1. Where, upon the expiration of the charter of a bank which was chartered in 1901 under the banking act of 1893, application for renewal of the charter in terms of the banking act of 1919 is approved and the charter renewed, the bank thereby becomes a bank chartered under the banking act of 1919; and the amendment approved on March 15, 1935, repealing that portion of the banking act of 1919 (Code, § 13-1901), imposing stockholders' liability, is applicable to the shareholders of such a bank.
2. By virtue of the provisions of the banking act of 1919, imposing a liability upon shareholders for the benefit of depositors (Code, § 13-1901), the acquirement of the ownership of stock makes this liability a vested contractual right of the depositors, which under the contract and due-process clauses of the State and Federal constitutions can not be impaired by the 1935 amendment repealing the stockholders' liability. That amendment is susceptible of a construction giving it only prospective application, which construction would render it constitutional; and it is the duty of the court so to construe it, rather than to construe it as having retrospective application, which would render it unconstitutional. There is no language in the amendment imperatively requiring that it be given retrospective application; and in the absence of such language it must be construed to have only prospective application. Deposits made in the Bank of Grantville before the 1935 amendment are protected by the stockholders' liability, but deposits made after that amendment are not so protected.
The defendant demurred on the general grounds, contending that the petition shows that the Bank of Grantville, though incorporated under the banking act of 1893, renewed its charter under the banking act of 1919, and that after such renewal the liability of its stockholders under the 1919 banking act was repealed by the amendment approved March 15, 1935, and that there was no stockholder liability to the depositors as claimed by the petition. The demurrer was sustained, and the action dismissed; and the plaintiff excepted. The writ of error presents two major questions for decision, to wit: (1) Did the renewal of the charter make the Bank of Grantville one incorporated under the banking act of 1919, so that the amendment of 1935 applies to the liability of its stockholders to depositors? (2) Does the amendment of 1935 have a retrospective application?
1. Article 10 of the 1919 banking act authorizes any bank to renew its charter for a period of thirty years by filing application for such renewal with the secretary of State six months before the expiration of its charter. It requires that the application be published for four weeks, that a copy of same be transmitted to the superintendent of banks, and that he make an examination of the condition of the bank and make his recommendation to the secretary of State. The act authorizes the superintendent to recommend that the renewal be granted, or to recommend that it be not granted, either because of the unsatisfactory condition revealed by his examination, or because he thinks it inexpedient; and the renewal of the charter is granted or denied depending upon the recommendation of the superintendent of banks. These provisions of the act clearly indicate a legislative purpose and intention that all banks chartered before 1919 must look to the 1919 act for a renewal of their charter. It is manifest that the *Page 731
legislature sought by such provisions to obtain a uniform banking system in this State. Since by virtue of the provisions of this act the continued existence of every bank upon the expiration of its charter depends entirely upon the terms and conditions set forth in this act, any bank the charter of which is renewed by meeting these conditions is in reality chartered under the 1919 act. In Gormley v. Searcy,
The defendant cites McKemie v. Eady-Baker Grocery Co.,
2. By the amendment approved March 15, 1935, that portion of the banking act of 1919 codified as section 13-1901, imposing on stockholders individual liability to depositors, was repealed. This stockholders' liability, though fixed by statute, is at the same time a contractual one. In Crawford v. Swicord,
In Richmond v. Irons,
In Bank of Norman Park v. Colquitt County,
To construe the amendment to relieve the stockholders of their liability as to deposits made before the amendment would be to give to that amendment a retrospective application, and thereby impair the obligation of contracts. The State constitution (Code, § 2-302) declares: "No . . retroactive law, or law impairing the obligation of contracts, . . shall be passed." The United States constitution (Code, § 1-134) declares: "No State shall . . pass . . any . . law impairing the obligation of contracts." These constitutional inhibitions stand as an absolute bar to a retrospective application of the 1935 amendment. There is a possible intimation in the 1935 act of an intention to give to that act a retrospective application, in that it provides that "This act . . shall not affect banks or the liability of the stockholders of banks which have, before the approval of this act, been taken over by the superintendent of banks for liquidation." Ga. L. 1935, pp. 103, 105. This provision, however, merely states one circumstance where the act shall not apply; but if it be conceded that this language authorizes a construction that would give the act a retrospective application, it is nevertheless true that there is no language in the act that imperatively demands a construction that would give it retrospective application, and the act as a whole will bear a construction that gives it a prospective application only. Statutes equally susceptible of two constructions, one of which would render it constitutional and the other unconstitutional, must be given that construction which will harmonize it with the constitution. Fordham v. Sikes,
In Morris v. Interstate Bond Co.,
Having thus construed the 1935 amendment, what is the effect upon the deposit claims asserted by the plaintiff? Only deposits made before the 1935 amendment are protected by the stockholders' liability; and if, by checking on such deposit, the depositor withdrew *Page 737
an amount equal to all deposits made before the 1935 amendment, there could be no valid claim against the stockholder for the benefit of funds deposited after the 1935 act. The applicable rule for ascertaining whether funds on deposit when the bank closed in 1935 were deposits made before or after the amendment was approved may be stated as follows: "The first drawings out are to be attributed to the first payments in." Stockholders of the Peoples Banking Co. v. Sterling,
Judgment reversed. All the Justices concur.