218 Wis. 126 | Wis. | 1935
The following opinion was filed March 5, 1935 :
Plaintiff sued to recover judgment against the defendant, a national bank, for the recovery, with costs and disbursements of this action, of the amount of a certificate of deposit, issued by the defendant to the plaintiffs, and which had become due and was owing to the plaintiffs. Defendant, in its answer, admitted that due demand for the payment of the certificate had been made, and that it has not been paid. As the answer did not controvert plaintiffs’ allegations that the amount of the certificate, with interest, was due and owing to plaintiffs, those allegations must be deemed admitted and true.. Sec. 263.26, Stats. However, defendant, in connection with other matters stated by way of defense in defendant’s answer, alleged that on May 29, 1933, its stockholders adopted a due resolution of dissolution, and that it is thereby barred from paying any depositor, including the plaintiffs, any sums except such as are their share of a ratable distribution of the proceeds of liquidation under such dissolution, which share defendant is ready to pay and expects to pay, as and when payable.
The sufficiency of facts thus alleged to defeat plaintiffs’ right to have judgment, in this action for the present payment to them of defendant’s admitted indebtedness on the certificate of deposit, was challenged by the plaintiffs demurring to the answer on the ground that it does not state facts sufficient to constitute a defense.
Under the federal statutes, §§ 181, 182, of title 12, USCA, pp. 265, 272; sec. 5220 et seq., R. S. U. S., and the federal decisions in relation to the voluntary closing and liquidation of a national bank by the vote of its stockholders, and the notice of intent to dissolve which must be given and which must notify “the holders of its notes and other creditors
The decisions by the federal courts, in relation to voluntary dissolution and liquidation proceedings of national banks under federal statutes, which are reviewed and cited in Merchants’ National Bank v. National Bank of Lillington (D. C.), 231 Fed. 556, and in Steele v. Randall (C. C. A.), 19 Fed. (2d) 40, establish that the following propositions are applicable to such proceedings:
(1) The action of stockholders in appointing a liquidating agent pursuant to the powers conferred upon them by §§ 181, 182, of title 12, USCA, pp. 265, 272; sec. 5220 et seq., R. S. U. S., is treated by the courts as equivalent to, and carrying all of the incidents in respect to the assets and the rights of creditors as the making of a voluntary deed of assignment would do; and it would be impossible to comply with those statutes and effectuate their equitable purpose if creditors were permitted to secure priorities or liens by attachment or recovering judgments constituting liens upon the property.
(2) Immediately upon going into such liquidation, the assets of the bank become a trust fund for the payment of its debts pro rata, and no liens can be created thereafter either by the bank or by the rendition of judgments; but valid liens which existed at the time such liquidation went into effect, or because a court has by injunction or otherwise assumed control of the property, will be preserved.
(3) If those who are in charge of the liquidation, including the comptroller, are satisfied with the proof which is fur
In view of those established principles, the defendant’s allegations as to the dissolution and pending liquidation of the defendant, are sufficient to constitute a defense to the recovery by plaintiffs of a judgment herein which would entitle them to the present payment of their undisputed claim, and which would constitute a lien upon defendant’s property for the full amount of that claim. Consequently, to the extent of preventing plaintiffs from obtaining a judgment to that effect, the facts alleged constitute a defense, and plaintiffs’ demurrer was rightly overruled.
By the Court. — Order affirmed.
A motion for a rehearing was denied, with $25 costs, on April 30, 1935.