 Jud.Code.
Under the local practice in Nebraska, where trial by jury is
waived in an action at law, the findings made by the trial court
have the same force and effect as the verdict of a jury, and the
hearing in the Supreme Court is not a trial
de novo, and
where the judgment of that court, reversing a judgment of the trial
court in favor of the plaintiff, is upon the ground that the
plaintiff's case is legally insufficient under the federal statute,
the questions in this Court are whether the findings of the trial
court were supported by substantial evidence and justified recovery
under the federal statute.
The trial court, having found that defendants had knowingly made
false statements as to the condition of a national bank of which
they were directors, and that plaintiffs were entitled to recover
from defendants their losses by reason of their reliance thereon,
this Court reverses the supreme court of the state and affirms the
judgment
Page 240 U. S. 542
of the trial court, and
held that plaintiffs, as
creditors of a national bank, may recover from those directors who
knowingly made statements required by the National Bank Act that
were false or who knowingly permitted, assented to, and allowed the
same to be made and published, and also held that, in this case,
the findings of the trial court as to the condition of the bank and
the knowledge by the defendant directors of the falsity of the
statements made and published under the federal statute, and the
reliance thereon by the plaintiffs, were supported by substantial
evidence.
93 Neb. 121 reversed.
The facts, which involve the right of creditors of a national
bank to recover their loss from the directors of the bank, are
stated in the opinion.
Page 240 U. S. 543
MR. JUSTICE HUGHES delivered the opinion of the Court.
The Capital National Bank of Lincoln, Nebraska, suspended
payment on January 21, 1893. The plaintiffs in error were unpaid
depositors, and brought these actions against directors of the bank
to recover damages attributed to false representations of the
bank's condition. With their denials of breach of duty, the
defendants averred that their liability, if any, was to be
determined
Page 240 U. S. 544
by the provisions of the National Bank Act. Judgment in favor of
the plaintiffs, upon the verdict of a jury, was affirmed by the
supreme court of the state.
Yates v. Jones National Bank,
74 Neb. 734. It was held that the actions were for deceit at common
law, and the judgments were sustained upon that ground. Upon writ
of error, the judgments were reversed.
206 U. S. 206 U.S.
158,
206 U. S. 181. It
was the view of the court, even if it were conceded
"that there was some evidence tending to show the making of
alleged written representations other than those contained in the
official reports made by the association to the Comptroller of the
Currency, and published in conformity to the National Bank Act,
that such latter statements were counted upon in the amended
petition and were, if not exclusively, certainly principally, the
grounds of the alleged false representations covered by the
proof."
Id., p.
206 U. S. 171.
It was therefore concluded that the recovery had been based upon
conduct of the defendants in the discharge of duties imposed by the
federal statute; that, with respect to such conduct, the statute
(Rev.Stat. § 5239) furnished an exclusive test of liability,
and that this test had not been applied. It was held that
responsibility, by the terms of the statute, arose from its
violation "knowingly," and hence that "something more than
negligence is required -- that is, that the violation must in
effect be intentional."
Id., pp.
206 U. S.
179-180.
Upon remand, the petitions were amended, but there was no
material change in the nature of the causes of action. By
agreement, the several cases were tried together, and trial was had
by the court without a jury. Official reports, as published, of the
condition of the bank, were introduced in evidence. Two of these
(of December 28, 1886, and December 9, 1892) had been annexed to
the petition, and the allegations were broad enough to embrace
others. It appeared that the official reports of December 28, 1886,
December 12, 1888, September 30,
Page 240 U. S. 545
1889, July 9, 1891, December 2, 1891, and December 9, 1892, had
been attested by the defendant Yates; those of September 25, 1891,
and September 30, 1892, by Ellis P. Hamer, the intestate of the
defendant, Louisa Hamer, and those of December 28, 1886, August 1,
1887, October 2, 1890, December 19, 1890, and July 9, 1891, by the
defendant, David E. Thompson. Each of these statements showed the
capital stock intact and also surplus and undivided profits.
On behalf of the defendants Yates and Hamer, the following
special findings among others were requested:
"III. That neither the defendant Charles E. Yates nor Ellis P.
Hamer, the deceased, knowingly violated or knowingly permitted any
of the officers, agents, or servants of the Capital National Bank
to violate any of the provisions of the national banking act under
which said bank operated."
