The Goldsboro Savings and Trust Company closed its doors on 19 December, 1930. About eleven months before this date S. B. Moore, who owned five shares of its capital stock, for the purpose of transferring this stock to his nephew, M. S. Moore, delivered his certificate to the bank and the bank immediately recorded on its books a cancellation of the certificate and in lieu thereof issued another certificate for the same stock to M. K. Moore, as trustee for M. S. Moore. At that time the bank was solvent; the stock had a market value of $75 a share; the transfer was made in good faith; and the trustee named in the latter certificate is the father and natural guardian of the minor. The appeal brings up for review the single question whether the assessment made against S. B. Moore on 10 September, 1931, is enforceable in law.
The stockholders of a bank organized under the laws of North Carolina are individually responsible, equally and ratably, and not one for another, for all contracts, debts, and engagements of the corporation to the extent of the amount of their stock therein at its par value, in addition to the amount invested in such shares. The Commissioner of Banks, within the time prescribed by statute, may levy an assessment equal to the stock liability of each stockholder in the bank and shall file a cojty of such levy in the office of the clerk, which, when recorded and indexed, shall have the effect of a judgment of the Superior Court and may be enforced by execution. N. C. Code, 1931, secs. 218(c), (13), 219(a).
Stock in a bank, as in any other corporation, is generally transferable, but whether the transfer is effective against creditors of the bank must be determined upon the facts of each case. It is an established rule of law that a transfer of stock in a corporation must be made to a person who is not only legally capable of holding the stock but is legally bound to respond when an assessment is made; not legally bound, necessarily, in the sense that he will be financially able to meet the liability but in the sense that he is legally capable of assuming the obligation.
Aldrich v. Bingham,
This provision is not restricted to trustees appointed by will or by an order of court; it extends to every trust relation, however created.
Trust Co. v. Jenkins, supra; Lucas v. Coe,
In
Corporation Commission v. Latham,
The appellee lays stress upon a clause in section 219(d) exempting those who in good faith and without intent to evade liability transfer their stock “to any person of full age”; but without regard to the question whether a stockholder’s liability is statutory or contractual we learn from the agreed statement of facts that the controverted transfer of stock was not made directly to a minor but to a trustee of “full age,” who was qualified to perform all the duties required of him in his fiduciary relation.
Our conclusion is that S. B. Moore is exempt from liability to assessment as a stockholder in the bank. Judgment
Beversed.
