38 S.W.2d 863 | Tex. App. | 1931
The point presented for decision is that of whether or not the cause of action was barred by the statute of limitations. The answer depends, first, on how the action should be classified. The asserted right of action is founded solely on article 533, R.S. 1925, which is as follows: "No president, director, manager, cashier or other officer or agent of any bank or banking institution organized and doing business under the provisions of this article shall receive or assent to the reception of deposits, or create or assent to the creation of any debts by such bank after he shall have knowledge of the fact that it is insolvent or in failing circumstances. Every person violating the provisions of this article shall be individually responsible for such deposits so received and all debts so contracted. Any director who may have paid more than his share of the liabilities mentioned in this article may have the proper remedy at law against such other persons as shall not have paid their full share of such liabilities. In case of the insolvency of one or more of such officers, agents or managers, the same shall be paid for the time being by those who are solvent, in equal proportion." The article is clear in the nature and purpose of its adoption, to impose upon the bank's officers and directors, as such, the legal liability of becoming "individually responsible" when the special circumstances stated occurs, to pay to the specially named depositors "such deposits so received" by "such bank." The word "deposits" as used is descriptive of the obligation assumed by the bank with the assent of the officers and directors "violating the provisions of this article." A general deposit is, in truth, but a loan of money to a bank and the relationship of the bank to the depositor is legally regarded as that of debtor and creditor. Baker v. Kennedy,
Under the tests stated, undoubtedly the statute in the present case does create the duty or obligation upon the officers and directors to pay the deposit received by the bank for whom they assume to act, though independently of the statute the law does not imply any obligation upon the officers and directors to pay the debt; nor, independently of the statute, could any right of action for the debt of the bank be maintained by the creditors of the bank. Therefore the liability thus imposed should be classed as in the nature of a statutory liability imposed upon the officers and directors to personally pay the debt of the bank due by it to the plaintiff, a depositor creditor. It is a cause of action for a money judgment and the obligation is to pay money only.
What period of limitation, then, is applicable to the case of liability as here provided? There appears a great variety of decided cases in relation to different statutes of limitation which have been applied to actions of debt created partly by statute and partly by contract, as well as to debts *865
created solely by statute. Article 5529 fixes four years as the period applicable for "every action other than the recovery of real estate, for which no limitation is otherwise pre scribed." Another provision, subdivision 4, article 5526, fixes two years as the period applicable for "actions for debt where the indebtedness is not evidenced by a contract in writing." In the case of Corsicana National Bank v. Johnson,
The case cited of McCord v. Nabours,
The judgment is affirmed.