Rosenback v. Salt Springs National Bank

53 Barb. 495 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1868

By the Court, Mullin, J.

By section 192 of the general banking law of this- state, it was provided'that, the shares of said association should be deemed personal property, be transferable on the books of the association in such *503manner as might be agreed on in the articles of association, and every person becoming a shareholder by such transfer should, in proportion to his shares, succeed to all the rights and liabilities of prior shareholders.

The associations created under said act were,' for almost all purposes, corporations, and the general provisions of the Revised Statutes relating to corporations applied to them, and one of the provisions thus applied empowered such associations to make by-laws not inconsistent with any existing law, for the management of their property, the regulation of their affairs, and the transfer of their stock.

It was held in The Bank of Attica v. The Manufacturers’ and Traders’ Bank, (20 N. Y. Rep. 501,) that a delegation by the articles of association to the directors, of the general powers of the association and the management of its stock, does not authorize a by-law subjecting the stock to a lien in favor of the bank for. the indebtedness of the stockholders ; and it was further held, that a purchaser for value, without notice of such a by-law, had an equitable, title to the stock, free from the lien of the bank.

But when the articles of association provide that the shares of its stock shall not be transferable until the shareholder shall discharge all debts due by him to the association, the association thereby acquires a valid lien on the stock as against an assignee who takes it with knowledge thereof. (Leggett v. The Bank of Sing Sing, 24 N. Y. Rep. 283.)

It was held in Arnold v. The Suffolk Bank, (27 Barb. 424,) that when the articles of association provided for a lien upon stock until the shareholder’s ' debt to the bank was paid, such a lien was valid, and bound the stock.

If the case in hand had arisen under the general banking law of the state, it cannot require argument to show that the defendant had no lien on the plaintiff’s stock. The lien insisted on is created by a by-law, and not by *504the articles of association; so that within the principles of the cases cited, there was no valid lien upon the stock ever created.

The defendant is created under the act of congress, and not under the state law; and it remains to inquire whether the provisions of that act authorize the directors to create a lien in favor of the bank on the stock held by the stockholders for the security of debts due by them to the bank.

The first act passed by congress providing for the ere-, ation of banking associations was passed in 1863, and approved on the 25th February in that year. That act was repealed in 1864, and another act passed, providing for the incorporation of these associations, in 1864, and was approved June 3d of that year.

It will not be necessary to refer to any of the provisions of the former act, except section 36, which provided that no shareholder should have power to sell or transfer any share of stock, held in Ms own right so long as he should be liable, either as principal debtor, surety or otherwise, to the association for any debt which should have become due and remain unpaid; nor should any such stockholder receive any dividend so long as such liabilities should continue; and no stock should be transferred without the consent of a majority of the directors, while the holder thereof was indebted to the association. This clause was not incorporated in the new act, and hence the power to subject stock to a lien in favor of the bank, as security for debts due from the person holding it, to the bank, must be looked for in some other clause or section of the act.

The 5th section of the act of 1864 provided that associations for carrying on the business of banking may be formed by any number of persons, not less than five, who shall enter into articles of association which shall specify in general terms the object for which the association is *505formed, and may contain any other provision, not inconsistent with the provisions of said act, which the association may see fit to adopt for. the regulation of its business and the conduct of its affairs.

Section 8 provides that the associations formed under said act shall be bodies corporate, and shall have a corporate seal, succession, make contracts, sue and be sued as fully as natural persons, elect or appoint officers, and exercise such incidental powers as shall be necessary to carry on the business of banking. The directors have power to define and regulate by by-laws nqt inconsistent with said act, the manner in which its stock shall be transferred, its officers elected or appointed, its property transferred, its general business conducted, and all the privileges granted by said act exercised and enjoyed.

By section 12 the capital stock is declared to be personal property, and transferable on the books of the association in such manner as may be prescribed in the by-laws or articles of association; and every person becoming a shareholder by such transfer shall, in proportion to his shares, succeed to all the rights and liabilities of the prior holder of such shares. .

