101 F. 367 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Oregon | 1900
This is a demurrer to two separate defenses in the amended answer to the complaint of the receiver in an action brought to recover an assessment upon national bank stock held by the defendant. The defense in the original answer was that the defendant was induced by the fraudulent representations of one Browne, president of the bank, and Bruñe, its secretary, to purchase shares in the bank belonging to Browne. It appears from the allegations of the answer that Browne and. Bruñe made various fraudulent representations in respect to the condition of the bank, to the effect that the bank was in a solvent condition, and that it had assets above its liabilities; that its surplus capital amounted to $30,000; that the capital stock of said bank was worth 20 per cent, over and above its face value; that it was not indebted to any one except regular depositors and $10,000 loaned money; that it had loans and discounts that were good and' collectible, amounting to above $122,000; that it owned stocks and securities of the reasonable value of above $15,000, and that there was due the bank from solvent state banks and bankers more than $8,000; that the bank had sufficient assets to pay all of its liabilities of every kind and nature, and both its time and stock deposits, and then leave'over and above after such payments cash sufficient to"pay all the capital stock of the bank and 10 per cent, premium thereon; and it was further represented that the bank was doing a lawful business, and had complied with the laws of the United States and the state of Idaho, and had good credit and standing. .It was alleged that these representations were made for the purpose of deceiving and defrauding the defendant out of a certain tract of land owned by him and situated in the state of Oregon, which land, it was proposed, should be exchanged for the stock in question, and was thereafter so exchanged, .and a conveyance therefor
It .is held that contracts by which a party becomes a stockholder under circumstances such as are set forth in this complaint are not void, but voidable. Upon that doctrine the defendant became a stockholder in the Moscow Bank, and was such at the time the receiver took charge; and, under the rule adopted in some of the cases, the utmost diligence in rescinding the voidable contract will not relieve the unfortunate stockholder if he does not discover the fraud practiced upon him until after proceedings are begun to liquidate the bank’s affairs, and if any “considerable amount of corporate indebtedness” has been created in the meantime. Bank v. Newbegin, 20 C. C. A. 339, 74 Fed. 140, 33 L. R. A. 727. And so in the earlier case of Upton v. Englehart, 3 Dill. 496, Fed. Cas. No. 16,800, it is said that, “if a person has accepted a certificate of stock, and become, to all external appearances, a stockholder, persons may have become creditors of the company on the faith of his membership, and in law are presumed to do so; and, as they cannot know the manner in which he was induced to become a stockholder, there is ground to maintain that as to them the manner is immaterial.” In a recent case, where a stockholder in a national bank sought to avoid liability on the ground that his subscription was induced by fraud, the court says that it is immaterial whether there were creditors of the bank who became such in reliance on the fact that the defendant had become one of its shareholders, since the creditors of a bankrupt company “are entitled to nothing less than its whole outstanding capital stock as a fund for the payment of their claims, and because all persons are in law presumed to extend credit to corporations, and especially to national banks, whose shares are subject to a double assessment, in reliance upon the amount of their issued capital stock, although
I am of the opinion that in exceptional cases, where there is no room for an inference that credit has been given on the faith of the ownership of stock by a defendant, he should he permitted to rescind his agreement of subscription as well when there are creditors as when there are none; that there should he no presumption of law to overcome the fact capable of proof in such a case. My inclination is to follow in the way which seems to be pointed out by the cases cited, and yet, upon the facts so far appearing, this would probably result in great injustice to the defendant. There ought to he no failure of justice, much less an unjust judgment. It appears from the complaint that the defendant was imposed upon by the false representations made to him and contained in the official reports of the president and secretary of the hank as to the bank’s.condition. The defendant lived several hundred, miles from the place where the hank was located. He took no part in its affairs, and had no means of information respecting it sarre through the officers who contrived the imposition practiced upon him. The hank was insolvent at the time of his purchase, and was closed by the comptroller of the treasury, so it is alleged, some 20 days thereafter (although it otherwise appears that some 36 days intervened between the defendant’s pur