"IV. That neither the defendant Charles E. Yates nor the
deceased, Ellis P. Hamer, knowingly participated in or assented to
any violation of any of the provisions of said national banking act
by any of the officers, agents, or servants of said Capital
National Bank."
"IX. That the defendant Charles E. Yates, in attesting said
reports of date December 28, 1886, and December 9, 1892, did not,
with actual knowledge thereof or intentionally, make an untrue
statement or representation of the assets or liabilities of said
Capital National Bank, nor of any of the items of either its assets
or liabilities."
"X. That neither the defendant Charles E. Yates nor the deceased
Ellis P. Hamer, with actual knowledge or intentionally, made any
untrue statement or representation of any or all of the assets of
the Capital National Bank in any or all of the statements or
reports made to the Comptroller of the Currency and published by
said bank, as required by the national banking act, which reports
are shown in the testimony in this case. "
Page 240 U. S. 546
The trial court found "against each of the defendants and in
favor of the plaintiff" respecting the third and fourth requests.
On the ninth request, the court answered "in the negative" as to
the report of December 28, 1886, and "in the affirmative" as to the
report of December 9, 1892, and on the tenth request, the court
found "in the affirmative." These rulings "in the affirmative" were
taken to be findings against these defendants, each of whom at once
(on a motion to set aside the findings and for a new trial) filed
exceptions -- the defendant Yates stating that the court "erred in
finding against defendant on the ninth request as to report Dec. 9,
1892," and each of the defendants Yates and Hamer stating that the
court "erred in finding against defendant on the tenth
request."
Among the requests for findings submitted by the defendant
Thompson were the following:
"4. Whether this defendant, at any time prior to its failure or
suspension, had actual personal knowledge that any of the official
statements made by the Capital National Bank to the Comptroller of
the Currency, and referred to in the petition or the evidence, were
in any material respect false and untrue."
"5. Whether this defendant in fact participated in any of the
official reports made by the Capital National Bank to the
Comptroller of the Currency other than the five several reports
dated respectively, December 28, 1886, August 1, 1887, October 2,
1890, and December 19, 1890, and July 9, 1891."
"6. Whether, in attesting such of the official reports of the
Capital National Bank to the Comptroller of the Currency as are
shown to have been attested by him, the defendant acted in good
faith."
"7. Whether, in attesting such of the official reports of the
Capital National Bank to the Comptroller of the Currency as are
shown to have been attested by him, the defendant acted
fraudulently and with actual personal
Page 240 U. S. 547
knowledge that such reports or any one of them were in any
material respect false and untrue."
As to the fourth request, the trial court found "in the
affirmative," and the defendant Thompson filed his objection that
the finding was "not sustained by sufficient evidence" and was "not
consistent with the findings made in response to the sixth and
seventh requests." As to the fifth request, the trial court found
"that the defendant attested only five reports mentioned in said
request." As to the sixth and seventh requests, it was found:
"Respecting the sixth and seventh requests of the defendant, the
court finds that the defendant had no actual personal knowledge of
the truth or falsity of the reports made to the Comptroller,
attested by him, but, in attesting such reports, the court finds
that the defendant relied upon the statements made to him by the
president and cashier of the bank, and without any investigation,
and that, at the time of attesting such statements, the defendant
knew that he had no personal knowledge of the truth or falsity of
such reports, and that the same were attested recklessly and
without performing his duties as a director to ascertain the truth
or falsity of such reports before the same were attested by him,
and in this respect the court finds that the same were not made in
good faith."
The trial court, upon its own motion, found in each case, as to
all the defendants, as follows:
"The Capital National Bank at the time it assumed that name and
at the time it increased its capital stock to $300,000, had
sustained losses greatly in excess of its purported capital stock,
and that it never, in fact had any capital stock, undivided
profits, or surplus, and that it was at all times insolvent and so
continued up to the time it ceased to do business, on January 21,
1893, at which time its liabilities exceeded its assets by more
than a million dollars. "
Page 240 U. S. 548
The court finds that from and after September, 1891, the said
Ellis P. Hamer, and the defendants Yates and Thompson, and each of
them, had knowledge and knew that the statements, advertisements,
and representations of the bank's financial condition and capital
stock, both official and unofficial and voluntary, shown by the
evidence, were being published in the newspapers and sent to the
plaintiff, by the officers of the bank, as alleged in the amended
petition, and that they contained the names of all the directors,
including said Ellis P. Hamer, and the defendants Yates and
Thompson, and purported to be made and published under and by their
authority, in their names, and with their sanction and consent.
