27 F. 591 | U.S. Cir. Ct. | 1886
This case is now before the court upon the master’s report, made under a decree entered July 3, 1883, whereby he was directed to take proof and report the amount of the debts of the bank still unpaid, and the amount due each creditor thereof; the value of the assets of the bank, if any, aside from the individual liability of the shareholders; and the amount of assessment necessary to be made on each share of capital stock in order to fully pay the indebtedness of the bank. See 17 Fed. Bep. 308. By this report the master has found there is still due and unpaid to the creditors of the bank the sum of $368,971.50 for the principal and interest of said indebtedness up to November 1,1884; that said bank has no assets or funds out of which to pay said indebtedness, except the individual liability of its shareholders, and that said indebtedness requires an assessment of 90 per cent, upon the capital stock of said bank held by the respective shareholders. To this report voluminous exceptions have been filed by several of the shareholders, and upon the argument of these exceptions much of the ground which was considered and discussed upon the former hearing had been again examined. The professional ■ standing of counsel, and their earnestness in pressing a rehearing of their points, has caused me to again consider the questions made, and to some extent review the conclusions announced at the time the interlocutory decree was entered.
As I understand the -counsel, they insist that, under the law as it stood at the time the bank suspended, the remedy of the creditors of the bank was by a suit at law against the shareholders; and while
It is further urged that this bill did not become a proper bill, within tho terms of the statute of 1876, until the amendment of July 23, 1883, at which time a clause was inserted stating that tho bill was filed by complainant in behalf of himself and of all other creditors. The original bill in this case was strictly and technically a creditors’ bill, filed by James Irons as a judgment creditor of the
The question as to the effect of the decree of the discharge in bankruptcy, interposed by the defendants Ira Holmes, Edgar Holmes, M. D. Buchanan, and Pope, has also been rediscussed, and the case of Garrett v. American File Co., 110 U. S. 288, S. C. 4 Sup. Ct. Rep. 90, (decided and reported since this question was formerly up,) is now presented as holding a contrary rule from that which I adopted in disposing of these pleas; but after an examination of that case I do not see that it should in any way be allowed to change the conclusion which I have heretofore announced. The decision upon these pleas was placed mainly upon the peculiar facts in the record.
Counsel for Mr. Charles Comstock have reargued at length the question of the good faith of the transfer of his capital stock. The proof shows that Mr. Comstock appeared by the records of the bank to be the holder of 150 shares of its capital stock on the day the bank closed its doors; but it is claimed that the proof in the case-shows that as early as February, 1873, Mr. Comstock sold 50 shares of his stock to Ira Holmes, and that in June, 1873, he sold 50 shares more; but that, owing to inadvertence or neglect, no transfer was made upon the records or books of the company; and no change of ownership of stock was actually made until the day before the bank suspended, when the original stock was canceled, and new certificates issued to the purchasers. I conclude that, for the purpose of determining the individual liability of a shareholder for the debts of a national bank, he must be construed and held to be such shareholder up to the time there is an actual transfer of his stock upon the books of the bank. So long as the man appears upon the books of the bank to be a shareholder, the presumption of law is that the debts of the bank are contracted upon the faith of his liability as such shareholder; and while it may be a hardship upon Mr. Comstock to enforce this individual liability as to shares which he may have sold in good faith several months before the failure, and when the bank
It is further urged, in support of some of the exceptions taken, that the proof in the ease shows that a large number of the debts of the bank which have been reported by the master have been actually paid out of the assets of the bank, and therefore no longer form a claim against the bank, or against the shareholders. The facts, as I gather them from the proof in the record, are briefly these: The bank, by a resolution of its stockholders, went into liquidation on the twenty-fifth of September, 1873. Ira Holmes, president, was left in charge of its assets, and immediately proceeded to settle with the creditors. The bank had some money, and a large amount of commercial paper, and owed a large amount to its depositors and other creditors. Mr. Holmes made settlements with a great many of these creditors by paying them some money, and turning out to them the commercial paper of the bank. It is now insisted that the testimony of Mr. Holmes shows that this paper was taken in payment of the indebtedness of the bank. It appears, however, that in all cases he either indorsed the commercial paper in the name of the bank, or guarantied it in the name of the bank; and in many cases suits have been brought against the bank upon the guaranties and indorsements thus made, and judgments rendered which have formed the basis of the proof upon which the master has found the amount of indebtedness of such creditors. And it is further urged that Mr. Holmes, from the time the bank went into liquidation, had no authority to bind the bank by an indorsement or guaranty; and that, therefore, these judgments, rendered upon such indorsements and guaranties, are void and inoperative as against shareholders. I am satisfied, however, from the proof, that the creditors who took the commercial paper of the bank did not take it in payment of the indebtedness due them from the bank, but took it as collateral to such indebtedness; and that only so far as such paper has proved collectible, and been made available by such creditors, should it be deemed a payment of the bank’s indebtedness. I do not think the proof justifies the assumption that the creditors of the bank took this paper as absolute payment of their demands, but that they took it to be collected and applied upon their debts.
But if I had any doubt as to the terms on which these creditors took this paper, I should still deem the bank liable, because I have no doubt that Mr. Holmes, the chief executive officer of the bank, had the power to bind the bank and the shareholders by indorsements or guaranties, in the due course of business, as well after the vote to go into liquidation as before. Bank v. Insurance Co., 104 U. S. 54;
The exceptions to the master’s report are overruled, except in so far as they are impliedly sustained by this re-reference to the master.