17 Utah 252 | Utah | 1898
This is an appeal from a final judgment dismissing plaintiff’s action. It appears that the Cass County Bank was incorporated under the laws of the state of Iowa, where it afterwards did a banking business; that on December 27, 1893, one Isaac Dickerson, a stockholder, obtained an order of the district court of the district in which the bank was situated appointing the plaintiff, Theodore G. Steinke, receiver of its assets, with authority to take possession of all its property, and convert the same into money; to collect all indebtedness due the bank, and bring such suits as might be necessary in so doing, and pay its indebtedness, so far as its assets would go. It also appears that the defendant was the owner of six shares of its stock, of the *par value of $3,000, when the indebtedness of the bank was incurred for which this suit was brought; that the indebtedness of the bank largely exceeds its assets. This suit was brought by the receiver upon the individual liability of the defendant over and above the amount of the stock held by him. The liability which the .plaintiff, as receiver, seeks to enforce, was created by the following statute of the state of Iowa:
“Section 1. That all stockholders and shareholders in associations or corporations organized under chapter one aforesaid, for the purpose of transacting a banking business, buying or selling exchange, receiving deposits of
“Sec. 2. Should the whole amount for which the stockholders are made individually responsible as provided by section one of this act, be found in any case to be inadequate to the payment of all the debts of any such association or corporation, after the application of its assets to the payment of such debts, then the amount due from such stockholders on account of their individual liability created by this act, as such, shall be distributed equally among all the creditors of such corporation in proportion to the amount due to each.”
Secs. 1 and 2, Chapter 208, Acts 18th Gen. Assem. Iowa.
The first section declares the stockholders shall be individually liable to the creditors of the corporation, over and above the amount of their stock, in a sum equal to their respective shares. And in case .the amount of such liability be insufficient after the application of the assets of the corporation, the second section provides the amount of the individual liability of the stockholders shall be distributed equally among all the creditors in proportion to their respective amounts. The first section fixes the liability of the stockholders to pay, and declares it to be due to the creditors, and.not to the bank. That being so, the
When it becomes necessary to resort to the individual liability of the stockholders above the amount of their stock, under a statute similar to the one quoted, the decided weight of authority is to the effect that the suit should be brought by the creditors, though there is a substantial conflict which cannot be reconciled; but we think the more reasonable and better rule is as we have stated it. This disposes of this appeal, and we do not deem it necessary to decide other questions raised and discussed by counsel. The judgment is affirmed, with costs to respondent.