16 N.E.2d 387 | NY | 1938
The Superintendent of Banks in 1931 took possession of the business and property of Globe Bank and Trust Company, pursuant to provisions of the Banking Law (Cons. Laws, ch. 2), and proceeded to liquidate it. The defendants are stockholders of the bank. The Superintendent of Banks has instituted a separate action against each defendant to recover the "amount" of his shares in the bank. At the time that the Superintendent of Banks took possession of the bank and at the time he began these actions, article VIII, section 7, of the Constitution of the State provided that "the stockholders of every corporation and joint-stock association for banking purposes, shall be individually responsible to the amount of their respective share or shares of stock in any such corporation or association, for all its debts and liabilities of every kind." He asserts in these actions the right to enforce the stockholders' responsibility, decreed by the Constitution.
Except for difference in the name of the defendant and the number of shares owned and held by him, the complaints in the three actions are identical. After each defendant had filed an answer, the plaintiff moved in each action for summary judgment under rules 113 and 114 of the Rules of Civil Practice. The motions were granted. The defendant Heinemann made a cross-motion to dismiss the complaint on the ground that it fails to state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action. That motion was denied. All the defendants appealed to the Appellate Division from the summary judgments against them and the defendant Heinemann by appropriate notice of appeal brought up for review the intermediate order denying his motion to dismiss the complaint. The Appellate Division reversed the orders for *423 summary judgment and the judgments entered thereon but held, upon the defendant Heinemann's appeal, that the complaint was sufficient. It has granted leave to appeal, in each action, certifying for review the following questions of law:
"1. Does the complaint herein set forth facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action?
"2. Upon the record on appeal herein, is the plaintiff entitled to summary judgment for the relief demanded in the complaint?"
The provision of the Constitution imposing upon the stockholders of a bank responsibility for its debts has been repealed by vote of the people of the State, but the repeal does not affect liability already accrued. Though the Constitution provided that the stockholders of a bank "shall be individually responsible" for the debts and liabilities of the bank, it is silent as to how and by whom the stockholders' responsibility may be enforced, and as to "when liability arises, upon whom it falls, and how long it continues." (Broderick v. Aaron
[Kornberg],
We have said recently that "The constitutional provision is not self-executing, nor does it define the term `stockholder.'" (Broderick v. Adamson [Gordon],
A provision for individual responsibility of the stockholders of a bank to the amount of their respective share or shares was contained in the Constitution of 1846, but, like the provision in the present Constitution, it is silent as to how and by whom that responsibility may be enforced. Within three years thereafter, the Legislature created a cause of action for the enforcement of such liability by chapter 226 of the Laws of 1849. The cause of action created by that statute, like the cause of action created by section 120 of the Banking Law, provided for enforcement of liability only "equally and ratably." In Matter of HollisterBank (
For more than eighty years all proceedings to enforce a stockholder's liability were brought pursuant to the statute and subject to its limitations. There has been no assertion heretofore by the Superintendent of Banks or by the creditors of a bank that proceedings other than those authorized by statute might be brought to enforce a liability against stockholders not ratably, but one for the other. Argument may be made that it is unfair to place upon a stockholder of a bank responsibility for more than his proportional share of the debts of the bank. (Cf.Terry v. Little,
The form of the statute at the time this action was brought shows beyond possibility of doubt that the Legislature intended that for definition and enforcement of a stockholder's liability, we must look to the statute *426 alone. No other construction is possible of the provision of section 120 of the Banking Law that the "individual liability of such stockholders for the contracts, debts, and engagements of the bank * * * shall be governed exclusively by the provisions of this section and section 80 of this chapter." Section 80 (now § 632) provided, so far as material to the question we are discussing, that "whenever a liability of stockholders for the amount of their respective share of any such corporation exists * * * the superintendent * * * may enforce the individual liability of such stockholders in whole or in part." Certainly the Legislature has not vested in the Superintendent any authority to bring any action other than the action provided by statute to enforce the liability defined by the statute.
The Appellate Division has so held, and has based its decision upon that ground. It has left open the question whether the provision of the Constitution is self-executing and creates a cause of action in favor of creditors to enforce responsibility of stockholders "one for another" for the amount of stock held by each. We have already said that the constitutional provision is not self-executing. The Legislature has so construed that provision since its adoption. An experience of eighty years has demonstrated that statutes were necessary to define what the Constitution has left undefined, and to create a new cause of action appropriate for enforcement of a stockholder's responsibility. No other cause of action was created by the Constitution or may be maintained for enforcement of that responsibility.
We cannot pass upon the cross-motion of the defendant Heinemann to dismiss the complaint. No appeal has been taken to this court from the order denying it.
In each action the order should be affirmed, with costs. The first question certified is not answered and the second question is answered in the negative.
O'BRIEN, HUBBS, LOUGHRAN, FINCH and RIPPEY, JJ., concur; CRANE, Ch. J., taking no part.
Orders affirmed, etc. *427