"The court further finds that the said Ellis P. Hamer and the
defendants Yates and Thompson, and each of them, from and after
September, 1891, had knowledge and knew said statements,
representations, and advertisements aforesaid contained material
false representations of the financial condition of said bank, and
were in fact false and untrue, as in plaintiff's amended petition
alleged, and with knowledge of all of the matters and facts
aforesaid they and each of them knowingly permitted, assented to,
and allowed the same to be made, published, advertised, and sent to
plaintiff, as aforesaid, as in the amended petition alleged. That
said statements and advertisements aforesaid showed and represented
the bank to be in a sound, solvent, and prosperous financial
condition when in fact it was at all times wholly insolvent and
unable to pay its liabilities."
It was further found "that the allegations of plaintiff's
amended petition are true." The trial court, as to each of the
defendants, also set forth its conclusion that the plaintiffs were
entitled to recover "in an action of deceit under the principles of
the common law exclusive of the requirements of the national
banking act," and fixed the damages sustained. Motion for a new
trial was denied.
Page 240 U. S. 549
Upon appeal, the judgments in the several cases were reversed by
the supreme court of the state, and the actions were dismissed. 93
Neb. 121. The appeals were heard by six judges, two of whom
dissented from the conclusion reached. Three judges concurred in
one opinion (delivered by Hamer, J.), taking the view that the
amended petitions contained "no material additional statement of
facts," that they
"still charge the defendants with making false statements to the
Comptroller of the Currency as to the condition of the Capital
National Bank, and this is the main foundation or basis for
recovery,"
and that the plaintiffs,
"having failed to allege and prove that the defendants
personally knew of, or personally participated in, the acts of the
officers of the bank of which they now complain,"
were not entitled to recover under the decision of this Court as
to the rule of liability established by the federal act.
Id., pp. 123, 130. The remaining judge (Letton, J.), whose
concurrence was essential to the reversal, stated his views in a
separate opinion. After pointing out that the issues were the same
as when the case was presented to this Court on the former writ of
error, and that this Court had held that a federal question was
involved, he said:
"I agree with the former judgment of this court and that of the
several inferior federal tribunals before which the question was
presented that the petitions state a cause of action at common law
for deceit, but think this court is bound by the opinion of the
Supreme Court of the United States. I am also inclined to the view
that the evidence would support a judgment upon such a theory of
the case. The findings of the district court are to that effect. I
am not satisfied they are unsustained by the evidence. The
presumption is that they are so sustained, but I have not examined
the evidence so critically as would be necessary to determine this,
for the reason that, under the holding of the Supreme Court of the
United States as to the measure
Page 240 U. S. 550
of duty and of liability of directors under the banking laws of
the United States, I think a case has not been made. For that
reason alone, I concur in the conclusion."
Id., p. 131.
The appellees moved for a rehearing, contending, in part, that
the court had erred in denying to them "the right to recover under
the national bank laws." On this motion, the court was equally
divided, and the motion was denied. And these writs of error to
review the judgments of reversal and dismissal have been
prosecuted.
1. It is insisted that the writs should be dismissed in the view
that the plaintiffs in error sought to enforce liability upon
nonfederal grounds and that the federal question was raised
exclusively by the defendants in error. But this objection ignores
the nature of the plaintiffs' case. The fact that their petitions
did not refer, in terms, to the federal statute is not controlling.
Thomas v. Taylor, 224 U. S. 73,
224 U. S. 78-79;
Grand Trunk Ry. v. Lindsay, 233 U. S.