The more important provisions of the act of 1864, above cited, are substantially the same as those .contained in the banking law of our state. And in the absence of any construction of those provisions by the courts of the United States, we must follow that of our own courts.

Applying to these provisions the principles settled by our courts, we must hold:

1st. That unless the act of congress or the articles of association expressly authorize the directors of a banking association by a by-law to make the stock of any of its stockholders subject to a lien in favor of the bank, as security for a debt due by him to the bank, no such lien can be thus created.

2d. So such power is expressly given; and that it was *506not intended to be given is fairly inferable from the omission to re-enact, in the act of 1864, the clause of the act of 1863, which expressly gave the bank such a lien.

The general power to pass by-laws does not embrace that of creating liens and through the lien a forfeiture. The lien would be worthless unless it could be enforced, and the necessary consequence of enforcing it is a sale of this stock and consequent loss of it to the owner.

How corporations cannot pass by-laws which impose a forfeiture. (See eases cited in the opinion of the court, in the matter of the Long Island R. R. Co., 19 Wend. 37.) In that case the railroad company had, as I infer from the opinion, passed a by-law declaring forfeited the stock of such of its stockholders as should, after notice, fail to pay installments due upon such shares. The court held that, in the absence of express authority to pass such a by-law, none existed, and the forfeiture was void.

But if I am wrong in supposing that the by-law of the defendant is void because it provides for a forfeiture of the plaintiff’s stock, it is nevertheless void because without express authority it attempts to impose a lien upon its stock. (Bank of Attica v. The Manufacturers’ Bank, cited supra.) It is said in that case, and in Leggett v. Bank of Sing Sing, (supra,) that had the power to impose a lien been contained .in the articles of association, it would have been valid. We do not know what is contained in the articles of association, as they are not before us, but it is reasonable to infer that if they contained such a power they would have been produced.

The power to create a lien not being expressly conferred by the act of congress nor by the articles of association, it only remains to inquire whether it is impliedly conferred in any of these provisions of the act of congress which confer other or different powers on the associations than is conferred by the general banking law of the state. Before entering upon the inquiry, it may be proper to *507acertain the intentions of the state and national legislatures in framing the laws under which these banking associations were and are created, and the powers which it was intended to confer upon them.

The legislature that passed the general banking law in 1838 were met, at the very outset of the efforts to establish a new system of banking, by constitutional provisions (§ 9 of art. 3 of the Constitution of 1822) requiring the assent of two-thirds of all the members elected to the legislature to every law creating, continuing or altering a corporation. A majority only could be procured; hence it became indispensable that an act which was to bring into being an indefinite number of associations for banking purposes should be so framed as to deprive them, as far as possible, of the powers usually conferred on coporations, and yet clothe them with such powers as were necessary to enable them to perform the duties which must necessarily devolve on banking institutions. Hence we find that the act does not in terms confer on the associations to be created under it any of the powers of corporations. It gives them only such powers as are absolutely necessary to carry on their business, and as necessarily incident to it they become clothed with others, and indeed with all the usual powers belonging to corporations. In a word, the act was a mere evasion of the constitution. The Supreme Court uniformly held these associations to be corporations. But the Court of Errors, pressed by the mischiefs which would result from declaring them illegal, held them not to be corporations, withing the meaning of the constitution, nevertheless, that court held them to be corporations whenever a question as to their character was before it. As: the act was silent as to the powers which it was intended that these associations should exercise, and as the articles of association which the stockholders were required to file in order to bring the association into existence, might contain any provision *508not inconsistent with the constitution or laws that those framing them might desire to insert therein, these articles, instead of the act, became the charter, and the courts held they might lawfully exercise powers given by the articles, although not enumerated in the general act. It was doubtles on this ground that the Court of Appeals held that a lien on stock was created in favor of the association when the articles provided for it. The articles being in effect a contract between the stockholders, it was right to hold them bound thereby, although the law creating the corporation conferred'.on them no power to make any such contract.

