1 Woods 523 | U.S. Circuit Court for the Southern District of Georgia | 1873
The bill is filed against the City Bank, a corporation under the laws of Georgia, domiciled in the city of Augusta. Joseph C. Fargo, Charles Baker and others, citizens of Georgia. It alleges, in substance, that complainant is the holder of certain bills and notes, to the amount of five thousand, four hundred and forty-six dollars, issued by the City Bank under a charter granted by the legislature of the state of Georgia, which the complainant acquired in the course of his business and for a valuable consideration. That the bank, soon after the issue of the notes, suspended specie payment, ceased to do business and failed to redeem or pay its notes. That after such failure the bank distributed among its stockholders a large amount of gold and silver coin to the amount of $70.000, and also certain other large sums as dividends amounting to $30,-O00. That as late as January, I860, the bank had on hand a reserved fund of $100,000,
To this bill defendants, under the 39th equity rule, which provides that “the defendant shall be entitled in all cases, by answer, to insist upon all matters of defense in bar of or to the merits of the bill of which he may be entitled to avail himself by a plea in bar,” have filed an answer in which they set up in bar of the complainant’s claim, the statute of limitation passed by the legislature of Georgia, approved March 16, 1869, entitled “an act in relation to the statute of limitations, and for other purposes” (Laws Ga. 1869,' p. 133), and also the general statute of limitations. The complainant has excepted to the answer as evasive, imperfect and insufficient in refusing to answer a part of the interrogatories and in not fully answering others. These exceptions present the question. whether the statute of limitations, pleaded by defendants, is a bar to the relief claimed; for if it is a bar, it excuses the defendants from further answer.
That part of the answer which sets up the limitation is in these words: “To all the charges in said bill, touching dividends of any kind declared by said City Bank, or the disposal of its assets by said bank, save the said assignment, defendants decline to answer, because they say that none of said dividends were declared, nor any payments or transfer of money dr assets, made by said bank to its stockholders, at any time after the 31st day of May, 1865. And all the bills held by complainant were issued before said last named date, and none since that time, and that at said last named date, and continuously since that time, said bank has been notoriously insolvent, and had and ever since has ceased to transact business or to keep any banking office or place of business, and all said bills have since that time ceased to circulate as money. Wherefore, defendants claim the benefit of the act of limitation aforesaid.”
The provisions of the statute on which this answer is founded, are as follows:
“¡See. 3. And be it further enacted, that all actions on bonds or other instruments under seal, and all suits for the enforcement of rights accruing to individuals or corporations under the statutes or acts of incorporation,*288 or in any way by operation of law which accrued prior to June 1, 1865, not now barred, shall be brought by January 1, 1870, or the right of the party plaintiff or claimant and all right of action for its enforcement shall be forever barred.”
“Sec. 6. And be it further enacted, that all other actions upon contracts express or implied, or upon any debt or liability whatsoever, due the public, or a corporation or a private individual or individuals, which accrued prior to the first day of June, 1865, and are not now barred, shall be brought by January 1, 1870, or both the right and the right of action to enforce it shall be forever barred. All limitations hereinbefore expressed shall apply as well to courts of equity as courts of law, and the limitations shall take effect in all cases mentioned in this act, whether the right of action had actually accrued prior to the 1st of June, 1865, or was then only inchoate and imperfect if the contract or liability was then in existence.”
The terms of these sections are very broad, but it is claimed by the complainant that they do not apply to bank bills. A recent decision of the supreme court of Georgia, to which our attention has been called, is adverse to this position. In Kimbro v. Bank of Fulton [49 Ga. 419], of which only the head note is furnished, and which is not yet reported in full, it was held as follows: “The general rule is, that statutes of limitation do not apply to bank bills, because they are, by the consent of mankind and course of business, considered as money, and that their date is no evidence of the time when they were issued. If bills have ceased to circulate as currency, and have ceased to be taken in and reissued by the banks, they no longer have that distinctive character from other contracts, which excepts them from the operation of the statute of limitations. If tne bills of the Bank of Fulton had thus lost their distinctive character prior to the 1 st of June, 1865, they come within the provisions of the act of March 16, 1869, entitled ‘An act in relation to the statute of limitations, and for other purposes.’ ”
The averments of the defendant’s plea bring this case within the rule thus laid down. In Leflingwell v. Warren, 2 Black [67 U. S.] 603, it was held by the United States supreme court that the construction given to a statute of limitations by the supreme court of a state will be followed by the federal courts. We are therefore constrained to hold upon this point with the decision of the supreme court of Georgia. And we may add, that decision has our full concurrence.