42,
233 U. S. 48. It
was alleged that statements published by the defendants, acting as
directors and officers of the bank, with respect to its financial
condition, were false, and were known to be false, and were made
with intent to deceive plaintiffs and others. Two of these
statements -- official reports formally attested -- were, as we
have said, annexed to the petitions. The proof of representations
chiefly concerned these reports and others of a similar sort. In
contemplation of law, the question upon the case made by the
plaintiffs was essentially one as to the liability of these
directors for conduct governed by the federal act. The conclusion
of the trial court that there could be a recovery at common law,
independent of the federal statute, did not alter the inherent
character of the actions. Recognizing that these must be deemed to
rest upon transactions falling within the purview of that statute,
and that the plaintiffs' rights must be measured accordingly, the
supreme court of the state reversed the judgments
Page 240 U. S. 551
and dismissed the actions. Although the defendants alleged in
their answers that, if any liability attached to them as directors,
it was determined by the federal act, the construction of which was
necessarily involved, this was not, properly speaking, a matter of
affirmative defense. What is called the defendants' assertion of
federal right was simply their contention as to the essential
elements of the plaintiffs' cause of action. In
Thomas v.
Taylor, supra, the case was framed in deceit under the common
law, but the appellate courts of the state decided "that it was the
facts pleaded, and not the technical designation of the action,
which constituted grounds of recovery." We accepted that decision,
saying:
"There is nothing in the national banking laws which precludes
such view. Those laws are not concerned with the form of pleadings.
They only require that the rule of responsibility declared by them
shall be satisfied."
If the plaintiffs' cause of action required the application of
the federal statute in defining the liability of these directors
with respect to the acts alleged and proved, the plaintiffs were
entitled to its correct application. Their case, as made by their
pleadings and proofs, is not to be treated as of one character for
the purpose of dismissing it in the state court, and as of another
sort for the purpose of denying their right to complain of the
dismissal. We conclude that this Court has jurisdiction.
2. It is apparent that there were no findings of fact by the
supreme court of the state. The actions being at law and trial by
jury being waived, the findings of fact made by the trial court --
as we understand the local practice -- had "the same force and
effect" as the verdict of a jury.
Citizens Ins. Co. v.
Herpolsheimer, 77 Neb. 232;
Dorsey v. Wellman, 85
Neb. 262;
Darr v. Kansas City Hay Co., 85 Neb. 665;
Madison Bank v. Gross, 98 Neb. 684. It was not a case of a
trial
de novo upon appeal, as in an equity suit.
First
National Bank v. Crawford,
Page 240 U. S. 552
78 Neb. 665. But, apart from these considerations, findings of
fact by the supreme court would necessarily require the action of a
majority of that court, and it is plain that the opinion of the
three judges, unaided by the concurrence of the fourth, could not
be regarded as embodying such findings. Justice Letton, whose
concurrence in the result made the reversal possible, stated
specifically the sole ground of his action, and his statement did
not purport to be the resolving of questions of fact. After saying
that he was inclined to the view that the evidence would support a
judgment upon a cause of action at common law for deceit, and that
"the findings of the district court" were "to that effect," he
added that he was not satisfied that these findings were
"unsustained by the evidence." He considered the presumption to be
that they were "so sustained," but he had "not examined the
evidence so critically as would be necessary to determine this,"
for the reason that, in view of the holding of this Court "as to
the measure of duty and of liability of directors" under the
federal act, he thought that "a case had not been made." "For that
reason alone" he concurred in the conclusion.
It is manifest that this was simply the expression of an opinion
with respect to the legal sufficiency of the plaintiffs' case. That
is, the decisive ruling -- upon which the reversal rested -- was
that, as matter of law, applying the federal statute, the
plaintiffs were not entitled to their recovery. And the judgment as
entered upon appeal simply set forth that the court, finding "error
apparent in the record of the proceedings and judgment," reversed
and dismissed.
In this state of the record, for the purpose of determining
whether, in thus reversing the judgments and depriving the
plaintiffs of their recovery, the federal question was wrongly
decided, there are two questions to be considered: (a) whether the
facts found by the trial court
Page 240 U. S. 553
justified a recovery under the federal law, and, if so, (b)
whether there was substantial evidence to support these findings,
as the duty to decide the federal question, in its very nature,
involves this further inquiry.
Dower v. Richards,
151 U. S. 658,
151 U. S. 667;
Stanley v. Schwalby, 162 U. S. 255,
162 U. S.
277-278;
Kansas City Southern Ry. Co. v. Albers
Commission Co., 223 U. S. 573,
223 U. S.
591-592;
Creswill v. Knights of Pythias,
225 U. S. 246,
225 U. S. 261;
Southern Pacific Co. v. Schuyler, 227 U.