Congress encountered no constitutional obstacle in its way in the passage of the law under which the national banking institutions are created. It intended to create institutions substantially like those created under our banking law. The act of congress of 1863 was, in all its national provisions, like ours, except that its 8th section expressly conferred upon the associations certain powers usually conferred on corporations, such as the power to have a common seal, succession, &c.

The 5th section of the act of 1864 permitted those who filed articles of association to incorporate therein, in addition to the matters required by the act of 1863, any other provisions, not inconsistent with the provisions of said act, which the association may see fit-to adopt for the regulation of its business and the conduct of its affairs. Ho such provision as this was contained in our banking law, and could not be, without subjecting the act, instantly, to the constitutional prohibition.

It cannot be denied, in view of the provisions of the acts of congress above referred to, but that congress intended to create, and has created, bodies corporate, nor but that those bodies are clothed not only with the powers expressly conferred, but also with such others as are necessary to carry into effect those which are thus conferred, and to *509them may, perhaps, be added certain incidental powers Which belonged at common law to all corporations, unless expressly withheld by their charter.

I come now to the question suggested above, viz., whether the power to declare a lien upon stock by means of a bylaw has been incidentally or impliedly conferred on the national banking associations.

The 5th section of the act of 1864 authorized, as I have shown, the incorporation into the articles of association of any other provisions not inconsistent with said act, which the association might see fit to adopt for the regulation of its business and the conduct of its affairs. This provision is broad enough to authorize the creation of a lien in favor of a bank upon the stock of its1 debtors. According to the case of Leggett v. The Bank of Sing Sing, such a lien might be created by the articles without any provision authorizing it in the general law. But the articles contain no such authority, and hence the provisions of the 5th section do not aid the defendant.

The 8th section provides that the board of directors shall have power to define and regulate by by-laws, not inconsistent with the said act, the manner in which its stock shall be transferred, its general business conducted, and all the privileges granted by the act exercised and enjoyed. The authority to regulate the manner of transferring the stock does not embrace the power to create a lien upon it. If it did, then the state banks would have had the power, as the general banking law conferred the same power on the directors of the association. But it is settled that they acquired no such power, under this clause. Indeed, the clause under consideration was never designed to confer any such authority. It is of the highest importance that a corporation should know who are its stockholders, in order- that they may be able to pay dividends to the real owner of the stock, but, also that they may *510know who are entitled to vote at elections, hold the office of directors and contribute in case of loss. These ends can only be attained by enabling the corporation to regulate the manner of transferring the stock. This was the sole object of the clause of the act to which I have referred.

The same section declares that the by-laws may regulate the manner in which its general business shall be conducted. Argument cannot be required to show that this clause does not embrace the power to create a lien on stock. Such a power has no connection with the general business of the corporation. It applies to a very limited class of cases, and to a very small share of the business of the bank, if its affairs are conducted in conformity to the general law.

The section next authorizes by-laws to regulate • the manner in which all privileges granted by the act shall be exercised and enjoyed. This does not contain the grant of any new power, except the. power to make -by-laws in relation to powers expressly granted by the act, or powers which are necessary to carry into effect such express powers, as the power -to create. a lien on stock has not been conferred by any of the other provisions of the statute. This clause does not profess to authorize a by-law to be-made in reference to it.

¥e have, then—1st. The act of congress creating these associations, almost identical with an act of our own legislature, which last mentioned act our own courts have held does not confer on these associations the power to create by by-law a lien on the stock of a stoekholder-indebted to it. 2d. A provision in the act of congress of 1863, declaring such a lien is repealed and omitted from the subsequent act of 1864. 3d. Ho such power is expressly conferred in the act of 1864, nor does it contain any pro vision which, fairly construed, confers any such, power. 4th. The by-law would tend to work a forfeiture, and is *511not, therefore, such an one as the association could adopt under the power which corporations have at common law to pass by-laws.

