Appellant, receiver of American Savings Bank of Muscatine, demanded judgment against Cora Noble, appellee, for an assessment of one hundred per cent on $2400 of the capital stock of said bank. The action is founded on section 9251, Code 1931, to which further reference will be made. The bank being insolvent suspended business on September 19, 1931, and appellant was appointed as its receiver. He claims that when the bank closed Cora Noble was a stockholder to the extent of twenty-four shares within the meaning of section 9251. Appellee denies that such was the fact and asserts that she has not been such stockholder or the owner of said stock subsequent to March 1, 1927. Upon this one issue the case was tried. The court found for appellee and dismissed the action. The receiver has appealed.
[1] The salient facts, underlying the controversy, are not complex. We find, from the record, that on March 1, 1927, Cora Noble owned twenty-four shares, of the stock of this bank, par value $100 per share, represented by five stock certificates that had been issued to her. On the last mentioned date she sold these shares to her husband, A.C. Noble, accepting therefor his promissory note for $2400. Appellee had accumulated the stock in five small blocks between the years 1912 and 1921. On March 1, 1927, the certificates were scattered, some being in the home and some in the bank. One certificate was assigned to A.C. Noble in December, 1930, and the remaining four in August, 1931. When the bank closed its doors the five certificates endorsed to A.C. Noble were in his possession. None of them had been surrendered for cancellation and no new certificates to A.C. Noble had been issued. The stubs in the bank's stock-certificate book showed that the twenty-four shares were held in the name of Cora Noble when the receiver was appointed. A.C. Noble was one of the directors of this bank from 1922 until it closed in 1931. He informed the active officials of the bank of his purchase *Page 1217 of the stock from his wife. It also appears that subsequent to the purchase he voted the twenty-four shares personally at the stockholders' meetings during the several years before the bank closed, whereas previously he had voted them by proxy. This is shown by the testimony of A.C. Noble. In the minutes of the stockholders' meetings is found confirmation of this testimony although the minutes were carelessly kept and the showings therein are somewhat indefinite.
In 1928, at suggestion of an examiner, the directors of the bank voluntarily took out of the bank's assets some past due notes and substituted cash, excepting that A.C. Noble and perhaps one other director gave the bank their promissory notes instead of cash. Each director put up cash or his note for one-half of the amount of his stock. The note given by Noble to the bank represented 50 per cent of all the stock he owned including the twenty-four shares he had purchased from his wife. This note was a part of the assets of the bank when it failed. Cora Noble neither signed the note nor had any knowledge that the assessment had been made.
Section 9251, Code 1931, on which plaintiff brought this action, is in the following words:
"9251. Liability of stockholders. All stockholders of savings and state banks shall be individually liable to the creditors of such corporation of which they are stockholders over and above the amount of stock by them held therein and any amount paid thereon, to an amount equal to their respective shares, for all its liabilities accruing while they remained such stockholders."
This statute has been considered in several recent opinions of this court. In Bates v. First Tr. Sav. Bank,
"In the application of Code section 9251 we have said that the question is, who is the real owner of the stock, even though it has not been transferred on the books of the corporation. Andrew v. Sanford,
We also said in Andrew v. American Savings Bank, *Page 1218
"Notwithstanding the provisions of Code sections 9192 and 8386, title to shares of stock in a corporation may pass from one individual to another without transfer being made on the books of the corporation. The Des Moines National Bank v. Warren County Bank,
[2] But plaintiff says that, although A.C. Noble may have been the actual owner of this bank stock and as such owner liable for the assessment, under the holdings in the above cited cases, yet Cora Noble is estopped to deny her liability because she accomplished no issuance of new certificates to A.C. Noble nor a cancellation of the certificates she held, with the result that at the time of the appointment of the receiver the stock records of the bank indicated that she was the owner of the twenty-four shares. In support of this proposition plaintiff relies upon Andrew v. Sanford,
We come to the same conclusion as did the district court and the case is affirmed. — Affirmed.
HAMILTON, C.J., and MITCHELL, ANDERSON, PARSONS, KINTZINGER, and DONEGAN, JJ., concur.
