delivered the opinion of the Court.
Stockholders in banking corporations, charged with personal liability, contend that a statute of Maryland defining the form of liability and its measure offends against the Constitution of the .United States by impairing the obligation of contracts previously made.
*177
In No. 298, the liability in controversy is that of stockholders in the Peoples Banking Company of Smithsburg, which was incorporated under the laws of Maryland, January 24, 1910, and closed its doors June 29, 1931. The Bank Commissioner of the state, after being appointed receiver, filed a petition with a Circuit Court in Maryland for an order assessing the stockholders of record in an amount equal to 100% of the par value of their shares. An order was made accordingly in conformity with the provisions of Acts, 1910, Chapter 219 (Code of Maryland, Article II, § 72). Thereafter the appellants filed petitions for the revocation of the order, alleging the invalidity of the statute imposing liability, and alleging also that those of them who had paid the assessments before joining in the petitions had done so by mistake. At the date of liquidation appellants were the holders of over 2000 shares of stock. Thirteen appellants had become the holders of a relatively small portion of these shares (345) before the enactment of the applicable statute. Nearly all the appellants were depositors in the insolvent bank and were thus creditors as well as stockholders. The Circuit Court for Washington County, Maryland, granted the petitions, holding the statute void as an impairment of existing contracts. The Court of Appeals reversed, and adjudged the statute valid.
Ghingher
v.
Bachtell,
In No. 299, the liability in controversy is that of stockholders in the Hagerstown Bank and Trust Company, which was incorporated in 1902. The trust company was closed in February, 1933, and in January, 1935, an order was made for the assessment of all the stockholders to the extent of 100% of the par value of their shares, provided that no good cause was shown to the contrary within a stated time. The appellants in this case, unlike some of the appellants in No. 298, acquired
*178
their shares after the enactment of the 1910 statute. Even so, they appeared within the time limit in opposition to the assessment, asserting that the statute was invalid as to them. The Circuit Court of Washintgon County sustained their opposition, and the Court of Appeals reversed.
Ghingher
v.
Kausler,
The questions in the two' cases will be considered separately.
First: The case of the Peoples Banking Company of Smithsburg.
The Constitution of Maryland provides that “the General Assembly shall grant no charter for Banking purposes . . . except upon the condition that the Stockholders shall be liable to the amount of their respective share or shares of stock in such Banking Institution, for all its debts and liabilities upon note, .bill or otherwise.” Maryland Constitution, 1867, Article III, § 39. This provision was effective without more to impose a substantive liability upon stockholders in banks.
Ghingher
v.
Bachtell, supra,
pp. 688, 690. On the other hand, it did not take from the legislature the power to implement the liability with statutory remedies, nor in the absence of such statutes did it take that power from the courts.
Ghingher
v.
Bachtell, supra.
In January, 1910, when the. Smithsburg bank was organized, the only applicable statute was Chapter 206 of the Acts of 1870. The Act shows by its title that it is one “to create State Banking Institutions to enable the several Banks in this State— State and National — to avail of the provisions thereof.” It provides (§ 11) that “the continuance of the said several corporations shall be on the condition that the stockholders and directors of each of said corporations shall be liable to the amount of their respective share or shares of stock in such corporation, for all its debts and
*179
liabilities upon note, bill or otherwise, and upon this further condition, that this Act and every part of it may be altered from time to time, or repealed by the Legislature.” . The Maryland courts have held in a series of decisions that the liability thus recognized was not en-forcible by the bank itself in the event of its insolvency, or by a liquidator or receiver suing in its behalf.
Ghingher
v.
Bachtell, supra; Miners Bank
v.
