251 Mass. 514 | Mass. | 1925
The defendant did not specifically require proof of his signature, and, the note having been introduced, he offered evidence in support of his declaration in set-off which if sustained was more than sufficient to cover the plaintiff’s claim. The judge, who heard the case without a jury, disallowed. the set-off and found for the company.
The rights of the defendant as plaintiff in set-off under G. L. c. 232, §§ 1, 2, are to be determined as if the writ had been dated September 25, 1920, when the commissioner of banks took and retained possession of the company for the purpose of liquidating and winding up its affairs. Cosmopolitan Trust Company v. Ciarla, 239 Mass. 32, 36. Bailey v. Commissioner of Banks, 244 Mass. 499, 501.
The company then held the promissory note of the defendant now in suit, and the firm of Horblit and Wasserman had a balance due on a checking account of $6,941.84, which is the first item of the declaration in set-off. This claim was duly proved February 28,1921, the certificate of proof reading, “subject to rights of set-off to be hereafter determined,” and on March 1, 1921, the certificate of proof was formally assigned to Wasserman by the other member of the firm, and the first dividend paid on the claim has been credited on the
The second item is for a deposit of $400 "standing in his name as trustee,” and the plaintiff’s answer to the defendant’s declaration in set-off admitted that Wasserman as trustee for one Jacob Cutler had a claim which was duly proved and a certificate had been issued to him as trustee. The defendant, although contending that the money was his own, did not controvert this admission, and the judge could find on all the evidence that Wasserman held this deposit as a fiduciary, and it could not be used to reduce his personal indebtedness.
The last item is for $1,500, the amount paid for ten shares of the capital stock of the company, which is alleged never to have been legally organized, and that if the issuance of the stock was legal, the certificate required by law was never filed, and the transaction became or was void. See G. L. c. 156, §§ 41,"42, 43; c. 172, § 18. But the legality of the corporate organization of the company, as well as the liability of stockholders thereunder, is settled by Commissioner of Banks v. Cosmopolitan Trust Co. 247 Mass. 334. And the failure to file with the Secretary of the Commonwealth a certified copy of the records of the meeting at which the increase of capital stock was voted did not relieve the defendant of his primary obligation as a stockholder. Cunningham v. Commissioner of Banks, 249 Mass. 401.
If, without deciding, it is assumed that the amended answer sets forth an equitable defence which is permitted in actions at law by G. L. c. 231, § 31, the defendant finally invokes the doctrine of equitable set-off, citing with cases from other jurisdictions Holbrook v. Bliss, 9 Allen 69, Spaulding v. Backus, 122 Mass. 553, 534, Abbott v. Foote, 146 Mass. 333, 334, Perry v. Pye, 215 Mass. 403, 413. But in those suits no' question of the winding up of an insolvent trust company was presented as in the case at bar, where
The defendant’s requests in so far as not given were denied rightly, and the exceptions to the exclusion of evidence, not having been argued, are treated as waived.
Exceptions overruled.