For these reasons, I am of the opinion that the by-law creating or declaring the lien is void, and furnishes no justification to the defendant for refusing to transfer to the plaintiff the stock in question.

It is not necessary to examine the other question presented by this appeal, viz., whether, if such a lien existed, a loan to a stockholder would not be a loan on the security of the shares' of its own stock, and therefore a violation of the 35th section of the act of 1864, which forbade such a loan.

If the authority was conferred upon the association to declare such a lien by by-law, it would not be in violation of section 35. That section, as well as the one conferring the authority to declare the lien, must, in that event, be so construed as that both shall have effect; and as that could only be done by applying section 35 to express pledges of stock as security for loans, the section would be so construed. Congress must have intended that the two provisions could stand, as in the act of 1863 it expressly gave the bank a lien on the stock for debts due 'by the stockholders, but forbade them to loan on the security of their own stock. I do not perceive, therefore, that any light can be drawn from section 35.

If I was called on to construe that' section separated from all other provisions of the act, I should be of opinion that a loan by an association upon shares of its own stock as security, however a lien upon it as security might be obtained, was forbidden. But as it has been" held that such a lien may be obtained if provided for in the articles of association, it would follow only that such a lien cannot be created by by-law, and the section must, therefore, be *512construed as if it contained the exception of liens created "by the articles of association. For these reasons, I am in favor of affirming the judgment.

[Onondaga General Term, April 7, 1868.

Judgment affirmed, (a)

Foster, Mullin and Morgan, Justices.]

The reporter has been furnished with a note of another case involving the same question discussed in the foregoing opinion, which was decided by the same court at the general term in June, 1869:

Luther H. Conklin and DeWitt C. Peck, assignees of James S. Chandler,, respondents, vs. The Second National Bank, appellant.

In- this case the indebtedness against Chandler did not arise out of loans or discounts made upon the security of his bank stock, but was for a balance on an account current, and mostly for moneys received by Chandler, who was a, banker, upon checks, drafts and notes sent to him for collection. The defendant’s bank claimed to have a lien upon his stock as security for this indebtedness, by force of a by-law of the directors creating such lien, notice of which was indorsed upon the certificates of stock.

Morgan, J. The decision in Rosenback v. The Salt Springs National Bank seems to control this case. The opinion, in' which I concurred, placed the judgment solely upon the ground that the directors had no authority to create-a lien upon the capital stock for debts due from the stockholders to the corporation, unless such authority was expressly conferred by the articles of association. In the case at bar, the articles of association give no such authority to the directors, nor is any such power conferred upon them by the act of "congress. The defendant’s bank claims to hold Chandler’s stoci: as security for-his indebtedness, by force of a by-law of the directors, creating a lien, of which notice is indorsed on the certificates of stock. This claim cannot be distinguished from that set up by the Salt Springs National Bank in the case of Rosenback. It is true, the judgment of the special term in the casq of Rosenback was put solely upon the ground that the debt of Barnes grew out of paper discounted by the bank, on which he was indorser, and that the by-law relied upon as creating a lien upon his stock as security for such debt was within the prohibition* of the 36th section of the act of congress. (15 U. S. Stat. at Large, 110.) I think the judgment of the special term might with propriety have been affirmed upon that ground; but the opinion of Mr. Justice Mullin put the judgment of affirmance upon other grounds, decisive of the case at bar, in which I concurred. I am of the opinion that we ought to affirm this judgment upon the authority of that case.

. Bacon and Mullin, JJ., were for affirmance.

*513Foster, J., dissented, and stated that he contiurred in the judgment in the case of Rosenback v. The Salt Springs National Bank solely upon the ground that the lien claimed in that case was within the prohibition of the act of congress. As the indebtedness of Chandler did not arise out of any .loans or discounts within the prohibition of the 35th section, he was of opinion that the lien claimed by the bank should be adjudged valid.

Judgment affirmed.