delivered the opinion of the court.
This is á bill brought by a receiver of a national bank to recover from former directors of the bank for. losses sustained by it because of dividends paid out of capital and improper loans and investments made by the defendants. The bill states with particularity the dates at which each defendant began and ceased to serve, and thus discloses that six of those named left office more than six years before August 2, 1916, when this suit was begun. On motion the bill was dismissed by the District Court as against these six- on the ground that the statute of limitations of the State of Rhode Island was a bar.
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There is no dispute that the statute of Rhode Island governs the case.
McClaine
v.
Rankin,
This suit is brought upon the common-law right of the bank to-recover for acts that diminished its assets. Therefore the question is whether the bank’s claim is barred. The bank of course must be charged with knowledge of
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what appeared upon'its books. It owned them; its stockholders had a right to inspect them.
Guthrie
v.
Harkness,
The question, therefore, is narrowed to the entries on the books, and as to these, again as suggested by the District Judge, it is to be remembered that credits and the value of business paper or securities are variable. Many of those said to be overvalued were for short terms.. Most of the renewals are stated to have been new extensions of credit — that is new judgments on present responsibility, superseding the old. We agree with the Courts below that, the valuations on the books cannot be regarded as continuing in an effective sense. Three new directors came upon the board before August 3, 1910. It is alleged unmistakably in the bill that all the directors were chargeable with notice and did in fact know that the dividends were paid out of assets and not earned and that the im *264 proper loans should be recalled. Even if otherwise the statute of limitations would not have run, which we do not imply, knowledge of the facts by the new directors was knowledge by the bank, and none the less that according to the bill they in their turn were unfaithful. It is not alleged that they conspired with the defendants whose case we are considering. They came to the board as the eyes of the bank. Anyone of them having notice was bound to do what he could to avert or diminish the loss. Indeed the bill seeks to charge one of them for not having done his duty. Notice to an officer, in the line of his duty, was notice to the bank. A single director like a single stockholder could proceed in the courts. Joint Stock Discount Co. v. Brown, L. R. 8 Eq. 381, 403.
The counsel for the plaintiff seemed to take the bill as admitting less than we have said in the way of knowledge. We are unable to read it otherwise than as we have indicated, but even if knowledge on the part of the new directors were not expressly charged, it was their business and duty in the year and seven months from the resignation of the first three to August 3, 1910, or the seven months after the resignation of the second three to the same date, to get some notion of the credits and assets of the bank. It does not appear that there would have been any difficulty in ascertaining at least enough to lead to further inquiry if they had. See
Wood
v. Carpenter,
Decree affirmed.
