delivered' the opinion of the Court.
Harrigan, trustee in bankruptcy of the Louis J. Berg-doll Motor Company, brought this suit in a state court of Pennsylvania, on July 13, 1921, to recover $155,571.79 and interest from Bergdoll, a stockholder in' the company. The defendant, a resident of the State, pleaded the general six-year statute of - limitations.. The claim sued on is the assessment, ordered-by-the bankruptcy court, of 51.85% off the par value on shares in the company held by the defendant, the amount being found by that court to be. unpaid on the stock and required to satisfy the liabilities. *562 The corporation had been organized under the laws of Pennsylvania about April 1, 1912; had its place of business there; and was adjudged bankrupt in the federal court for the eastern district of the State in April, 1913. It was then insolvent. In May, 1913, it had become apparent that the company’s liabilities largely exceeded its assets other than the amounts unpaid on its capital stock. The petition- of the trustee to the bankruptcy court praying that the assessment be made, and that he be authorized' to proceed to collect the same, was not filed until October, 1917.
The application then made was strenuously opposed by Bergdoll. The order for the assessment was entered by the referee in February, 1918, but was not confirmed by the District Court until July, 1919,
The reversal by the Circuit Court of Appeals of the judgment of the District Court insofar as it adjudged the .liability of Bergdoll was in accord with- the rule,- settled in the third circuit and elsewhere, that the order of assessment and levy is a purely administrative proceeding pre
*563
liminary to the institution of a suit; that in the absence of consent there is no jurisdiction in the bankruptcy court to fix the personal liability of a stockholder; and that any person whose stock is assessed may when sued in a plenary action on such assessment in any court of competent jurisdiction malee any defence thereto affecting his individual liability, but may not attack the administrative order of the District Court in determining the need of an assessment, or in levying the same.
Great Western Telegraph Co.
v.
Purdy,
The decision of the Supreme Court of the State holding that the statute of limitations had run was said to be an application of the state law, settled at least since
Swearingen
v.
Sewickley Dairy Co.,
*564
The trustee contends that the statute of limitations did not begin to run until March 27, 1920, the date of the judgment of the Circuit Court of Appeals which confirmed the order making the assessment and authorized suit to collect it.. This contention rests upon the assumption that BergdolPs liability remained contingent until the entry of that judgment and, hence, that the cause of action arose then. The highest court of Pennsylvania has held that assessment was not a condition precedent to the existence of the cause of action; and that the liability became absolute without an assessment, either by the corporation or. by any court, as soon as the need of this asset for paying debts became apparent. Compare
Potts
v.
Wallace,
Scovill
v.
Thayer,
Affirmed.
Notes
See
Maryland Rail Co,
v.
Taylor,
See
In re Jassey Co.,
178 Fed, 515;
Babbit
v.
Read,
