281 Mass. 467 | Mass. | 1933
This suit in equity is brought by the commissioner of banks, in possession for the purpose of liquidation of the insolvent Industrial Bank & Trust Company under powers conferred by G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 167, § 22, to enforce for the benefit of its creditors the individual liability of its stockholders established by G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 172, § 24. It was stipulated by the parties that the commissioner of banks pursuant to power conferred by said c. 172, § 25, on December 9, 1924, instructed the bank to levy an assessment of seventy per cent of the par
The one contention common to all the stockholding defendants is that their liability can be enforced in this proceeding to the extent of only thirty per cent because of the contribution of seventy per cent made in 1925 on account of the shares of stock now owned by them. The contention of the plaintiff is that he is entitled to collect the entire par value of the shares, regardless of the collection of the earlier assessment. The solution of the problem thus presented depends upon the construction of G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 172, §§ 24, 25. Power is conferred upon the commissioner of banks to enforce by suit in equity the individual liability of the stockholders in a trust company in his possession for purposes of liquidation. G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 167, § 24. His determination as to the percentage of liability so to be enforced is final. His authority is plenary. This was decided after full discussion in Commissioner of Banks v. Prudential Trust Co. 242 Mass. 78. That decision rested in large measure upon the fact that crucial provisions of our statutes were taken from the national banking act
The material words of said § 25 are that any trust company “whose capital stock has, in the opinion of the commissioner, become impaired by losses or otherwise, shall, within three months after receiving notice from the commissioner, pay the deficiency in the capital stock by assessment upon the stockholders pro rata to the shares held by each. If such corporation shall fail to pay such deficiency in its capital stock for three months after receiving such notice, the commissioner may apply to the supreme judicial court for an injunction; and if a stockholder of such corporation neglects or refuses, after three months’ notice, to pay the assessment as provided in this section, the board of directors shall cause an amount of his stock sufficient to make good his assessment to be sold by public auction, after thirty days’ notice given by posting such notice in the office of the corporation and by publishing it in a newspaper of the city or town where the corporation is located or in a newspaper published nearest thereto; and the balance, if any, shall be returned to such delinquent stockholder. This section shall not take away the right of creditors to enforce the liability of stockholders in such corporations, as provided in the preceding section, or the right of the commissioner to enforce such liability as provided in section twenty-four of chapter one hundred and sixty-seven, nor increase the general liability of such stockholders.” Those words, with an exception presently to be noted, also were taken in the main in substance and effect from the national bank act, U. S. Eev. Sts. § 5205. They were first incorporated into our statutory law by St. 1892, c. 327.
The main purpose of said § 25 is to enable the stockholders of a trust company to avoid liquidation and to continue its business. It contemplates its operation, not its closing. The assessment there authorized is for the purpose of restoring impaired capital. It stands in this respect on the same footing as the initial payment for capital in settlement of original subscriptions for shares of stock. It is for the benefit of the corporation. Its purpose is to enable the corporation to remain with doors open and to enjoy public confidence. Said § 25 was engrafted upon an exist
Whether an assessment under said § 25 shall be levied and paid is a matter to be determined by the particular trust company coming within its operative effect. It is optional with the corporation to decide whether its stockholders shall pay the assessment and continue the business of the corporation or whether the alternative shall be accepted of leaving the commissioner of banks to take action in the ways open to him under the statute. That is a matter of corporate decision commonly to be passed upon by the stockholders. See Opinion of the Justices, 261 Mass. 556, 596, 597; Commercial National Bank v. Weinhard, 192 U. S. 243. The words that the assessment under said § 25 shall not be construed to “increase the general liability of such stockholders” emphasize this optional feature and make plain that the power of the commissioner of banks is not absolute, but merely advisory to require the payment of such an assessment, for the purpose of continuing the operation of the business. The trust company, rather than make the assessment to restore the impaired capital, may prefer to go into liquidation or to leave the commissioner of banks to take such further steps as may be deemed wise. It may desire to contest his conclusion that the capital has become impaired. The words “shall, within three months after receiving notice from the commissioner, pay” in their context in said § 25 do not import compulsory mandate, but rather permissive choice between courses
In the ease at bar the shareholders of the trust company voluntarily paid the assessment of seventy per cent voted by the directors under said § 25, or suffered their shares of stock to be sold at public auction and thus the capital was restored. This conduct was designed solely to promote the operation of the trust company. The business was continued for more than six years thereafter. The object of that payment and restoration of capital was accomplished. When the new obstacles were encountered in 1931 new measures were required quite disassociated from what had gone before. If the assessment in 1925 had been levied by vote of the stockholders, it would have been a liability incident to being a stockholder in a corporation and in that sense implicit in that relationship because incurred by voluntary action of the corporation. Albert E. Touchet, Inc. v. Touchet, 264 Mass. 499, 509. It would not have increased the “general liability” of the stockholders.
It is manifest from said §§ 24, 25, regulating trust companies, that a bank in operation was designed to hold out to the public as security for depositors not only the capital but also the unimpaired liability of stockholders to the amount of their stock at par so far as necessary to pay its debts in liquidation.
It is not necessary to determine whether after an assessment has been levied under said § 25 there is personal liability on the part of the shareholder to pay it or whether the only remedy for its collection is by sale of the shares of the shareholder at public auction as therein provided. See Shriver v. Woodbine Bank, 285 U. S. 467, 476, 477, 478. Without considering that aspect of said § 25, we think that for the reasons already stated the seventy per cent paid on account of the shares of stock to restore impaired capital in 1925 is no defence to the present proceeding to collect one hundred per cent on such shares under said § 24.
The commissioner of banks by virtue of the large powers conferred upon him by St. 1922, c. 488, § 1, now embodied
Sections 22, 24 of G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 167 are constitutional under established principles. The suggestion to the contrary requires no discussion. Cosmopolitan Trust Co. v. Mitchell, 242 Mass. 95. Commissioner of Banks v. Prudential Trust Co. 242 Mass. 78.
Where one had bought stock in the trust company which was indorsed to him in blank and held by him but for which no new certificate had been issued in his name, he was the owner of the shares and is liable to the assessment. This is settled by Cunningham v. Commissioner of Banks, 249 Mass. 401, 422, 423. As was said in Early v. Richardson, 280 U. S. 496, 499: “That the actual owner of the stock may be held for the assessment although his name does not appear upon the transfer books of the bank, is well settled." No fraudulent conduct is essential to liability in such case in order to establish liability. .
The record owners of stock in the circumstances disclosed in the case at bar were liable to the assessment, even where there had been some form of transfer. Commissioner of Banks v. Cosmopolitan Trust Co. 253 Mass. 205, 227. Commissioner of Banks v. Hanover Trust Co. 247 Mass. 347.
This principle applies to stock standing in the name of Harold A. Rudnick as to whom the facts were these: in 1926 he gave a promissory note to the Industrial Bank & Trust Company and at the same time as collateral security therefor indorsed and delivered to the trust company his
This principle is applicable so far as facts may warrant to the estate of Ira Shapira, who before his death was adjudicated a bankrupt. For aught that appears he was the record owner of these shares of stock at the time of his death. In the absence of further findings, this is enough to support the inference that he was a stockholder and that his estate was a stockholder.
The record owners of stock in the circumstances disclosed were liable to the assessment. Commissioner of Banks v. Cosmopolitan Trust Co. 253 Mass. 205, 227. Commissioner of Banks v. Hanover Trust Co. 247 Mass. 347.
All questions that have been argued by the defendants have been considered. Other points, if any, open to the parties are treated as waived.
Although the bill was taken pro confessa against Sarah
Ordered accordingly.