74 Minn. 98 | Minn. | 1898
In the year 1887 the City Bank, a banking corporation under the laws of this state, leased of one Whitten certain premises in the Boston Block, in the city of Minneapolis, for the term of ten years, terminating on May 1, 1897. In January 1896, the City Bank became insolvent, certain creditors instituted insolvency proceedings against it pursuant to the provisions of G. S. 1894, c. 76, a receiver was appointed, and an injunction was issued prohibiting the bank and its officers from transacting any further business. Pursuant to the ordinary proceedings in such a matter, the district court made
Subsequent to the initiation of said proceedings against the City Bank, proceedings were begun by a creditor of said bank against said bank and its said receiver and the stockholders of said bank to enforce, in behalf of the creditors of said bank, the stockholders’ statutory liability, pursuant to the provisions of said chapter 76. Such proceedings were had in said matter that an order of said court was made, requiring the creditors of said bank to intervene in said proceeding; and, pursuant to such proceedings, claimant, Isaac C. Seeley, on August 27, 1897, duly filed his intervening complaint herein, claiming to be a creditor of said bank, and basing said claim upon the same facts as were set forth in his intervening complaint against said bank in the receivership proceedings. The hearing on said claim was had before the said district court on February 19, 1898; and the court found as true all the facts hereinbefore set forth, but, as a matter of law, held that the said Seeley, by reason of said facts, was not a creditor of said bank, and therefore was not entitled to share in any of the assets of said bank.
The question on these appeals is whether, in proceedings under chapter 76, supra, to liquidate an insolvent banking corporation, a lessor of the bank can have allowed as a claim against the estate the amount of damages he has sustained by reason of the breach of its executory contract of leasing. On the argument in this court,
The estate involved in the Kalkhoff case was that of a corporation which was going out of business voluntarily. When the proceedings in which the receiver was appointed terminated, the corporation ceased to exist; and, if the damages sustained by reason of a total breach of the executory contract of leasing were not recoverable in the winding-up proceedings, no part of the same could ever be collected, for by its voluntary dissolution the corporation incapacitated itself from all further business. It was then or never with the lessor. In view of these facts, we feel confident that no one will criticise the conclusion reached in that case; and, if this be so, we simply have to inquire whether there is any practical difference, when considering a claim of this description and the rights of a claimant, between a proceeding to wind up and dissolve an ordinary domestic corporation, instituted by its stockholders in
This brings us to a consideration of the statutory provisions under which the defendant corporation was placed in the hands of a receiver, and is now in process of liquidation (chapter 76, supra). Section 5900 prescribes that,
“Whenever any corporation having banking powers, or the power to make loans on pledges or deposits, or authorized by law to make insurances, becomes insolvent or unable to pay its debts, or neglects or refuses to pay its notes or evidences of debt on demand, or violates any of the provisions of its act or acts of incorporation, or of any other law binding on such corporation, the district court may, by injunction, restrain such corporation and its officers from exercising any of its corporate rights, privileges and franchises, and from collecting or receiving any debts or demands, and from paying out or in any way transferring or delivering to any person, any of the moneys, property or effects of such corporation until such court shall otherwise order.”
Under this section the bank is restrained by injunction from exercising any of its corporate functions until such time as the court may by order relieve it from the absolute prohibition. And while in this condition, and until so relieved, it is as devoid of life and as completely disabled as if it were entirely out of existence. It is possible, under the statute, that the corporation may resume business; but observation and experience teach us that this possibility is extremely remote, and that insolvent financial concerns rarely survive proceedings in liquidation. Indeed, under section 5901, whenever an injunction issues against a bank for a violation of its charter, on the complaint of a creditor, the court is required to proceed to final judgment, and to adjudge a forfeiture of the charter, if the proof be sufficient, even in cases where a settlement has been effected with the complainant. So that, from these and other
If a lease is repudiated, and the leased premises abandoned by reason of the insolvency, there is a total breach of the covenants; for the insolvent can no longer perform its executory contracts, or use any of its property in discharge of its obligations. If so, justice demands that claims of this nature be presented and passed upon in the insolvency proceedings; for unless this be done, and a meritorious claimant- be allowed to share in the distribution of assets, he is entirely without a remedy, unless it should happen that the corporation survives the proceedings and resumes its banking business. Whether it survives depends upon its ability to stand up under proceedings to reduce all of its assets into money, and also to exhaust the liability of its stockholders, and this cannot be ascertained until all opportunity has passed to have claims allowed in the insolvency proceedings; and whether the corporation resumes business, after it has been discovered that something remains with which to resume, is entirely in the hands of the stockholders, and beyond the control of the person who has sustained damages. We hold that when a banking corporation is proceeded against under the provisions of chapter' 76, and its executory contract is repudiated by the receiver, there is a breach of the contract, which the injured party should at once declare to be total, and then proceed to establish his claim for damages against the estate.
Holding, as we do, that upon the breach a cause of action immediately accrued to the lessor for the recovery of all damages, present and prospective, for the loss of the contract, we are brought' to consider the measure of damages. The lessor waited until the term fixed by the lease expired, and then filed a claim for the total rental, less a small sum paid by the receiver for a few days he was in possession after his appointment, and less amounts received from
It follows that under the findings the claimant was entitled to recover nominal damages only, and the court erred in its conclusions of law in not awarding such damages. But this is no ground for a reversal.
Order affirmed.