Snyder,
In June, 1910, less than five months after the incorporation of this bank, a statute was enacted, abrogating the remedy uPder the then existing statute and substituting another. Acts of 1910, c. 219; Maryland Code, Article II, § 72 “Stockholders of every bank and trust company shall be held individually responsible, equally and ratably, and not one for another, for all contracts, debts and engagements of every such corporation, to the extent of the amount of their stock therein, at the par *180 value thereof, in addition to the amount invested in such stock . . . and the liability of such stockholders shall be an asset of the corporation for the benefit ratably of all the depositors and creditors of any such corporation, if necessary to pay the debts of such corporation, and shall be enforceable only by appropriate proceedings by a receiver, assignee or trustee of such corporation acting under the orders of a court of competent jurisdiction.” A like remedy had previously been created against stockholders in trust companies. Acts of 1904, c. 101; Acts of 1908, c. 153. Through these amendatory acts, the cause of action formerly enforcible by the creditors separately, each suing for himself, became en-forcible by the receiver as the representative of all. As a consequence of the new procedure, the assessment was to be laid upon all the holders of shares at the time of liquidation without reference to their relation to the bank at the creation of the debts, though stockholders dropping out sooner might escape a liability which under the earlier law would have clung to them indefinitely. Moreover, offsets and counterclaims were no longer to be available to reduce the several assessments and thus establish inequality. Stockholders when sued by the receiver would contribute to the fund ratably, and then prove their claims against the bank in the same way as other creditors. Such in outline is the effect of the statutory changes as the highest court of Maryland has defined them in this very case.
Do changes of that order impair the obligation of a contract between the corporation and the stockholders in contravention of the provisions of the Constitution of the United States?
The answer must be “no,” and this for two reasons, first, because the changes are directed to the implementing remedies rather than the substantive liability, and second, because a change of substantive liability was *181 made permissible by the reservation of a power of alteration or repeal.
(1) The obligation laid upon the shareholders by the Maryland Constitution, though susceptible of legislative and judicial regulation in respect of the mode of its enforcement, was a substantive liability to which every stockholder subjected himself upon the acquisition of his stock. The legislature did not exhaust the measure of that constitutional liability by the creation of a particular remedial device. The remedy adopted was interpreted judicially as having in view a suit by a creditor against the particular group of stockholders who had undertaken by implication to answer for his debt. This does not mean that a different form of remedy, for example a suit by a receiver, would have been a departure from the Constitution, if the statute had prescribed that method of enforcement. The broad but indefinite words of the constitutional command gave permission to the legislature to establish any remedies reasonably appropriate to the general end in view. Cf.
Whitman
v.
Oxford National Bank,
The remedy first established was found to be unworkable.
Ghingher
v.
Bachtell, supra,
at p. 692;
Murphy
v.
Wheatley,
(2) The result would not be different if the effect of the statutory amendments were, to be viewed as an enlargement of the substantive liability for debts after-wards contracted, the enlargement being applicable to stockholders without exception, present as well as future. The charter was accepted subject to the condition that the personal liability then prescribed by statute should be subject thereafter to repeal or alteration. This court has held that when such a condition attaches to a charter, there is no unconstitutional change of the obligation of a contract by a subsequent enlargement of the liability of stockholders as to debts afterwards contracted, though the shares so affected were acquired before the change was made.
Sherman
v.
Smith,
*184
Sherman
v.
Smith, supra,
left unanswered an inquiry (
What has been written is not at war with anything decided or even intimated in
Coombes
v.
Getz,
Second: The case of the Hagerstown Bank and Trust Company.
As already pointed out, all the complaining stockholders in this company acquired their shares after the adoption of the Act of 1910, with its new remedial devices. What has been said as to the stockholders in the Peoples Banking Company of Smithsburg applies with redoubled force to the stockholders in the trust company.
The decree in each case should be
Affirmed.
Notes
“The authority of a state under the so-called reserved power is wide; but it is not unlimited. The corporate charter may be repealed or amended, and, within limits not now necessary to define, the interrelations of state, corporation and stockholders may be changed; but neither vested property rights nor the obligation of contracts of third persons may be destroyed or impaired.” Coombes v. Getz, supra, pp. 441, 442.
