176 S.E. 860 | W. Va. | 1934
This suit was brought in the circuit court of Monongalia County to recover from the defendant trustees a double assessment laid upon $4,300.00 par value of their stock in Federal Savings and Trust Company. After a demurrer to the bill of complaint was overruled, a directed *476 judgment was rendered for the plaintiff in the amount sued for.
The question presented upon this appeal is whether the demurrer to the plaintiff's bill should have been overruled. The single proposition advanced to sustain the demurrer is that the demand sued upon is a bare legal demand, and that the remedy at law is full, adequate and complete. To this proposition, which, upon its face, appears to be sound, the plaintiff, to sustain his bill of complaint, replies that the legislature, by Code, 31-8-32, has conferred upon courts of chancery the right to hear and determine suits for the recovery of the "double" assessment of stockholders in banks, whether those suits be against many or only one. The defendant then says that, granting by way of argument that the purpose of the legislature was to confer chancery jurisdiction, the legislature was without power to do so because of the constitutional provision preserving the right of trial by jury in actions at common law. (Section 13, Article III, Const.) Then the plaintiff says that the claim sued on is a liability created by the very constitution in which the provision invoked by the defendant (preservation of the right of trial by jury) is contained, and that although the right here asserted rests in contract, it is a creature of the constitution and not of the common law, and, therefore, since no right of trial by jury as to that right could have existed at the time of the adoption of the constitution (as no such right of action then existed) that it does not fall within that class of cases with referance to which the right of trial by jury was intended to be preserved.
The legislature, in the absence of constitutional inhibition, has the power to confer jurisdiction upon courts of equity even in the case of purely legal demands. The only inhibition of that power is the constitutional provision preserving right of trial by jury. It is to be observed that the right of trial by jury is not conferred by the constitution; that right is simply preserved as it existed at common law when the constitution was adopted. Without doubt, this right of trial by jury existed as to *477 legal demands at common law. Therefore, as to such legal demands at common law, since the right of trial by jury existed at the time of the adoption of the constitution, it would seem clear that that right must continue, and that it cannot be infringed by the legislature by transferring jurisdiction to courts in chancery, where no jury trial as a matter of right, and as at common law, exists. The first problem presented in this case seems to be the question of whether the right sought to be asserted in this bill is a right as to which the defendant would be entitled to trial by jury at the time the constitution of West Virginia was adopted.
This court has already held that the right to collect double assessments against stockholders of insolvent banks is not a penalty, but that it grows out of contract. Pyles v. Carney,
We think that the legislature could place jurisdiction in courts of chancery to hear and determine suits of this nature without abrogating the right of trial by jury where that right had existed prior to the adoption of our constitution. In the case of Pollard v. Bailey, 20 Wallace 520,
Having determined that the legislature could, if it chose, confer chancery jurisdiction to hear and determine suits brought against a single stockholder of a bank to collect the amount of the double assessment on his stock without violating the provisions of section 13 of Article III of the Constitution, the remaining question is: Did the statute in question confer that jurisdiction?
Section 32 of article 8 of chapter 31 of the Code contains the following language:
"If it shall appear that the assets of such insolvent institution or other corporation are not sufficient to pay in full all of its creditors and depositors without waiting to administer the assets of such institution or other corporation or delaying for any other cause in the same suit or in separate suits to be forthwith instituted in the same or any other jurisdiction in his name, the receiver, under the authority of the Commissioner of Banking, shall collect from each of the several stockholders of such institution or other corporation all sums for which *480 they are severally liable to such institution or other corporation for the benefit of its creditors."
While this language, it must be admitted, contains no express grant of chancery jurisdiction, it, nevertheless, in our opinion, imports such jurisdiction by unmistakable intention. It speaks of suing the stockholders (plural) in the same suit. This could be done only in chancery. It then says that the liability may be enforced in separate suits, and no reason appears for believing that a different jurisdiction is intended from that provided for suing all the stockholders. The word "suit" itself is indicative of chancery jurisdiction, as the word "action" indicates jurisdiction at law. Furthermore, we believe that the intent to confer jurisdiction upon the chancery courts is borne out by the recent history of this provision. Under the former act (section 81-A of chapter 54 of the 1923 Code), the provision was that "a suit for such purpose may be instituted against resident stockholders", etc. In the case of Finnell v. Bane,
For the reasons stated, the judgment of the circuit court of Monongalia County is affirmed.
*481Affirmed.