Andrew v. Bevington Savings Bank

221 N.W. 668, 206 Iowa 869
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedOctober 23, 1928
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 221 N.W. 668 (Andrew v. Bevington Savings Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Andrew v. Bevington Savings Bank, 221 N.W. 668, 206 Iowa 869 (iowa 1928).

Opinion

Kindig, J.

The‘ Bevington Savings Bank was a banking corporation, organized under the laws of Iowa, and located at Bevington. Financial embarrassment overtook the institution, and the state banking department ordered an assessment on the stock of the concern, to restore impaired capital, on or about *871 December 31-, 1921.' Such action-was taken.under and 'by virtue of Section 1878-of the 1897 Code, which reads:

“Should the capital stock of any state ’or savings bank become impaired by losses or otherwise, the auditor of state .[after-wards by amendment made the superintendent of banking] may require an assessment upon the stockholders, and shall address an order to the several members of the board of directors of such bank, fixing the amount of assessment required, and the board of directors’ shall, ’within thirty days after the receipt of. such order, cause such deficiency to be made good by a ratable assessment upon .the stockholders for the amount of stock held'by them, by giving such stockholders’ nóticé iñ writing,, signed by tlie president or .vice president,.'attested by’the’cashier or'secretary’of the bank, under its seal, if it have’one, .and'deposited iii the post office, addressed to the last known residence of the stockholders, proof-thereof to be made by -the affidavit of the person so making the deposit.; which notice shall state -the entire sum to be raised,- and- the amount due from the addressed stockholder.”’ = •

Appellants," Martin J..’ Róách, Chris Wolfe, and Emma Schropel’, were”stockholders, .and paid 'their portion of this assessment.

Thereafter, the bank continued.to operate, and function as such until the appointment of a receiver, on March’29, 1922. Thomas Enright was named as such trust'officer for the corporation, and he duly qualified, and has acted in that cápacity ever since. Receiver’s certificates were issued 'as part of the administrative policy advised and suggested by the state superintendent of banking, the state attorney-general, .and a judge of the district court, who, appointed "the receiver.

In all] $17,500 was ‘procured by the "receiver through the inauguration of this system, and’ all used to pay the depositors and other creditors of the bank. So the present proceedings were instituted for- the-purpose of collecting from the; stockholders, including appellants, a sufficient.sum by a second assessment to. pay -the-indebtedness evidenced by these certificates.This additional assessment is under a different statute from that authorizing the first. .Reference is made to Section 1882 of the 1897 Code,, which provides:

*872 “All stockholders of savings and state banks shall be individually liable to the' creditors of such corporation of which they are stockholders over and above the amount of stock by them heid therein and any amount paid thereon, to an amount equal to their respective shares, for all its liabilities accruing while they remained such stockholders; and should any such association or corporation become insolvent, its stockholders may be severally compelled to pay such deficiency in proportion to the amount of stock owned by each, not to exceed the extent of the additional liability hereby created. The assignee or receiver of any such corporation, or in case there is none, or of his failure or refusal' to act, any creditor thereof, may maintain an action in equity to determine the liability of the stockholders, and the amount to which each creditor shall be entitled; and all parties interested shall be brought into court.”

Three general reasons are assigned by appellants as to why this remedy sought by the receiver is not available. They will be considered in the order named in appellants’ argument.

Before proceeding therewith, however, it is essential to know that the appellants Chris Wolfe and Emma Schropel, after serving their notices of appeal, paid the judgment against them for the assessment in question, and no lpnger are litigants herein. Consequently, the only appellant now important in this proceeding is Martin J. Roach; and hereafter, when reference is'made to the appellánt, the intention will be to indicate the said Roach.

I. It is urged by appellant that Thomas Enright, who was originally appointed receiver, is no longer such, because the fortieth general assembly changed the law under which he was named, by enacting Chapter 189 0f the Session Laws, which is now Section 9242 of the 1927 Code, and reads thus:

“The superintendent of banking henceforth shall be the sole and only receiver or liquidating officer for state incorporated banks and trust companies ***”.

That is to say, appellant’s idea, is that, in view of the new legislation, the superintendent of banking automatically became the receiver of the Bevington Savings Bank, and Thomas En-right, who was previously legally and’ duly appointed as such, *873 was thereby ousted, without the necessity, of a resignation or a court proceeding.

With this logic we are persuaded to disagree. “Henceforth,” as used in the legislative enactment, has its significance. Manifestly, it was the intent of the lawmakers that, in the future, when the district court appointed a receiver for an insolvent banking institution, “the superintendent .of banking” should be named, rather than any other person. Even without the word “henceforth,” that would be the effect of such change in the law. Foster & Son v. Bellows, 204 Iowa 1052; In re Estate of Culbertson, 204 Iowa 473. We suggested in Foster & Son v. Bellows, supra:

“Established principles of construction compel us to say that acts of the law-making body, unless otherwise plainly expressed, are aimed for the government of the future, rather than the past.”

When the act of the fortieth general assembly was adopted, Thomas Enright had already'been appointed, and was acting as receiver for this bank, under a law authorizing the same. If the legislature' had intended to interrupt this officer of the court in the execution of his trust, it would have provided for his removal and the substitution of the superintendent, of banking. No such operating machinery was furnished.

Moreover, application for a change of liquidating officers has not been made in the district court having jurisdiction of the subject-matter. But, on the other hand, appellant, during all the years, has stood by and permitted the originally appointed receiver to continue his activities in that capacity. Hence, under all. the considerations just discussed, it is plain that Thomas Enright is the receiver duly qualified to act in the premises.

II. Complaint is made because the district court allowed the second assessment under a record not justifying the same. More definitely, appellant’s objection is that the bank transacted no business during the interim between the first assessment and the court’s designation of the receiver. Thus the proceeds of the first assessment, he says, were for mere liquidating purposés. ,

Only one object can authorize that assessment, and this is *874

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221 N.W. 668, 206 Iowa 869, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/andrew-v-bevington-savings-bank-iowa-1928.