76 F. 388 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Washington | 1896
In support of their motion to remand, the plaintiff’s attorneys have argued that the supposed federal question is not now a debatable question, — the same having been decided, and the law settled, by the supreme court of the United States, — and they have cited the following cases: Bank v. Kentucky, 9 Wall. 363, 364; Waite v. Dowley, 94 U. S. 527-534. It is true that the opinion of the supreme court in each of the cases cited lays down general principles which, in my opinion, must control the decision of the federal question in this case. But the supreme court, like any other court, makes its decisions to fit the particular facts of th,e cases presented; and, when general rules are given, the application thereof to other cases- involving different facts may be questioned.
The points advanced in support of the demurrer are: First. The constitution does not create a right of action in favor of an individual depositor whose money has been taken in by an insolvent bank, and, until there shall be supplemental legislation providing means to enforce the same, this section of the constitution lies dormant. Second. All depositors similarly situated have equal rights with the plaintiff, and as they are all creditors of the bank, and represented by the receiver, the right of action, if any, exists only in favor of the receiver, for the benefit of all.
It is my opinion that the obvious intent and purpose of the people of this state, as expressed in the section of the constitution under consideration, were to insure honesty in conducting the business of the moneyed institutions of the state, and the greatest possible degree of security to those who should become depositors therein; and to the extent of establishing permanently a rule of individual responsibility for losses resulting from bad faith, or deceit practiced in dealing with customers of a bank, it was intended to not rely upon the legislature to make suitable laws. The section reads as follows (article 12, § 12):
“Any president, director, manager, cashier, or other officer o£ any banting institution who shall receive or assent to the reception of deposits after he shall have knowledge of the faet that such hanking institution is insolvent or in failing circumstances, shall he individually responsible for such deposits so received.”
This fixes individual responsibility clearly enough, and there is no necessity for legislation providing special means for its enforcement, since the general laws of the state are amply sufficient in affording a remedy by civil action for every case in which one person becomes legally responsible to another. The responsibility in such cases is not in favor of the state, nor the bank, nor its general creditors. It is for the benefit of those particular depositors whose money is taken under such circumstances as to constitute a fraud. The injury done by the fraudulent conduct of the bank officials is the basis of liability, and the injured party is the one entitled to redress. Therefore the right of action upon the liability does not inure to the bank, nor become an asset of the bank which a receiver is entitled to control. This case is clearly distinguishable from Wilson v. Book, 33 Wash. 676, 43 Rac. 939, in which the supreme court of this state held that the additional liability imposed upon stockholders by the eleventh section of article 12 of the constitution is not a primary liability, but the stockholders of banking corporations are, to the extent prescribed, liable as sureties for the debts of the corporation, and that creditors cannot sue; them to enforce such limited liability without having first exhausted their remedy against the principal debtor, and that money collectible from stockholders belongs to the trust fund for the payment of debts, which a receiver of an insolvent bank.