delivered the opinion of the Court.
In a suit for the enforcement' of the personal liability imposed by the statute then in force upon shareholders in national banks, petitioner, the defendant in the suit, disclaimed liability, first, upon the ground that before the assessment of the shareholders his ownership of the shares was divested by the filing of a bankruptcy petition and the appointment of a trustee thereunder, and, second, upon the ground that if ownership continued, liability was extinguished by virtue of a discharge in bankruptcy. Whether the defense should have prevailed is now to be determined.
Petitioner was adjudicated a bankrupt on April 21, 1933. and on July 31, 1933, was granted a discharge. At the filing of the bankruptcy petition he was the owner of ten shares of stock of the Union National Bank of Atlantic City, New Jersey. Since September 30, 1931, the Union bank had been in course of voluntary liquidation (under *600 R. S. §§ 6220 and 6221; 12 U. S. C. §§ 181, 182), the Atlantic City National Bank being the liquidating agent! The terms of liquidation are defined by an agreement. Union sold to Atlantic all its assets of every kind for $1,686,977.63, which the buyer was to pay through an assumption of the seller’s liabilities. The seller covenanted that the assets had a value equal to the price, and bound itself to pay the deficiency, if any should ensue. To this there was to be an exception in the case of the banking house and fixtures, which were to be taken at a' valuation of $353,000, irrespective of the outcome. The amount of the seller’s liability was to be fixed at the expiration of two years (i. e. on September 30, 1933), at which time all notes then uncollected were to be reckoned as losses. Before that time arrived, the liquidating bank met with troubles of its own. In January 1933, it was declared to be insolvent by the Comptroller of the Currency, and a receiver was appointed to wind up its affairs. In December, 1933, Union also was déclared insolvent, and the receiver then appointed is the respondent in this court. Valuing the uncollected assets, the Comptroller found it necessary to enforce the personal liability laid upon the shareholders (R. S. § 5151; 12 U. S. C. § 63; 38 Stat. 273; 12 U. S. C., § 64), and by an order made and filed on January 8, 1934, assessed them to the amount of the par value of the shares. The receiver has sued the petitioner as one of the shareholders of Union to recover that assessment.
In defense of the suit petitioner asserts, as we have seen, ■ that the ownership of the stock was divested by the bankruptcy, and also that liability was barred, if ownership remained. To estimate correctly the worth of these defenses we must have some other facts before us. The record shows that on October 27, 1933, by order of a referee, the trustee in bankruptcy was “authorized and di *601 rected to abandon all title to and to disclaim all the interest of the bankrupt in” the ten shares of Union National Bank, now the subject of this suit. There is no suggestion that in the interval between adjudication and disclaimer, the trustee had done anything betokening acceptance. The record also shows, in the form of an affidavit accepted by the court, that the bankrupt in his list of liabilities included the liability to assessment on his shares of Union stock, and that in his schedule of creditors he included Union and Atlantic as well as the receiver for Atlantic, then in charge of its affairs. The same affidavit tells us that promptly upon the transfer of the assets in September, 1931, the liabilities assumed by Atlantic were paid to the last dollar; that at the time of the defendant’s bankruptcy Union had no debts or liabilities except the debt or liability to the liquidating agent; and that even before the bankruptcy the fact had been definitely ascertained that the liquidation of the Union assets would result in a deficiency which would require an assessment of the stockholders up to the maximum amount of the par value of the shares. 1 The estimate was not impracticable, for about a year and seven months had passed since liqui *602 dation had begun, and only about five months were left before it would be deemed to be complete.
Upon these facts, established by the pleadings and supporting affidavits, the receiver moved for judgment. The District Court held the defenses insufficient, and gave judgment against the defendant for the amount of the assessment.
We dismiss with a few words the petitioner’s contention that at the moment of the bankruptcy he lost the title to the shares, and became relieved thereby of the liabilities attendant upon ownership, though his name was left continuously on the stock book of the bank. Cf.
Richmond
v.
Irons,
The petitioner being held to be the owner of the shares, we pass to the closer question whether the effect of the discharge in bankruptcy was to extinguish the personal liability that was attached to his ownership as a statutory incident.
Liabilities are not discharged in bankruptcy unless claims thereon exist in favor of claimants whose identity is determinable at the date of the petition.
Zavelo
v.
Reeves,
In saying this we are not unmindful that a comprehensive suit in equity is commonly the proper remedy against shareholders where insolvency becomes manifest in voluntary liquidation. 12 U. S. C. § 65. The remedy does not exclude the presentation of a proof of claim in bankruptcy, the amount to be liquidated under the direction of the court by bill in equity or otherwise.
Cunningham
v.
Commissioner of Banks, supra; United States v. Illinois Surety Co., supra; King
v.
Pomeroy,
Liquidation being possible, the claim is not defeated though there was uncertainty as to its amount at the filing of the petition.
Maynard
v.
Elliott, supra.
Yet even the amount was certain, if we are to credit the defendant’s statement. By this it appears that long* before the bankruptcy the necessity for an assessment to the amount of the par value of the shares had become obvious to the liquidating agent and indeed to all concerned. The facts are far removed from those in
Miller
v.
Irving Trust Co.,
Other objections are'made to the operation of the discharge, but they need not detain us long.
There is argument that a claim against a stockholder is not provable in bankruptcy for the reason that it is founded on a statutory liability not subject to discharge. Bankruptcy Act § 63; 11 U. S. C. § 103. True indeed it is that the liability is created by a statute, and not solely by agreement.
McClaine
v.
Rankin,
Finally argument is possible that the discharge is ineffective against the creditors of the bank for the reason that only a single creditor of Union was listed in the schedules. This, however, is unimportant if the creditor so listed (the liquidating agent) was in fact the only creditor, as the petitioner insists it was. Cf.
Longfield
v.
Minnesota Savings Bank,
Whether the petitioner will be able to make good the allegations of his answer, amplified and explained by the supporting affidavits, is not to be predicted now. Enough for present purposes that there are issues to be tried.
The decree should be reversed and the cause remanded for further proceedings in accord with this opinion.
Reversed.
Notes
‘At the time that I was adjudicated a'bankrupt as aforesaid it had been determined and from then until now it has been definitely determined and known that said Union National Bank was insolvent. Said Union National Bank was throughout all of that time and ever since September 30, 1931, had been closed to business. Also at said time it Bad been determined and throughout said period it was definitely known that the assets of said Union National Bank were insufficient in value to liquidate at a sum equal to the value placed upon them by said agreement of September 30,1931.
"Also at the time that I was adjudicated a bankrupt as aforesaid it had been determined and from then until now it has been definitely determined and known that an assessment and requisition upon the shareholders of said Union National Bank to the total par value of the amount of stock outstanding would be necessary to pay the debts and claims of said bank.” Extracts from petitioner’s affidavit.
“Under the clause in question, it was, at the time the petition in bankruptcy was filed, uncertain, a mere matter of speculation, whether any liability ever.would arise under it.”
Miller
v.
Irving Trust Co.,
