Court Opinion

ID: 8075024
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-09-09 12:00:18.344689+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:38:16.143499
License: Public Domain

McEAUGHEIN, J.
We have carefully examined this record, and are entirely satisfied with the ruling made by the learned trial justice in dismissing the complaint. The plaintiffs failed to prove the allegations of their complaint, or to offer any evidence which would have justified a finding that the defendant bank or any of its officers, including Townsend, had any connection with the plaintiffs or were responsible in any way for the loan which they made to Schroeter on the Virginia bonds, or that any representations were made, either by any of the officers of the bank or Townsend as to the validity of the bonds put up as collateral security for the payment of the loan. Indeed, there was no evidence that Schroeter ever made any representation to the plaintiffs upon which they relied in making the loan. The negotiations for the loan were not made by Schroeter, but by one Loeb, a broker, and the $16,000 in bonds which, was put up at the time the agreement for the loan was consummated was never in the possession of the bank and was obtained by Schroeter from a safe deposit box. The plaintiffs satisfied themselves as to the validity of the bonds and their valué from information derived, not from the defendant bank or any of its officers, but from others. When these bonds were put up, $10,000 was paid on account of the loan; the same being made out in two checks, of $5,000 each, one of which was made payable to the defendant bank. There was no evidence that, when this check was delivered to the bank, it or any of its officers knew it was a part of a loan made by the plaintiffs to Schroeter, or that he had deposited with them any bonds for the security of a loan. Nor was there any evidence to justify a finding that when the $45,000 in bonds was delivered to Schroeter it was for the purpose of having him borrow money oh them. On the contrary, the evidence shows that there was no understanding, or even a suggestion, made by any one connected with the bank as to what 'Schroeter might, could, or should subsequently do with the bonds, •or any of them. In short, plaintiffs failed to establish any facts upon which liability on the part of the bank or Townsend could be legally predicated. The motion to dismiss the complaint, therefore, was properly granted.
The judgment and order appealed from must be affirmed, with costs. All concur.