S. 601,
227 U. S. 611;
North Carolina R. Co. v. Zachary, 232 U.
S. 248,
232 U. S. 259;
Carlson v. Washington, 234 U. S. 103,
234 U. S.
106.
3. In addition to the general finding in each case that the
allegations of plaintiffs' amended petition were true, we have
noted that the court found specially that the bank had sustained
losses greatly in excess of its purported capital stock; that it
never "had any capital stock, undivided profits or surplus;" that
it "was at all times insolvent, and so continued up to the time it
ceased to do business on January 21, 1893," when "its liabilities
exceeded its assets by more than a million dollars;" and that the
published statements shown by the evidence, embracing the official
reports to which reference has been made, represented the bank to
be "in a sound, solvent, and prosperous financial condition" when
in fact it was "wholly insolvent and unable to pay its
liabilities." The official reports covered by the findings were
those made to the Comptroller of the Currency and published at the
times we have mentioned, in pursuance of Rev.Stat. § 5211.
*
Page 240 U. S. 554
While, as pointed out on the former writ of error, the act did
not expressly require that these reports "should contain a true
statement of the condition of the association," yet,
"by necessary implication, such is the character of the
statement required to be made, and by the like implication the
making and publishing of a false report is prohibited."
206 U.S. p.
206 U. S. 177.
And as it is plain that the making of these official reports, found
to be false, was a violation of the statute, the question is
whether the findings made a case within § 5239 of the Revised
Statutes, which provides that, where the statute is "knowingly"
violated or is "knowingly" permitted to be violated, as stated,
"every director who participated in or assented to" such violation
shall be liable individually for all damages thereby sustained by
"the association, its shareholders, or any other person," -- a
civil liability which may be enforced in the state court.
Id., pp.
206 U. S.
180-181.
As to the directors Yates and Hamer (the former having attested
an official report to the Comptroller of the Currency as late as
December 9, 1892, and the latter having attested an official report
of September 30, 1892), the trial court not only found "against
each of the defendants and in favor of the plaintiff" upon the
special requests for findings that these directors did not
knowingly participate in the violation of the act, but the trial
court also found explicitly that each of these directors, "from
Page 240 U. S. 555
and after September, 1891," knew that the official statements as
to the bank's financial condition, which were shown by the evidence
to have been published, "contained material false representations
of the financial condition of said bank, and were in fact false and
untrue," and that these directors, with knowledge "of all the
matters and facts aforesaid," had "knowingly permitted, assented
to, and allowed the same" to be made and published. The findings as
to each of these directors abundantly supported the plaintiffs'
recovery within the established rule of liability.
With respect to the defendant Thompson (the latest official
report attested by him being the one of July 9, 1891), we have seen
that the court found that he had "no actual personal knowledge of
the truth or falsity" of the reports which he attested, but that,
in attesting them, he "relied upon the statements made to him by
the president and cashier" of the bank "without any investigation,"
and that, "at the time of attesting such statements," he "knew that
he had no personal knowledge" of their truth or falsity, and that
they "were attested recklessly and without performing his duties as
a director" to ascertain their truth or falsity before attestation,
and in this respect that these reports "were not made in good
faith." If this finding, fairly construed, did not import more than
mere neglect or inattention, it would not be sufficient to sustain
a recovery, for Congress did not make negligence the test of
liability, but the fact that the act was violated knowingly,
although there may be a violation "in effect intentional," and
therefore within the statute, "when one deliberately refuses to
examine that which it is his duty to examine."
Thomas v.
Taylor, 224 U. S. 73,
224 U. S. 78-79.
In that case, the directors, having been warned by the bank
examiner and Comptroller of the doubtful character of certain
assets, still represented them to be good, and their reckless
report, in disregard of the official direction, was found to have
the
Page 240 U. S. 556
quality of an intentional breach of the defined duty. But, in
the present case, we are not called upon to determine what should
be deemed to be involved in the finding that the attestation of the
earlier reports, which were attested by this defendant, was made
"without nay investigation" and "recklessly." For there were later
reports made on behalf of the bank, and the defendant is not
excused simply by the fact that he did not attest them. His
liability was not merely with respect to attestation, but for
knowingly "participating in" or "assenting to" the violation of the
act. 206 U.S. pp.
