72 Miss. 854 | Miss. | 1895
delivered the opinion of the court.
The appellant, Solomon, is one of the joint makers of a note, with the appellee and Weems and Robinson, payable to the order of Haas, Guthman & Co., for the sum of $1,673.30. This note is dated August 16, 1892, and due four months after-date. It was given for the purchase of furniture for the Southern Hotel, in which the interest of the respective parties was: the appellant, 33f per cent.; the appellee, 25 per cent.; Weems, 40 per cent.; and Robinson, If per cent. And, as between themselves, such was the proportion of the note each was to pay. When the note was given, each of the makers, except the bank, placed in the hands of one J. H. Wright securities to be held by him until the party depositing the same should pay his proportion of the note, when Wright was to deliver to him the security he had deposited. Soon after the execution
The resolution of the board of directors declaring the dividend referred to in the pleadings provides that: “The dividend this day declared shall not be paid to any shareholders who may be indebted to the bank and whose indebtedness is not fully secured, but the amount of the dividend to such shareholders shall be entered as a credit on their indebtedness, and that to the shareholders who are not indebted to the bank, certificates of deposit shall be issued bearing interest at the rate of four per cent, per annum from July 1, and payable on January 1, 1893, or before said date, at the option of the bank, said dividend to be paid in above manner on and after July 1. ” At the time this dividend was declared Solomon was not indebted to the bank in any other sum than that evidenced by the note ®f $4,000 executed to the bank by Fewell and Solomon, Solomon being surety thereon for Fewell. This note was dated September 29, 1891, and was due ninety days after date. It was given in renewal of another for a like sum previously executed by the same parties, and the evidence suggests that there had been one or more antecedent renewal notes. What security the bank had for this note when the dividend was declared the evidence does not make clear. When the original note was given Fewell had deposited with the
The original bill in this cause was filed on July 20, 1893. On the thirtieth day of December, 1893, the bank accepted a conveyance from Fewell of the property described in the deed of trust in payment and discharge of the indebtedness it then
On final hearing, the chancellor granted full relief to the complainant and dismissed the cross bill of Solomon.
We think it clear, from the bank’s own showing, that the relief prayed by Solomon by his cross bill should have been granted, and this on either of two grounds:
1. When the dividend was declared, the sum thereby set apart to Solomon was his property, since he owed no debt to the bank except the one evidenced by the note of Fewell on which he was surety, and that was fully secured. The resolution of the board of directors was, therefore, not a limitation upon his right to the dividend, for his debt was not of the class which, in the declaration of the dividend, it was provided should be paid by an appropriation of the dividends. As soon as the dividend was declared and set apart, it became his property, and he might, at the expiration of the period fixed for its payment, have maintained an action therefor. Cook on Stock & Stockholders, §§ 541, 542. Whether a bank has a lien on the dividends to secure the payment of a debt due it by the stockholder in any other sense than as a set-off, is not involved in this cause. The action of the corporate, officers in attempting to appropriate the dividends to a debt fully secured, was in direct opposition to the resolution of the directors, and was an unauthorized denial of a right recognized by the controlling authorities of the bank.
No debt was due by Solomon to the bank after July 6, 1892,
2. The bank was always amply secured by the property of Fewell, the principal debtor, and to this property Solomon had the right to compel it to resort, in exoneration of his liability as surety. This property, primarily chargeable with the payment of the note upon which he was bound, has, pending this litigation, been accepted by the bank at a valuation far above the sum necessary for the full payment of the note on which he was surety, but the credit arising therefrom has been diverted and applied to the payment of a debt due by Fewell, and for which the bank had no security before the deed of trust was executed. This deed was given in substitution of the stock originally held by the bank for the protection of Solomon as surety. The evidence does not show that he agreed to subordinate his claim against this property, or to admit the bank to participate therein for the security of its unsecured debt with which he had no connection and for which he was not bound. The property was supposed to be sufficient to secure both notes, and he consented that both might be inserted in the deed and secured thereby, but, under the circumstances of this case, it is not reasonable to infer that he intended to waive his priority of right to the security it afforded, and there is no evidence tending to show that the bank officers so understood the transaction. The decree dismissing the cross bill is reversed, and a decree will be entered here granting relief according to its prayer. Reversed, and decree here.