156 S.E. 751 | W. Va. | 1931
From a judgment on a directed verdict, rendered May 23, 1930, defendant Higginbotham prosecutes error.
Defendant owned 42 shares of stock in the Bank of Jacksonburg on July 29, 1929, the date of the appointment of plaintiff as receiver for the bank, and on September 24, 1929, the commissioner of banking assessed against each stockholder owning stock on June 22, 1929, the full "double liability" of stockholders, the bank being insolvent. This action is to recover against defendant the sum thus assessed.
The bank was chartered in 1903 with an authorized capital stock of $25,000.00, divided into 250 shares of the par value of $100.00 each. Defendant acquired fifteen shares in 1908 fifteen shares in 1909, one share in 1912, and eleven shares in 1921, making 42 shares, all of which he owned when the receiver was appointed.
On June 22, 1929, the board of directors passed a resolution by which it turned over to the commissioner of banking all of the bank's assets and liabilities for liquidation, and immediately an assistant commissioner took charge, closed the doors, found the capital impaired, and that the assets were not sufficient to pay the liabilities due to losses, embezzlement and a "run" on the bank. Defendant was duly notified of the assessment, made September 24, 1929, and payment requested. Upon his failure to pay, this suit was promptly instituted to December Rules, 1929.
Upon the trial of the issue raised by defendant's plea ofnil debit, defendant attempted to show by plaintiff's witnesses that the bank had sufficient assets, including liability of the directors (alleged to be an asset), to pay the liabilities without resorting to collection of the stockholder's statutory "double" liability. The trial judge refused to allow the question of solvency of the bank to go to the jury, holding that the banking statute vested in the commissioner of banking *11
the power to determine the question of insolvency. The refusal of the court to allow the assets and liabilities of the bank as found by the officers of the banking department to go to the jury, for the purpose above stated, is the principal assignment of error relied upon in oral argument and brief. The consideration of this assignment impels a close inspection, and construction of the banking act of 1929, which radically changed the former banking laws as contained in Barnes' Code of 1923 and the subsequent amendments thereto, and which act of 1929 designates the act as chapter 54-d of the Code. It is now incorporated in Chap. 31 of the Revised Code of 1931. Under that act, the commissioner of banking is given far-reaching powers in the visitation, regulation and control of banks and like institutions, and in the summary and expeditious winding up of their affairs. In former years, the slow process of the courts in winding up insolvent banks, which often delayed final settlement for many years, had brought about insistent criticism and complaints, and the legislature, following the federal act and other progressive legislation, enacted an expeditious, exclusive and comparatively inexpensive method of liquidation. The intent of these acts should be effectuated by the courts. In sec. 2 of chap. 23, Acts 1929, under consideration, authority is given the commissioner, upon finding that the capital stock of a bank is impaired and upon failure to make the bank solvent, upon notice from him, to appoint a receiver who shall take charge and wind up its affairs under the supervision of the commissioner. The commissioner determines the question of the insolvency, a power given him by the act, and the procedure for winding up the bank, faithfully performed, is exclusive. Picklesimer v.Morris, Judge,
It is argued that inasmuch as the "double liability" of a stockholder in a state bank has been held by this Court to be a secondary liability to be discharged after all the other assets of the bank have been administered and debts yet remain, that it was not the intention of the statute to allow the enforcement of the liability until it was so determined either by actual administration of the other assets, or by judicial determination of insolvency. The statute provides in terms that without waiting to administer the assets, or delaying for anyother cause, the receiver shall collect from the several stockholders their liabilities in one suit or in separate suits. Then, if the assets, including all sums collected from the stockholders, shall more than suffice to pay the debts and surplus is to be distributed "first to the stockholders who have paid any sums upon their extraordinary liability as stockholders pro rata up to the respective amounts paid by each of them." It follows that if the assets, other than the double liability sums collected, are sufficient to pay the debts, there could be little harm done to the stockholders by "forthwith" payment of their statutory liability. The secondary character of the double liability remains. The other assets of the bank are first to be applied to the debts. The receiver holds the money contributed by the stockholders to supply any deficiency in order that the creditors may be protected. The fund is somewhat in the nature of a trust. The collection of this fund is not to await the administration of other assets; and delay in its collection is not countenanced "for any other cause." But it is argued that to forthwith collect this liability, and then return it or a part thereof would inflict an inconscionable hardship upon the stockholder. This same argument was advanced in Studebaker v. Perry,
It is argued that if the statute be construed to give the commissioner the right to determine the insolvency of the bank, and then proceed to collect double liability in advance of conclusive necessity therefor and in the event the other assets were nearly or quite sufficient to pay the debts, then to repay the stockholder, would render the statute unconstitutional as impairing the obligation of the stockholder's contract with the state. We can see no impairment in the statute of the obligation to pay, or not to pay, the double liability. The statute affords a quicker and more efficacious remedy than heretofore by which the liability may be enforced. That the remedy may be more burdensome does not render it unconstitutional; and by section 8, chapter 53, Code, *15
the law governing and controlling the bank at the time of its charter could be altered or repealed. The law reads that provision into the bank's charter. Cross v. By. Co.,
A more serious assignment of error is that the directed verdict and judgment thereon is based on the full par value of the 42 shares owned by defendant at the time the bank was closed, June 22, 1929, when there is no evidence to show that defendant owned all or any of his stock at the time any of the liabilities or losses of the bank accrued. The declaration charged that defendant "owned such shares when the bank became indebted as aforesaid." It says that the indebtedness, which caused the impairment of the capital stock and closing of the bank, existed on or before the 22nd day of June, 1929. There was no evidence at the trial to show when the liabilities of the bank accrued. The constitution, Art. VI, sec. 6, says that the stockholders "shall be personally liable to the creditors thereof, over and above the amount of stock held by them respectively to an amount equal to their respective shares so held, for all its liabilities accruing while they are suchstockholders. The statute, chapter 54, sec. 78-a (3), Code, contains the same language. In Heater v. Lloyd,
It is argued that to require the receiver or commissioner in a suit to enforce the double liability against a stockholder to show when the liabilities of the bank accrued for which the stockholder was liable personally to the extent of the par value of the stock then held by the latter, would greatly hamper and inconvenience the commissioner in the speedy settlement of the affairs of the bank, and delay the creditors in realization of their just debts, and entail costs. It must be remembered that the constitution protects the stockholder from responsibility for liabilities which did not accrue while he was a stockholder. As was said in the Dunn case: "That it may, under some circumstances and conditions operate oppressively, does not afford a sufficient reason for holding contrary to the manifest purpose and plain mandate of the sections cited." To allow a judgment to stand against a stockholder for double liability, not based on any evidence that he was owner of stock at the time the liability was incurred by the bank (for which only he is liable), would contravene the plain provision of the constitution cited. The burden rested upon the plaintiff to make out a case for recovery. It was error to instruct the jury to find for plaintiff. The assessment by the commissioner of the full double liability on the stockholders stock as of June 22, 1929, was not evidence that the liabilities of the bank which made it insolvent accrued as of that date.
The judgment will be reversed, the verdict set aside, and a new trial awarded.
Judgment reversed; verdict set aside; new trial awarded. *17