206 U. S.
177-179. If the defendant Thompson participated in or
assented to the making and publication of the official reports to
the Comptroller of the Currency, which were made in the year 1892,
knowing that they were false reports, he was liable to the
plaintiffs deceived and damaged thereby under the express terms of
the statute, and he could not escape this liability simply because,
while he thus participated or assented, other directors gave the
formal attestation. And the trial court found, not only with
respect to Yates and Hamer, but as to the defendant Thompson, that
each of them after September, 1891, knew that the official
statements as to the condition of the bank, shown by the evidence,
were in fact false, and that with knowledge of the facts stated in
the findings with respect to the condition of the bank, the
defendant Thompson, as well as the others, "knowingly permitted,
assented to, and allowed" the same to be made and published. This
was a sufficient finding of the ultimate fact of participation or
assent, and constituted an adequate basis for recovery.
We conclude that the findings of the trial court, in the light
of the federal statute, supported the judgments it entered.
4. The plaintiffs in error, however, are not entitled to
complain of the reversal as a denial of federal right, even though
the judgments were supported by the findings of
Page 240 U. S. 557
fact made by the trial court, if these findings themselves were
not supported by substantial evidence.
As to the financial condition of the bank, there is no room for
controversy. It would be difficult to conceive of a case of more
scandalous maladministration than that which the testimony
portrays. There was evidence of manipulation of accounts, of
fictitious and falsified entries, of fraudulent concealments. It
cannot be said that there was serious effort to meet this evidence.
There was no attempt to palliate the offenses which it appeared had
been committed by the executive officers in the conduct of the
bank's affairs. But these directors were not accountants;
presumably they relied upon the books as containing accurate items,
and there is no basis for the conclusion that they had knowledge of
fictitious or falsified entries in the books, or of the fraudulent
transactions which such entries were intended to conceal, and which
were revealed after the bank failed. With respect to such concealed
transactions, we find nothing to show that the directors knowingly
participated in, or assented to, a violation of the statute.
We pass, therefore, to matters of a different sort which lay
easily within the ken of the directors. The bank had been
incorporated as the Marsh National Bank in the year 1883, with a
capital stock of $100,000. The assets and liabilities of a
preceding concern, Marsh Brothers, Mosher, & Company, were
transferred to the bank and became its assets and liabilities. In
1884, the name was changed to the Capital National Bank of Lincoln;
the capital stock was then increased to $200,000, and in 1886 there
was a further increase, making the total capital stock $300,000.
Yates, Hamer, and Thompson became directors in 1884, and continued
as such until the failure of the bank in January, 1893. There were
seven directors in all, including C. W. Mosher, the president. It
appears that, at the time of the failure, the bank's assets at
their face
Page 240 U. S. 558
value, as shown by the books, were about $1,031,000. The
liabilities, as shown by the books, including capital stock,
amounted to about $1,017,000; these seem to have been in face
(including liabilities on rediscounts) about $1,760,000. Included
in the assets above stated, the amount of $850,959.86 (in face
value) was in bills receivable of which $155,560.84 were classed by
the receiver as doubtful and $397,073.63 as worthless. The actual
showing on liquidation appears to have been even worse; the total
amount realized from the bills receivable (aggregating $850,959.86)
was $229,520.82, and the total amount realized from all the assets
of the bank (including rediscounted items placed in the hands of
the receiver for collection, and excluding stock assessments) seems
to have been less than $400,000.
The evidence was that, at the time of the failure, there were on
hand worthless notes of C. W. Mosher, the president, amounting to
$85,281.67; of the cashier, R. C. Outcalt, $54,166.96 (less an
offset of $570.99), and of the Western Manufacturing Company
(signed by E. Hurlburt, Jr., manager), $235,000. This concern was
apparently but another name for C. W. Mosher; the testimony is that
it had no assets, and ceased to do an active business in 1889.
