25 Minn. 543 | Minn. | 1879
The demurrer to the complaint admits that ever since the first day of January, 1876, the Marine Bank
It is claimed by defendant that the bank in question was. not a bank of issue, and upon this assumption it is contended that the statutory liability imposed by the foregoing section has no application to the ease, and, if it has, it is void, as-being in excess of legislative authority under the constitution. Prior to the amendment of the chapter in 1869 (Laws 1869, c. 85) it may be that the section in question applied only to stockholders in banks of issue; but there can be no. doubt that it was within the intention of the legislature, bj these amendatory enactments, to embrace within its provisions all banks since incorporated under that chapter, and to make the stockholders therein individually liable, as provided by that section.
The objection that no statutory liability of this character can be created by the legislature in respect to stockholders in a bank not of issue, is rested upon the proposition that this power has been impliedly taken from the legislature by the constitution. This implication is sought to be founded upon the provisions of that instrument contained in the third subdivision of section 13, article 9, and section 3, article 10, of the constitution, the contention being that it was the intention to provide by these clauses for all cases of individual liability for corporate indebtedness authorized by the constitution, and that none other thau that therein provided for can be created
The objection of a defect of parties, which is raised by the
The liability declared on is purely a statutory one. It arose out of no contract between the parties, other than that implied by the statute, and is for no debt personally contracted by the defendant, either as principal or' surety; it exists wholly by force of the provisions of the statute which created it, and which alone determines its characteristics and incidents. That statute enacts in terms, and in the words of the constitution as applied to banks of issue, that “the stockholders in each bank shall be individually liable in an amount equal to double the amount of stock owned by them, for all the debts of such bank; and such individual liability shall continue for one year after any transfer or sale of stock by any stockholder or stockholders.” Gen. St. c. 33, § 21. The language of this section, that “the stockholders * * shall be individually liable * * . * for all the debts of the bank,” fairly imports a liability in their individual or private capacities, of all the stockholders to all the creditors of such bank.
It is obvious that these respective rights and obligations can be adequately protected and enforced only through an exer•cise of the equity powers of the court, and in an action wherein . all the parties in interest are present and. represented. And fit is equally clear, in case the bank, as in this instance, is ■utterly insolvent, with outstanding liabilities largely in excess ■ of its assets, that the prosecution to judgment and execution •of the separate demands of one of its creditors against the individual liability of one of the stockholders, without join"ing the other parties in interest, must necessarily affect the •equal claims and rights of the other creditors, and may result in entirely depriving them of any benefits under the statute; .a result at variance with its policy and the obvious intention
In view of these considerations alone, it may well be claimed that the legislature never intended to allow one of several creditors of an insolvent banking corporation to maintain a separate action in his own behalf against one of several stockholders upon the individual liability created by this statute, without joining in the same action all the other-parties shown to have any interest therein.
The correctness of this claim, however, does not rest alone upon these considerations. The very next section to the one creating this liability of the stockholders, provides that “in the event of the insolvency of any bank established under the
As further indicating the legislative intention upon this subject, the General Statutes of 1866, which contain the statutory provisions upon banking and the individual liability of stockholders, also provide a special and adequate remedy for enforcing the liability, closing up the affairs of the bank in ease of insolvency, and for the final adjustment of the rights-of all the parties having any interest in the matter. Gen. St. c. 76. This chapter applies to all corporations and associations having any corporate rights. It provides in terms that “whenever any creditor of a corporation seeks to charge its stockholders on account of any liability created by law, he may file his complaint for that purpose in any district court which possesses jurisdiction, to enforce such liability.” Authority is given in such action, whenever necessary, to take-an account of the property and debts due to and from the-corporation, to appoint one or more receivers to collect and convert into money the corporate demands and property, and make just and fair distribution of the proceeds among its creditors, and in case its assets prove insufficient to satisfy its debts, the respective liabilities of the stockholders are to be-ascertained, and the amount payable from each is to be adjudged, and its payment enforced as in other cases. Provision is also made for giving notice to all the creditors of the
It is reasonable to suppose that the legislature intended by these sections to provide an efficient and sole remedy for enforcing payment of the debts of an insolvent corporation out of the individual liability of its stockholders, for the rule is well settled that when a statute which creates a right also prescribes an adequate remedy, the latter is to be taken as the exclusive one. City of Faribault v. Misener, 20 Minn. 396; Sedgwick Const. Law (2d ed.) 344. The chapter which .gives this remedy forms a part of the General Statutes, which were adopted in 1866, and which contain the enactment that creates the statutory liability, and therefore the rule referred to is fairly applicable.
It is obvious, from an examination of these sections of ■chapter 76, that the remedy they provide contemplates a single action, in which all persons having or claiming any interest in the subject of the action shall be joined or properly represented, and their respective rights, equities and liabilities finally settled and determined. This accords with the general policy of the law as it has existed in this state since 1853, when the old system of a separate and distinct jurisdiction and practice in law and in chancery was abrogated for that of the code. Since then, there has been no distinction between actions at law and suits in equity, there being but ■one form of action for the enforcement and protection of private rights, whether of a legal or equitable nature. It is now ■competent for the same court, in the same action, to take cognizance of and adjudicate both the legal rights and the ■equities of the parties in respect to the subject in controversy, and also to bring in'all who may have any interest therein to be affected by the result, in order that their rights and equities may likewise be finally settled and adjudicated.
It is worth noting, in this connection, that the Revised Statutes of 1851 contained two distinct chapters regulating suits and proceedings affecting corporations, one of which related to actions at law, and the other to suits and proceedings in chancery. Rev. St. 1851, c. 76, c. 77. In the revision of 1866, both these chapters were consolidated into one, (Gen. St. c. 76,) entitled, “Actions respecting corporations,” with such modification of their provisions as had become necessary by reason of the change from the old to the new system of practice. Section 23 of the present chapter is nearly identical with Rev. St. (1851,) a. 77, § 25, the provisions of which latter section related solely to proceedings in suits in equity. The only difference consists in the omission from the present section of a clause which the former contained, giving to the-court authority, upon the application of either party to the suit in equity, to grant an injunction restraining all proceedings at law by any creditor. This omission is significant of the legislative understanding that such a clause was no longer necessary, for the reason that no creditor of an insolvent bank can now maintain a separate action for his own exclusive benefit, upon a claim against the individual liability of any stockholder, when it appears that there are other stockholders equally liable under the statute, and other creditors equally entitled to participate in the benefits of the liability. Upon a careful consideration of’the case, we are satisfied that the demurrer was rightly sustained by the court below, upon this ground.
Ordered accordingly.