44 A. 1022 | Md. | 1899
The Emmet Perpetual and Mutual Building Association of Baltimore City having been adjudged insolvent by a decree of the Circuit Court of Baltimore City, receivers were appointed; its property and assets have been converted into money and the fund brought into Court for distribution, there being three classes of claimants interested therein; first, creditors of the corporation; second, free shareholders who have given notice of withdrawal; and third, shareholders who have not given notice of withdrawal. Upon the application of the auditor for instructions as to the rule of distribution, the Court decreed that the general creditors *288 of the defendant corporation, as distinguished from all shareholders, are first entitled to be paid their claims in full, and that the shareholders of the defendant corporation who had given notice of their withdrawal, are not entitled to share with said general creditors pari passu. The relative rights of withdrawing and non-withdrawing shareholders were by the decree expressly reserved for the future action of the Court, so that upon the appeal from that decree now before us and taken by withdrawing shareholders the sole question is, whether in the distribution of the assets of an insolvent building association, the general creditors of the association are entitled to priority over shareholders of the association, who, in accordance with the by-laws of the association gave notice of withdrawal before the judicial declaration of insolvency, though the association was in fact insolvent when notice was given, and we cannot doubt that the learned Judge of the Circuit Court was correct in holding the general creditors entitled to such priority. The by-law of the defendant corporation regulating withdrawal is as follows: "By giving at least two weeks written notice to the board of directors, any member holding or owning completed shares may withdraw such shares, and the par value thereof shall be repaid to such member as soon as sufficient funds are in the treasuryof the association, less fines, c., if any due and owing by such member, and his or her share of any loss or expense theassociation may have incurred, not already provided for from theprofits of the association."
Obviously, this by-law was framed with reference to the doing of the regular business of the association rather than with reference to the closing up of its affairs, and the exercise of the right of withdrawal thereunder contemplates the association as a going concern. It was so held as to a similar by-law inRabbitt v. Wilcoxen,
In Eversman v. Schmidt,
Decree affirmed with costs above and below.
(Decided December 9th, 1899). *292