There were also notes in the name of E. W. Mosher aggregating
$107,085.45, which it was testified were worthless, save for a
collection on collateral of less than $10,000. According to the
schedules in evidence, these worthless notes had been taken since
June 1, 1892 -- that is, within a period of seven months before the
failure. And while the totals of these accounts, respectively, were
much larger than they had been formerly, the same accounts
embracing loans to a considerable amount had long been carried and
were included in the published reports. There was evidence that
there had been about $200,000 of worthless notes in these accounts
in January, 1892. While it is not necessary for the present purpose
to
Page 240 U. S. 559
go further back, the testimony supports the finding of the trial
court that the bank in fact not only had no surplus or undivided
profits, but that its actual condition was one of insolvency.
In the fourteen months before the failure, the evidence shows
three of the official reports made to the Comptroller of the
Currency and published in the newspapers in Lincoln; those of
December 2, 1891, September 30, 1892, and December 9, 1892. The
total resources in these reports are stated, respectively, as
$1,143,946.88, $1,033,561.11, and $1,074,867.37. Each of these
reports shows the capital stock unimpaired. As of December 2, 1891,
the surplus is stated to be $32,000, and the undivided profits,
$23,276.89; as of September 30, 1892, these items are $6,000 and
$11,978, respectively, and as of December 9, 1892, $6,000 and
$21,180.75. In January, 1892, the directors declared a dividend of
five percent, and in July, 1892, a further dividend of four
percent. There was evidence of serious discrepancies between the
items in the published official reports and corresponding items as
shown by the books. Without attempting to state the details
disclosed by the voluminous record, it is sufficient to say that it
was clearly shown by evidence substantially undisputed that these
reports constituted grossly false representations of the bank's
financial condition upon which the plaintiffs were invited to rely
and did rely.
There was also substantial basis for the finding that the
directors assented to the making and publication of these reports,
for, as we have said, whether this or that director attested a
particular report is not controlling upon the question of assent.
The official reports required by law are the reports of the bank,
and not simply of those signing and attesting. As the reports of
the bank, they are made under its authority, and presumably with
the assent of the board of directors. Taking the proved
circumstances into consideration, and particularly in the light of
the
Page 240 U. S. 560
activity of these directors, to which we shall presently refer,
it is hardly conceivable that they did not know of the
last-mentioned official reports which were made on behalf of the
bank and published in Lincoln. Certainly, the fact of such
knowledge on the part of each of them could properly be found.
There is no suggestion that they made the slightest objection to
the making or publication of these reports, and the evidence was
unquestionably sufficient to show their assent to this action on
behalf of the bank.
The remaining question is with respect to the evidence of the
knowledge of these directors of the falsity of these official
reports, or of such reckless disregard of the truth or falsity of
their contents as would show that the participation in, or assent
to, the violation of the statute, was "in effect intentional."
Under date of September 8, 1891, the Comptroller of the Currency
addressed a letter to President Mosher, referring to a report of an
examination of the bank, and criticizing various matters. It was
evidently in view of this communication that the trial court took
September, 1891, as the time after which the directors had
knowledge of facts showing the falsity of the reports. Without
reciting the letter in full, it is sufficient to note that the
Comptroller called attention to two loans (one being that of E. W.
Mosher) exceeding the statutory limit; of the fact that at the time
of the last report of the bank the overdrafts shown by the books
largely exceeded those stated in the report; to overdue paper, with
the statement that such of it as was good should be collected or
made active by renewal with satisfactory security; to the excess of
current expenses over undivided profits, and to the fact that the
bank had a large liability on account of rediscounted paper, said
to be caused by the falling off in deposits. It was suggested that
some of the loans should be called in as soon as practicable, and
the letter closed with the statement that,
Page 240 U. S. 561
according to the examiner's report, the board of directors had
held only two meetings during the past year, and that there was "no
record of their having examined or approved of the loans and
discounts." It was pointed out
"that the conduct of affairs of a national bank is by law
devolved upon the board of directors, and that regular and frequent
meetings are therefore very desirable."
