Arnold v. Weimer

58 N.W. 709, 40 Neb. 216, 1894 Neb. LEXIS 269
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedApril 17, 1894
DocketNo. 5586
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 58 N.W. 709 (Arnold v. Weimer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Arnold v. Weimer, 58 N.W. 709, 40 Neb. 216, 1894 Neb. LEXIS 269 (Neb. 1894).

Opinion

Ragan, C.

On, and some time prior to, the 13th day of November, 1891, Charles Homan and Carl Arnold (hereinafter called' “the bank”) were associated together as partners under the name of Kloman & Arnold, and conducting a general banking business in the city of Broken Bow, Custer county, Nebraska. David Weimer was a depositor in said bank, and on said date it was indebted to him in the sum of' $2,414.56. On said date he brought a suit in the district court of Custer county against- said bank, caused an attachment to be issued and levied upon certain real estate belonging to said bank. Afterwards, one George W. Goodell was, by an order of this court, appointed receiver of said bank, and he filed a motion in said suit brought by Weimer against the bank in the district court of Custer county to discharge said attachment. This motion the district court overruled, sustained the attachment, and ordered' the attached property to be sold. The receiver has filed a' petition in error in this court to reverse said order.

The receiver alleged in his motion to dissolve said attachment, as his grounds therefor, that at the time of the levy of the writ of attachment the bank had been closed by order of the officers of the “ state banking board,” and' that the property seized by the attachment was at the time in the hands of a receiver, and in the hands of the officers of the “state banking board of Nebraska,” and was not subject to attachment.

The motion to dissolve the attachment was tried by the district court on a stipulation of facts. From this stipula-' tion it appears that Weimer’s attachment was levied upon the real estate by the sheriff of Custer county on the 13th' of November, 1891; that the bank was then unable to pay its obligations; that before noon of said day the bank suspended business and posted on its doors a notice as follows: “Bank closed. In hands of receiver. Depositors [218]*218will be paid in full;” that on the morning of said date the manager of said bank telegraphed to the “state banking board” that the bank was closed and asked the board to send a receiver; that on the 14th or November the bank was duly examjned by an examiner appointed by the “ state banking board;” and that on the 19th of November Goodell was by this court appointed receiver of said bank.

The real contention of the receiver is that after the bank suspended business and closed its doors on the 13th, its property was not subject to attachment at the suit of a creditor, but that all the bank’s assets from that moment became a trust fund to be divided pro rata among all the bank’s creditors; or, if the property of the bank was subject to attachment on the 13th, then the appointment of a receiver on the 19th vacated the attachment. If the contention of the receiver is correct, it must be so because of some express statute or arise by operation of law from the fact 'of the receiver’s appointment. We have been cited by counsel to no statute, nor have we been able, after a careful search, to find a statute which exempts the property of an insolvent banking association from an attachment at the suit of the creditors; nor that divests the lien of an attachment already levied by reason of the appointment of a receiver thereafter for such association.

It is said by the receiver that under the banking act, chapter 8, Compiled Statutes, 1893, the district court of Custer county had no jurisdiction over the bank or its property, and that the only remedy a creditor of said bank had for the pollection of his debt was to await the appointment of a receiver, the winding up of the affairs of the bank by that officer, and the distribution of the bank’s assets. We ■do not agree with either of these contentions. By section 9, article 6, of the constitution the district courts are given both chancery and common law jurisdiction and such other jurisdiction as the legis'ature may provide; and by section 34, chapter 19, Compiled Statutes, 1893, the [219]*219legislature has provided that the district courts shall have and exercise general, original, and appellate jurisdiction in all matters, both civil and criminal, except where otherwise provided. There is nothing in the banking act, or any other statute, which forbade the district court of Custer county from entertaining jurisdiction of Weimer’s suit against this bank; nor is there anything in the banking act which expressly, or by implication, compels the creditor of an insolvent banking institution to await the appointment of a receiver thereof for the collection of his debt against such association. The legislature may have the authority to say that from the moment a banking association becomes insolvent that its property shall not be liable to an attachment at the suit of one of its creditors, but it has not said so. The legislature may have the authority to provide that an attachment levied upon the property of an insolvent banking association shall be vacated upon the appointment of a receiver thereof, but it has not said so.

Another argument of the receiver is that inasmuch as the assets of a national bank are not liable to be attached at the suit of a creditor, the legislature must have intended, by the enactment of the banking law of this state, that the assets of an insolvent banking association from the moment of its insolvency should occupy the same status as the assets of an insolvent national bank. If the legislature had intended by the banking act to render the property of an insolvent bank exempt from an attachment at the suit of one of its creditors it would doubtless have said so. The national banking act expressly provides that theUnited States shall have a first and paramount lien upon all the assets of the bank, and that no attachment shall be issued against said association or its property till final judgment rendered in the suit brought.

Counsel for the receiver cite us to State v. Commercial State Bank, 28 Neb., 677, as an authority for their contention. In that case one McConaughy was a large stockholder in the [220]*220Commercial State Bank. He, McConaughy, became insolvent and made an assignment to the sheriff for the benefit of his, McConaughy’s, creditors. The sheriff took possession of not only McConaughy’s property, but claimed the right to the possession of the assets of the bank as well. The attorney general made application to this court for the appointment of a receiver for the assets of the bank. The sheriff,- as McConaughy’s assignee, resisted the application, claiming that McConaughy owned all the stock in the bank. The court, by the present chief justice, Norval, held, in effect, that although McConaughy was the owner of the majority or all the stock of the corporation, he did not thereby become the corporation, and that while his assignee could hold his, McConaughy’s, property, the assignee had no claim to the assets of the bank; that the'' were a trust fund for the payment of its debts, and that the rights of the creditors to the bank’s property were superior to the rights of the stockholders and the assignee of the. stockholders thereto. Nothing in that case supports the contention made by the receiver. There being no statutory provision which exempts the property of this bank from attachment at the suit of one of its creditors prior to the appointment of a receiver therefor, or possession taken by the sheriff under section 268, Code of Civil Procedure, and no provision vacating an attachment already levied upon the appointment of a receiver for its assets, we proceed to inquire what right or title the receiver acquired to the property attached by virtue of his appointment.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
58 N.W. 709, 40 Neb. 216, 1894 Neb. LEXIS 269, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/arnold-v-weimer-neb-1894.