148 Ga. 719 | Ga. | 1919
The Court of Appeals desires instruction from the Supreme Court upon the following questions:
“1. In a suit brought by the receivers of an insolvent bank, chartered under the laws of Georgia since the act of 1893 (Acts 1893, p. 70), against a stockholder thereof upon his statutory individual liability to depositors of the bank (Civil Code of 1910, § 2270), is the defendant entitled to set off the amount of his own individual deposit which he had in the bank when it became insolvent and ceased to operate?
“2. In such a suit as is referred to in the preceding question, can the defendant set off the amount of money which, subsequently to the insolvency and the closing of the bank but prior to the commencement of the suit against him, he voluntarily paid to other depositors of the bank, to reimburse them for the loss, of their deposits?”
The act of the General Assembly, approved December 18, 1894 (Acts 1894, p. 76; Civil Code of 1910, §§ 2247-2250), deals with the individual charter liability of a stockholder in any bank or other corporation. Section 3 of that act (Civil Code of 1910, § 2249) declares such individual liability to be “an asset of such bank or other incorporation, to be enforced by the assignee, receiver, or other officer having the legal right to collect, marshal, and distribute the assets of such failed bank or other corporation.” Stockholders in a bank incorporated under the laws of this State since the passage of the act of 1893 (Acts 1893, p. 70) are indi