45 F. 668 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern Ohio | 1891
The plaintiff sues as the owner and holder of 100 shares of $100 each, of the capital stock of the Metropolitan National Bank, a corporation organized under and by virtue of the laws of the United States for the purpose of carrying on the banking business, which business it did carry on in the city of Cincinnati, Ohio, from the 1st day of January, 1884, to the 1st day of February, 1888, its capital stock being $500,000. The petition sots forth that the defendants constituted the board of directors of said bank, and by reason of their mismanagement, carelessness, neglect, bad faith, and unlawful conduct in the administration of their office, permitted and caused the money, property, assets, and capital of the bank to be squandered, wasted, and loaned upon insufficient security or without security, and the capital stock to-become almost worthless, to such an extent that the bank become embarrassed and insolvent, by reason whereof the comptroller of the treasury of the United States, on the 6th day of February, 1888, seized upon and took possession of the bank, displaced the defendants from the-management and control thereof, and turned over its money, property, and assets to a receiver duly appointed, who proceeded to close out and wind up its affairs according to the laws of the United States. The petition sets forth in detail the acts of the directors complained of, and alleges that from the property and assets of the bank sufficient money was-realized to pay its creditors and depositors in full; and that dividends at different times have been declared and paid to the stockholders, including the plaintiff, of 49 per cent, of the face value of the stock held by them, the dividend to the plaintiff amounting to $4,900.
The petition further alleges that by reason of the acts of the defendants complained of the plaintiff has lost 51 per cent, of the stock so owned and held by him as aforesaid, — that is to say, the sum of $5,100, —for which he prays judgment, with interest and costs.
Four of the defendants have filed answers. The cause is now before the court upon general demurrer on behalf of the defendants Charles M. Holloway and Edward N. Roth. The demurrer is upon the ground that, admitting the facts alleged in the petition, the right of action is in the receiver, and not in the individual stockholders. The precise point
Smith v. Hard, 12 Metc. (Mass.) 371, is a leading case on this point. It was there held: First. That there is no privity, relation, or cornice-' tion between the holders of shares in a bank, in their individual capacity, on one side, and the directors of tho bank on tho other, and that the bank is a corporation and body politic, having a separate existence as a distinct person in law, vested with the entire stock and property thereof, and that its agents, debtors, officers, and servants are responsible to it for all contracts made in reference to its capital, and for all torts and injuries diminishing or impairing it. Second. That the individual members of the corporation have no right or power, jointly or severally, to intermeddle with the property or concerns of tho bank, or call any officer, agent, or servant to account, or discharge them from any liability. Third. That injury done to the capital stock by wasting, impairing, and diminishing its value is not, in the first instance, necessarily a damage to tho stockholders. All sums which could in any form be recovered on that ground would be assets of tho corporation, and would he held in trust to pay the debts of the bank; and it would be only after those debts were paid, and in ease any surplus should remain, that the stockholders would be entitled to receive anything. Fourth. That, strictly speaking, shares in a bank do not constitute a legal estate and property, but rather confer a limited and qualified right upon the stockholders to participate, in the proportion of their holdings, in tho benefit of the common fund vested in the corporation for the common use; that the stockholders interest is a qualified and equitable one, manifested usually by a certificate, which is transferable, and that an injury done to the stock and capital by negligence or misfeasance, is not an injury to such separate interest, but to the whole body of stockholders in common. The opinion was by Chief Justice Shaw. Tie said that if an action could be brought by one stockholder It might bo brought by the holder of a single share, so that for one and tho same default of tire directors there might be as many actions as there were shares.
In Craig v. Gregg, 83 Pa. St. 19, it was held that an individual stockholder could not maintain a separate action at law against the directors of a corporation for damages by reason of the negligence of the directors, and that the remedy must be in a form to protect tho interests of the corporation as the trustee for all its stockholders and the creditors.
So in Allen v. Curtis, 26 Conn. 455, it was held that the directors axe the agents of the corporation, and liable only to it, their principal, for their acts.
In Evans v. Brandan, 53 Tex. 56, a petition by a stockholder in a, corporation for a recovery of damages for himself, and not on behalf oí
It is not necessary to pursue the subject further. The demurrer must be sustained, and the petition dismissed, at the costs of the plaintiff.