63 So. 310 | La. | 1913
Lead Opinion
“The adoption of any one of the above courses meant making public the condition of the bank, and consequently ruin. Publication would have precipitated a run, and the bank was in no condition to stand a run. Not only this, but a run on the bank would inevitably have led to the withdrawal of timid depositors from other banks and been menace to the community. Banks can only exist by investing the funds of their depositors, and experience and the law recognizes that, under ordinary circumstances, they are only required to keep on hand in cash a sum equal to 25 per cent, of their deposits. No bank, therefore, can stand a run or demand for immediate repayment of deposits, a demand which is only made when depositors are fearful of the bank’s condition. Failure of the People’s Bank through a run would, in all human probability, have involved other banks and the community at large and w.ould certainly have involved the loss of the entire capital stock of the bank and caused a loss not only to the stockholders of the People’s Bank but to its depositors.”
The plaintiffs would have been willing to lend largely to the bank, but such loans would in no way have improved the situation, since they would have correspondingly increased the liabilities. The only way, apart from liquidation, was either to reduce the liabilities or the capitalization by an amount equal to the impairment or else increase the assets. This last' was evidently the best; but how accomplish it, without an assessment of the stockholders, which might, and more than likely would, prove disastrous.
After canvassing the situation, the plaintiffs decided to execute their joint and several notes and discount them in other banks and have the proceeds placed to the credit of the embarrassed bank. And this they did; and they allege as follows:
“That, in furnishing the People’s Bank with said $98,000, your aforesaid petitioners, who executed the notes for said amount, did so solely for the purpose and with the expectation of enabling the said bank to continue business for the benefit and in the interest of all the stockholders and to avoid the sacrifice and loss of its established business and good will and to protect the common interest and fund of the stockholders as hereinbefore set forth; that it was the expectation and understanding of the directors that by the use of said funds the bank could continue in business and eventually earn the amount thereof, so that the same could be restored to the makers of said notes without any violation of its legal obligations to creditors or the state, and the said notes could gradually be retired, or the amount thereof repaid to petitioners, and petitioners confidently believed and expected that they would never be called upon to pay the whole of said notes out of their own personal funds but that ultimately their fellow shareholders, for whose common benefit and protection the money had been furnished and who, to the extent of their interest in the assets of the bank, were bound with them for the payment of its debts, would contribute to the payment of said notes or to the reimbursement of the makers thereof.”
But, while the plaintiffs thus allege that it was their “expectation and. understanding” that the amount thus placed by them to the credit of the bank would be returned to them, they cannot and do not deny that the thing required by the State Bank Examiner to be done, and which they proposed doing by the said deposit of their money, was to increase the assets of the bank by that much, without increasing its liabilities in the slightest degree, .in any way, shape, or form; and that they made said deposits with that clear understanding and intention.
Thus reinforced, the bank continued in business ten months longer, when liquidation was decided upon, and a contract was entered into with another bank by which the assets and business were transferred to this other bank in consideration of a bonus of $37,-500, and this other bank assumed all liabilities to depositors and creditors and agreed to account for any surplus remaining out of the assets after the settlement of all liabilities. Included in the assets thus transferred
In support of their claim the plaintiffs argue as follows:
“The plaintiffs who advanced the $98,000 did not donate that sum to the stockholders. It is no answer to point out that they transferred title to the $98,000 to the bank. The transfer of title made the sum hable to the deposi* tors and creditors but did not make it a donation to the stockholders. No one is presumed to give; and the plaintiffs had no intention of giving; they intended to subject that sum to the claims of the depositors and creditors but no more. As to the stockholders, they had not the remotest intention of divesting themselves of that sum. Analyze the transaction itself without evidence of any kind, and it is impossible to conceive that the plaintiffs had any intention of making a present of $98,000 to their fellow stockholders, and there is no evidence to that effect. That they placed themselves in a difficult position and may have had no clear idea of how they- were to get this money back does not affect the question. It will not do to say that they gave it to the stockholders when it is positively shown that they had no such intention. They had no more intention of giving the money to the stockholders than you or I would have given our real estate to a third person, if we placed title in his name, without taking a counter letter. The only difference between the two cases is that in the case of real estate the law bars parol proof. In the other parol proof is permissible. In both, however, the transfer of title to the bank in the one case and to the third person in the other case enables the third person and the stockholders of the bank to assert claims without just foundation.”
The plausibility of this argument results from the substitution of the stockholders to the bank as the beneficiary of the donation. Very true the plaintiffs did not intend to make a donation to their fellow stockholders and did not do so; but they intended to and did make a donation to the bank. Their only purpose in the transaction was that the bank should become the owner of the amount in question. Not the conditional owner, not the owner with a string to the gift, but the absolute, unconditional, untrammeled owner. The contribution, coupled with a condition of any kind, would not have answered the purpose. The. Bank Examiner had so informed the plaintiffs; and they understood perfectly, therefore, that they were divesting themselves now and irrevocably of this money and investing the bank now irrevocably and unconditionally with it. The money became the unconditional and absolute property of the bank, with no liability whatever resting upon the bank for the return of it; and from this the consequence inevitably follows that it belongs to the stockholders and must be distributed ratably among them.
Judgment affirmed.
Rehearing
On Application for Rehearing.
Our attention being now called to a document filed in the record wherein the holders of 1,801 shares of stock in the People’s Bank have transferred to plaintiffs their interest in the fund in the hands of defendant liquidators.
It is ordered that our former decree herein be set aside; and it is further ordered, adjudged, and decreed that there be judgment in favor of plaintiffs and against defendants maintaining the injunction issued herein as to the sum found to be due to the stockholders who signed the act of transfer to plaintiffs above referred to and no further; and that, as thus amended, the judgment appealed from is affirmed. Rehearing refused. The right is reserved to all parties to apply for a rehearing within the legal delay from date.