It is insisted further, by the complainant, that the bill charges fraud, and the statute does not apply to frauds. Under the general statute of limitations of this state (Irwin’s Code, § 2880), it is provided that if the defendant, or those under whom he claims, has been guilty of fraud by which the j)laintiff had been debarred or deterred from his action, the period of limitation shall run only from the time of the discovery of the fraud. There is no such provision in the act under consideration, and the most .the complainant can fairly claim is that the general provision applies. Conceding, as we do, this to be the fact, the complainant fails entirely to bring his case within the exception by the averments of his bill. There is no charge that by the fraud of defendants he has been debarred or deterred from his action. We think that, by the 6th section of the act, an action on the bills is barred against the .bank itself. The terms of this section are as broad as language can make them: “All actions upon contracts, express or implied, or upon any debt or liability whatsoever, due the public, or a corporation or a private individual or individuals, which accrued prior to June 1, 1865, and are hot now barred, shall be brought by the 1st of January, 1870, or both the right and the right of action to enforce it shall be forever barred.” This language leaves no loop hole of escape. A fortiori, if the action on its bills against the bank itself is barred, an action against the stockholders on the bills, j based on the averments made in the bill of complaint, must also be barred.
The complainant assails the statute for unconstitutionality, and criticises its provisions. We think that the details of a statute of limitations are wholly within the discretion of the legislative power, with a single limitation only, that no such act can impair the obligation of contracts. The act under consideration provides, that upon all contracts or liabilities which existed prior to June 1,1865, an action should be brought within nine months and fifteen days from the passage of the act, or be forever barred. Does this impair the obligation of contracts, or is it only a change of the remedy? If the latter, it is not forbidden by the constitution. It is well established that the legislature may shorten the time for the running of the statute of limitations without impairing the obligation of the contract; that such legislation affects the remedy only. The only restraint upon this power is, that reasonable time must be allowed, after the passage of the law, to allow the bringing of actions. A limitation, so short- as to practically cut off all actions, would affect the contract as well as the remedy, and be void. Here is a statute which applies to contracts and liabilities which had existed nearly four years, and which allowed over nine months in which to bring suit. This appeared to the legislature a reasonable time, and, in regard to the class of contracts to which it applies, it seems reasonable to us. It may be fairly held to change the remedy merely, and not to impair the obligation of the contract.
We are of opinion, then, that the statute pleaded is constitutional; that it bars the claim of complainant, and that the answer setting it up in response to certain parts of
To that part of the bill which alleges an assignment of the assets of the bank, and calls upon the assignee to account for the trust funds, the defendants set up in their answer the decree of the superior court of Richmond county, which is also mentioned in the bill, distributing the funds of the bank and discharging the assignee. There are no sufficient averments of fraud or collusion, in the bill, to render the decree void; and, as it was a creditor’s bill to settle a trust, all creditors are parties, if they were brought in by publication, according to the laws of Georgia. Story, Eq. PI. §§ 103, 106.
There is no averment that complainants were not notified, according to law, of the pendency of the bill, nor is a copy of the record attached to the bill. Without other and further averments, we must hold the decree binding on complainants. The setting up of the decree in the answer excuses defendants from further answer to that part of the bill to which the averments relative to the decree apply.
The answer appears to us to be a complete defense to the case made by the bill, and that it is in all respects sufficient. The exceptions must, therefore, be overruled.