delivered the opinion of the court.
This is an action at law against the administrator of the estate of George Hall, deceased, upon bills of ■ the Merchants’ and. Planters’ Bank of Sayannah, Georgia, amounting to over $100,000. The deceased was, on the 1st of January, 1860, and up to .the time of his death, the owner of one thousand shares of the capital stock of that bank, of the nominal value of $100 a share. A clause in the charter of the bank provided that “ the persons and property of the stockholders ” should be liable for- the redemption of its bills and notes at any time issued, in proportion to the number of shares held by them. The plaintiff was the owner of the bills in suit, and as they were not paid on presentation, he brought an action upon them against the bank in the Circuit Court of the United States for the Southern District of Georgia, and recovered judgment, upon which execution was issued and returned unsatisfied. He then brought this action to charge the estate of the deceased, Hall, under the provision of the charter mentioned.
To the declaration the defendant pleaded the general issue and the Statute of Limitations of March 16, 1869, requiring actions for the enforcement of rights of individuals under acts of incorporation or by operation of law, which accrued prior to June 1, 1865, to be brought before the 1st of January, 1870, or be for ever barred. To the special plea the plaintiff interposed a demurrer, and it was agreed in arguing it that the following facts should be considered as set forth in the plea; namely, that George Hall was domiciled in Connecticut, and died there *27 in 1868, leaving a will; that there was no administration in Georgia on his estate until Aug. 9,1869, when letters of administration ad colligendum were granted to' the defendant, Mills; and that permanent letters of administration, with the will annexed, were granted to him on June 7, 1869.
The court sustained the demurrer and struck out the plea. The case was then tried upon the general issue, and the plaintiff- obtained a verdict for the sum of $100,000, of, which sum $31,354 was to be made out of the property of the deceasedj then in the hands of the administrator, and the remainder out of property which might subsequently come into his hands. Upon this verdict, judgment being entered, the defendant brought the case to this court on a writ of error.
The principal questions presented for our consideration are: 1st, whether the statute of March 16, 1869, is a bar to the action; and, 2d, whether an action at law by a bill-holder to charge a stockholder will lie under the charter of the bank; and, if so, whether the declaration will sustain the finding oí the jury.
The statute of March 16, 1869, was intended to bring all claims to an early determination. It was passed, as recited in its preamble, on account of the confusion which had “ grown out of the disturbed condition of affairs during, the late war,” and because of doubts entertained relative to the law of limitation of actions “ which should be put to rest.” It was a measure well calculated to bring disputed controversies to a speedy settlement. The time prescribed within which actions were to be brought was only nine months and fifteen days. In the case of
Terry
v.
Anderson
(
There is in the statute no exception in terms of any class of cases; yet such a construction must be given to its provisions as not to impair the operation of other laws, which it is not reasonable to suppose the legislature intended to repeal. The law of the State relating to the administration of the estates of deceased persons contains various provisions, which in many particulars would be defeated if the statute of March 16, 1869, was held applicable to actions in behalf of the estates or against them. Thus, administrators are allowed twelve months from the date of their qualification to ascertain the condition of the estates confided to their charge ; creditors are required to present their claims within this period; and no suits to recover a debt of the decedents can be brought until its expiration. Sects. 2530, 2518, and 3818. The Supreme Coui’t .of the State has accordingly held that the statute of 1869 does not affect this exemption from suit for the period designated, but that its spirit and equity require that suits against administrators upon the claims mentioned should be brought within a similar period after twelve months from the grant of administration ; that is, within nine months and fifteen days after-wards. Such is the purport of. its decision in
Moravian Seminary
v.
Atwood
(
Whether the present action can be maintained, it being an action at law by a bill-holder to charge the estate of a deceased stockholder, depends upon the construction given to the clause of the charter of the bank, prescribing the personal liability of
*29
the stockholders. The language of the clause, so far as it bears upcfn this case, is .that “ the persons and property of the stockholders shall at all times be liable, pledged, and bound for the redemption of bills and notes at any time issued, in proportion to the number of shares that each individual and corporation may hold and possess.” This provision is held by the Supreme Court of the State to create a personal liability on the part of the stockholder for all the notes of the "bank in the proportion that the shares held by him bear to all the shares of its capital stock, which any bill-holder can enforce, upon the insolvency of the bank, by separate action to the extent of his claim.
Lane
v. Morris,
Be this as it may, where an error in the amount recovered is apparent upon the record, and it could not have been remedied by an amendment of the pleadings, this court will, of its own motion, in the interests of justice, direct that it be corrected, and, if necessary, order a new trial or further proceedings for that purpose.
This cause will, therefore, be remanded to the court below with directions to grant a new trial, unless the plaintiff, within. a period to be designated by the court, consent to remit from the judgment the excess over $40,000; and 'it is
So ordered.
