89 Kan. 577 | Kan. | 1913
This action was brought by the appellant, the Abilene State Bank, to recover from the appellee, James Strachan, $1000, the amount of his additional liability as a stockholder of the appellant bank. The petition recites that Strachan became the owner of ten shares of the capital stock of the bank on May 14, 4901, of the par value of $1000, that the bank became insolvent on September 1,1910, and was placed in the hands of a receiver on November 22, 1910, that all the assets of the bank, including the double liability of stockholders, were insufficient to pay the liabilities of the bank, that Strachan-had repeatedly been requested to make payment of $1000, his additional liability as a stockholder, but that he had always refused. Strachan’s answer acknowledged that he had been a holder of the ten shares of stock, but he alleged that he had surrendered the shares to the bank in January, 1908, in part payment of a* debt of about $2500 which he owed the bank. No record of the transfer, however, was made on the books of the bank. From the testimony it appears that the certificate of stock had endorsed thereon an assignment to John A. Flack, who, it was shown, was the cashier of the bank, but had absconded just before it was discovered that the bank was insolvent. The testimony in behalf of appellee was that Strachan was indebted to the bank on a note for $2400 on which there was unpaid interest in the amount of $192, and that in payment of the note and interest Strachan turned over to the bank the stock at a valuation of $1350, also a mortgage on property of the value of $1050 and a check for $138.67, and that at- that time the certificate was delivered to the bank and the note surrendered to Strachan in the presence of Hallam, the president of the bank, and of Flack, its cashier. As to the financial condition of
It may well be doubted whether, in the absence of a statute granting the power, there is authority in a corporation to purchase its own capital stock. (Savings Bank v. Wulfekuhler, 19 Kan. 60; Bank v. Telephone Co., 88 Kan. 287, 128 Pac. 357; Note, 61 L. R. A. 621.)
. As to a banking corporation the statutory provision is:
“No bank shall ... be the purchaser or holder of any such shares unless such security or purchase shall be necessary to prevent loss upon a debt previously contracted in good faith; and stock so purchased or acquired shall, within six months from the time of its purchase, be sold or disposed of at public or private .sale. After the expiration of six months any such stock shall not be considered as a part of the assets of any bank.” (Gen. Stat. 1909, § 470.)
This statute, in effect, prohibits a bank from purchasing or dealing in its own stock. It is not the purpose for which a bank is organized, and if it were allowed to do so it might increase or decrease its capital stock above or below the limits prescribed by law. Creditors of a bank may look not only to a bank and its property but also to the added liability of its stock
“The law provides in effect that not only the bank, with all its property, shall be liable for its debts, but also that each stockholder in the bank to the amount of his stock, shall also be held liable. (Const., art. 12, §2; Gen. Stat. 198, §32.) But if a bank may purchase in all its stock, and own it itself, then where would be the security to the creditors of the bank, except in the bank itself? They could not, after exhausting the property of the bank, find any stockholders to sue. The law never contemplated any such a thing.” (p. 65.)
Here it is claimed that the stock of appellee was purchased to secure a previous existing debt which he owed the bank. It was proven that he was indebted to the bank, but whether the purchase was necessary to prevent loss to the bank is not so clear. He appears to have been indebted in a considerable sum, but it was shown that he had a great deal of valuable property, and the only other testimony on the subject was that he was solvent at the time he surrendered his stock to the bank. However, if it be assumed that there was some danger of loss and a real necessity for the purchase of the stock, still appellee can not be released from liability as a stockholder. This results from the conceded fact that the stock held by appellee was not transferred on the books of the bank. It has already been decided that under the statute regulating the transfer of stock (Gen. Stat. 1909, § 511) an effectual change of ownership can not be made which will relieve a stockholder from liability to creditors until the shares, of stock are transferred on the books of the bank. In Faulkner v. Bank, 77 Kan. 385, 94 Pac. 153, it was said:
“A bank must at all times have a register of its stockholders. It must know who is entitled to vote its*581 stock, who is entitled to receive dividends, who maybe called upon for assessments, and, generally, who should bear the burdens and receive the benefits of stock ownership. Besides this, persons dealing with a bank have a direct interest in its personnel, and recurring events illustrate the fact that the state as a conservator of the public welfare has a legitimate concern in the matter. Therefore the law provides that when a bank is organized the president or cashier shall transmit to the bank commissioner of the state a verified statement showing the names and residences of its stockholders and the amount subscribed and paid .in by each one. (Laws 1897, ch. 47, § 5, Gen. Stat. 1901, § 411.) After a bank has been organized and has been authorized to do business the same certainty and publicity are required. (Laws 1897, ch. 47, § 47, Gen. Stat. 1901, § 453.) True, shares of stock are personal property, and as such are transferable; but upon a change of ownership the transfer must be made on the books of the bank, and must be certified immediately to the bank commissioner. The provision of section 52, quoted above, is that shares of stock ‘shall be transferred on the books of the bank.’ Under the well-known canons of construction this means that nothing short of a transfer on the books of the bank will be sufficient. The only kind of transfer which can avail, to affect the rights of the bank, its creditors and the public, is a transfer on the books of the bank. None other need be recognized.” (p. 387.)
Counsel for appellee insists that a transfer on the books is not necessary where the bank itself is the purchaser, and this claim is based on the fact that no reference is made to a transfer in the section of the statute which provides that a bank may acquire its own stock to prevent loss on a previously existing debt. It was not necessary to repeat the provision governing transfers of stock in every section of the banking act. The provision for the transfer is not limited in its application to any particular class of purchasers, and no good reason is seen for excepting from its operation a transfer to the bank itself. Those who contracted with the bank while the -stock stood in the mame of
The judgment of the district court will, therefore, be reversed and the cause remanded with directions to enter judgment for the appellant.