The defendants insist that they were not apprised of this letter
until after the failure. There was evidence tending to show that it
was considered at a meeting of the board in September, 1891, but,
in addition to explicit denials, there was testimony to impeach the
credit of the witness so testifying. There was, however, another
letter from the Comptroller of the Currency under date of February
16, 1892, which admittedly was brought to the attention of the
directors. This letter, in substance, repeated several of the
criticisms which had been made in the earlier letter; it referred
to the desirability of collecting as soon as practicable loans that
had been carried for a number of years, and to the agreement of
Mosher and Outcalt to reduce their liabilities and to close "the
bulk of their outside interests," owing to which the business of
the bank had suffered; it again emphasized the duty of the
directors with respect to the conduct of the bank's affairs, and it
concluded with a request for a reply over the directors'
"individual signatures." The directors, including those whose
liability is now in question, accordingly signed a reply, under
date of February 19, 1892, which purported to furnish explanations
and promised improvement. It was stated that the bank had always
had a discount committee, and that a vacancy caused by the death of
a former member had been filled by the appointment of E. P. Hamer.
The last-mentioned director also wrote to the Comptroller on
February 23, 1892, to the effect that the manner of conducting the
bank had not been satisfactory to him, and, promising better
management,
Page 240 U. S. 562
he added:
"Your letter is a move in the right direction; it indicates that
we the directors should take a more positive position in the
management, which I, for one, shall do."
Apparently the Comptroller of the Currency was not satisfied.
For it appears that he wrote another letter under date of August
31, 1892, which, having been lost, was not introduced in evidence.
But the letter in reply, which the directors, including Yates,
Hamer, and Thompson signed individually (under date of September
19, 1892, as stated by defendants' counsel), is in evidence, and
its significance cannot be overlooked. Among other things, it
stated:
"The dividend of July 1st was all right; the expenses since then
have exceeded income by reason of having paid taxes & interest
on certificates of deposits to an unexpected amount during July.
The item of $8,000 losses referred to was an estimate of contingent
losses & not any particular loss already incurred, but referred
to some matters or process of liquidation, all items mentioned by
you shall receive prompt attention."
There was thus sufficient evidence from these directors
themselves that they were scrutinizing the affairs of the bank;
that, prior to the published official report of September 30, 1892,
which was followed by the published official report of December 9,
1892, these directors were examining the condition of the bank,
that they were considering the losses sustained, the expenses
incurred, and the basis of the dividend declared in July. These
were not casual statements, but deliberate assertions of activity
of supervision in response to official complaint. It was plainly
permissible, despite their disclaimers and denials, to attribute to
these directors the knowledge which men of ordinary intelligence
would readily have obtained with respect to the financial condition
of the bank in the course of the supervision which they
professed
Page 240 U. S. 563
to be actively exercising. Assuming that they were ignorant of
the frauds that had been committed and concealed by falsified
entries, there was warrant for the conclusion that they could not
have failed to acquire sufficient information to be aware that the
representations in the official reports of the latter part of the
year 1892 were materially false and calculated to deceive. The
questions of fact, so far as they arose upon a substantial conflict
in evidence, were for the trial court.
Citizens Ins. Co. v.
Herpolsheimer, 77 Neb. 232;
Madison National Bank v.
Gross, 98 Neb. 684. It is not necessary for us to review the
evidence in detail. It is sufficient to say that our examination of
it has convinced us that the findings of the trial court, at least
with respect to the last-mentioned reports, had substantial
support, and, in this view, we must conclude that the reversal of
the judgments, as entered in the trial court, upon the ground of
the legal insufficiency of the plaintiffs' case when tested by the
federal statute, was error.
The judgments of the supreme court of the state are reversed,
and the cases are remanded with instructions to reinstate the
judgments entered in the district court, which are affirmed.
Stanley v. Schwalby, 162 U. S. 255,
162 U. S.
279-283.
It is so ordered.
*
"Sec. 5211. Every association shall make to the Comptroller of
the Currency not less than five reports during each year, according
to the form which may be prescribed by him, verified by the oath or
affirmation of the president or cashier of such association, and
attested by the signature of at least three of the directors. Each
such report shall exhibit, in detail and under appropriate heads,
the resources and liabilities of the [associations] [association]
at the close of business on any past day by him specified, and
shall be transmitted to the Comptroller within five days after the
receipt of a request or requisition therefor from him, and in the
same form in which it is made to the Comptroller shall be published
in a newspaper published in the place where such association is
established, or if there is no newspaper in the place, then in the
one published nearest thereto in the same county at the expense of
the association, and such proof of publication shall be furnished
as may be required by the Comptroller. The Comptroller shall also
have power to call for special reports from any particular
association whenever in his judgment the same are necessary in
order to a full and complete knowledge of its condition."