12 N.E.2d 131 | Ind. | 1938
Separate actions were brought by the appellee against each of the appellants to recover from them the amount of their liability as shareholders in the insolvent Citizens State Bank of Carmel. The actions were consolidated, there was a trial, and judgment against appellant Kellam for $400 on his 4 shares of stock, and against each of the other appellants for $100 upon their one share of stock each.
Error is assigned upon the overruling of a demurrer to the complaint, the sustaining of a demurrer to certain paragraphs of answer setting up fraud as a defense, and the overruling of motions for a new trial.
It is contended, upon authority of Gaiser v. Buck (1931),
It is also contended that the Constitution of Indiana does not authorize the creation of the Department of Financial Institutions; that, under the Constitution, powers such 2, 3. as are lodged in the Department of Financial Institutions can only be delegated to officers elected by the people. This contention is based upon certain dictum inState ex rel. Collett v. Gorby (1890),
It is contended that the title, "An Act concerning financial institutions," is too narrow, and that the act embraces two subjects, to wit: "The rules and regulations concerning 4. financial institutions," and "Creates a commission and department for the control of them." There is no merit in this contention. The title is broad enough to cover all matters connected with financial institutions and their regulation and control. Board of Com'rs, etc. v. Scanlan (1912),
It is contended that the act in question is a local or special law in that it does not apply to all corporations alike. But the Constitution itself makes a special provision concerning 5, 6. the stockholders of banks, as distinguished from stockholders of other corporations, in the provision which makes them individually responsible, in an amount equal to their shares of stock, for all debts and liabilities of the bank. The Legislature may classify corporations or individuals for the purpose of legislation, where the basis for the classification relates to the subject-matter, and those within the group affected are in some material respect different from those without the group. Where such legislation affects all alike, under like conditions, in all parts of the state, it is general. That the public interest justifies *186 a separate method of supervision and liquidation for financial institutions seems clear without elaborating upon their functions.
Section 63 of the Act (Acts 1933, supra, p. 209, § 18-323 Burns' Ann. St. 1933; § 7785 Baldwin's 1934) authorizes the bringing of the action in the name of the State on the 7. relation of the Department of Financial Institutions.
By certain answers, appellants alleged that the plaintiff, that is to say, the State of Indiana, through its officers, the representatives of the Department of Financial 8-11. Institutions, represented to appellants at the time they bought their stock that the bank was solvent and safe, and that appellants relied upon those representations, and were deceived; that the bank was in fact insolvent, and that appellants did not discover the fraud until the bank was finally closed. In other paragraphs of answer, it is alleged that the bank became insolvent before appellants bought their stock, and that it was closed by the state; that the stockholders, who were liable at the time of closing, were permitted to escape without any liability; that there was a reorganization under which appellants bought stock, and that the bank was reopened, but was in fact insolvent; that the reorganized bank in fact became an assignee of the insolvent bank.
It is argued that officers of the state, when they act within the scope of their authority, bind the state; that the representations of the representatives of the Department of Financial Institutions were false and fraudulent; that fraud vitiates every transaction into which it enters; that the Department of Financial Institutions stands in the shoes of the bank; and that it cannot enforce the alleged liability because of the fraud. The constitutional provision for double liability is for the benefit of creditors. When one becomes a stockholder *187 in a bank, the law imposes upon him an obligation, in the nature of a contract of suretyship, in favor of creditors of the bank, in an amount equal to the face value of his stock. It is well settled that, where one becomes a surety, he cannot escape liability to the obligee because of fraud upon the part of the principal obligor in inducing him to become surety unless the obligee had knowledge of the fraud. It is not alleged in the answers that the creditors were parties to the fraud upon appellants, or that they had knowledge of it. Appellants permitted certificates of stock to be issued to them, and held them for many months. Depositors and other creditors of the bank had the right to rely upon the responsibility of appellants as guarantors to the extent of their stock holdings.
In Rowley v. Pogue (1931),
Judgment affirmed. *188