Arthur v. the Peoples Bank

83 S.E. 778, 99 S.C. 352, 1914 S.C. LEXIS 123
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedNovember 14, 1914
Docket8980
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 83 S.E. 778 (Arthur v. the Peoples Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Arthur v. the Peoples Bank, 83 S.E. 778, 99 S.C. 352, 1914 S.C. LEXIS 123 (S.C. 1914).

Opinions

November 14, 1914.

Each of the Justices of the Court delivered a separate opinion, as follows: This was an action by plaintiffs as stockholders thereof, for the purpose of placing the Peoples Bank of Union, South Carolina, in the hands of receivers. B.F. Arthur and Wm. H. Gist, by order of the Hon. D.E. Hydrick, then Judge of Seventh Judicial Circuit, were duly appointed receivers, and later H.B. O'Shields was appointed a coreceiver with Arthur and Gist, and duly executed bond, took charge of the assets of the said bank, and proceeded to administer the same. Creditors were called in and the appellants established their claims against the bank as nondeposit creditors, and under the terms of the order of the Court became the plaintiffs in the cause. Numerous depositors of said bank also established their claims against the bank as such. While litigation, which was protracted, growing out of the failure of the bank was going on, certain depositors, who had received dividends along with the creditors of said bank from the receivers from the general assets of the bank, brought an action in the Court of Common Pleas for Union county against the stockholders on their statutory liability to *Page 355 depositors, and after protracted litigation a judgment was obtained in favor of the depositors against the stockholders and judgment duly entered thereon. A number of stockholders paid into Court an amount sufficient to pay the balance due the depositors, after they had received their dividends, along with the general creditors of the bank, from the general assets, to wit: sixty-eight per cent. having been paid to depositors and all other creditors of the bank at this time by the receivers of the said bank from its general assets. Some of the stockholders did not pay their pro rata, and it could not be collected out of them, and the others had to pay about sixty-six per cent, of their statutory liability. After this from notes of the bank the receivers after much litigation succeeded in collecting about $4,000. The receivers now have this amount on hand, a portion of which was collected from the general assets of the bank since the payment of sixty-eight per cent, to creditors and the depositors. The depositors have been paid in full by what they got as dividends from the general fund, along with other creditors, and the sixty-six per cent, assessed against and collected from the stockholders. Out of this fund now in the hands of the receivers certain fees and cost must be first paid. The appellants have received only sixty-eight per cent, on their claims, and the balance is unpaid. Their contention in the Circuit Court was, and is here, that as general creditors of the bank out of the funds now in receivers' hands they are entitled to be paid in full, less proper fees and costs, before any of the stockholders, who are required by the judgment entered against them fixing their liability under the statute to pay depositors in full, under assessments made against them being sixty-six per cent., can be allowed to come in and share ratably in the fund now in receivers' hands and thereby be surrogated to the claims of depositors. The matter came on for a hearing before his Honor, Judge Prince, who sustained the contention of the stockholders, and held that the *Page 356 stockholders of the bank, who paid in their assessments under the judgment of the Court upon their statutory liability in favor of the depositors, have by this become subrogated to the rights of the depositors, and are entitled to share ratably, who have established their claims herein, and have not been paid in full in the distribution of the funds realized from the general assets of the bank. From this decree appellants appeal and allege error in this holding, and the question to be determined is: "How shall this fund now in the receivers' hands be disbursed?"

Article IX, sec. 18, Constitution of 1895, is as follows: "The stockholders of all insolvent corporations shall be individually liable to the creditors thereof only to the extent of the amount remaining due to the corporation upon the stock owned by them: Provided, That stockholders in banks or banking institutions shall be liable to the depositors therein in a sum equal in amount to their stock over and above the face value of the same." See, also, sec. 2660, vol. I, Code of Laws 1912, page 729.

The matters to be determined by this appeal have not been before any Court that I know of, and no authority can be found by me that aids me in arriving at a conclusion. There is no doubt that if the bank could have reduced to money all debts due it by any one when it was put in the hands of the receivers before any distribution at all was made, and before any assessment was made on the stockholders, the general creditors, including the depositors, would have shared in this fund ratably, and the stockholders would have been assessed in a less amount than they finally had to pay. The stockholders could have promptly paid into Court a sum equal in amount to their stock, over and above the face value of the same, and this would have gone to the depositors and left a large percentage to the general creditors, and at the same time the depositors, as creditors, would have shared in the general assets of the bank. The liability of the stockholders of the bank under the Constitution *Page 357 and laws of the State is a primary liability. When they take stock they contract that in addition to a depositor of the bank becoming a creditor of the bank that the stockholders guarantee that they will become liable to such depositors in a sum equal in amount to the face value of the stock held and owned by them. Paying the amount of assessment by stockholders, as the law required, and as he had contracted to do, in no sense made the stockholder a creditor of the bank. They were only discharging a primary liability voluntarily incurred by them when they became stockholders in the bank and they are not entitled to be subrogated to the claims of the depositors. What they paid in was by judgment of the Court obtained against them after long litigation by them denying the right of depositors to make them liable. The language of the Constitution clearly shows that it was the intention to give the depositors of a bank an additional safeguard for their deposits, but in no way intended to abridge or circumscribe the rights of creditors against an insolvent bank, or cause them to be postponed in any matter whereby a stockholder could be a preferred creditor and come in ahead of a regular creditor. To sustain the Circuit decree would make the depositor a preferred creditor. It would allow him to collect out of the stockholder, and then allow the stockholder to come in and collect ratably out of the fund with the creditor. I know of no law, or any reason in sense, morals, or public policy, why a stockholder in a bank should share with a creditor in the distribution of the fund of an insolvent bank simply because he has done what the law requires him to do — pay his primary obligation to the depositors. It would be contrary to public morals and good conscience to allow the assets of this insolvent bank to go to any one else than the creditors. Under the law the creditors are justified when they extend credit to a bank in thinking that they and the depositors are creditors, entitled to be equally paid out of the general funds and assets of the bank, and if there is *Page 358 not enough to pay both then the depositors have the further right to call upon the stockholders to pay the amount fixed by their holding of stock.

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Smoak v. Peoples Bank
126 S.E. 399 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1925)

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Bluebook (online)
83 S.E. 778, 99 S.C. 352, 1914 S.C. LEXIS 123, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/arthur-v-the-peoples-bank-sc-1914.