Attorney General v. President of the State Bank

21 N.C. 545
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedJune 5, 1837
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 21 N.C. 545 (Attorney General v. President of the State Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Attorney General v. President of the State Bank, 21 N.C. 545 (N.C. 1837).

Opinion

Gaston, Judge.

The pleadings upon this information present two questions, on which the judgment of the Court is required, for the purpose of eífecting a settlement of certain matters of account between the state and the bank. To understand these questions, it is necessary to examine briefly the provisions of the several acts of assembly bearing upon the matters in controversy, and the proceedings on the part of the oflicers of the bank which are complained of in the information. The bank was created by an act of assembly passed in the year 1810, entitled “ an act- to redeem the paper currency now in circulation, and to establish a bank, by the name and title of The State Bank of North Carolina.” It was thereby enacted, that a bank should be established with a capital of one million six hundred thousand dollars: that it should be lawful for the treasurer of the state to cause to be subscribed, for and in behalf of the state, the sum of two hundred and fifty thousand dollars; which sum should be reserved for the use of the state, to be paid for in stock of the United States, and “ the residue in gold or silver, at such time or times as it might be convenient for the state to pay the same that books should be opened to receive the subscriptions of individuals for shares of one hundred dollars a share, in. the capital stock of the bank; which shares were to be paid for, one-fourth to the commissioners, at the time of subscription; one-fourth within sixty days after the bank should go into operation ; one-fourth within one hundred and twenty days; and one-fourth within twelve months, to the directors of the bank; and that the subscribers to the bank, their successors and assigns, should be a corpo-. ration, and so continue, until the 1st of January, 1830., The subscription in behalf of the state was made accordingly by the public treasurer; and the stock of the United, States belonging to the state was transferred to the corpo-. ration in part payment. In 1811 another act was passed, modifying in several respects the provisions of the original *547 charter. This act is entitled* “ an act in addition to the act entitled ‘ an act to redeem the paper currency now in circulation, and to establish a bank, by the name and title of The State Bank of North. Carolina,’ passed in the year 1810.” It contains this provision — “the president and directors of the bank shall not he bound to pay to the state full dividends upon the whole sum of two hundred and fifty thousand dollars of the stock of the said bank reserved by the above-recited act, to the use of the state, and upon which, by the said act, the state is entitled to full dividends; but it is hereby declared lawful for the said president and directors, out of the full dividends to be declared on the said sum of two hundred and fifty thou-, sand dollars held by the state in their stock, to retain at the end of each year, for the general benefit of the stockholders, including the state, a sum equal to four per cen-tum upon such part of the said stock as shall not have been actually paid for by the state, on the day when the dividend is declared out of which the retainer is to. be made.” Bv this amendatory act, which was accepted by the stockholders, as a modification of their charter, the term,, of the corporation was extended to the 1st of January, 1835.. Payments were afterwards made by the state on account of the stock so reserved for its use, and subscribed for by the treasurer, but not in full therefor; and the bank received every year from the state, by retainer out of the dividends of profits declared upon this stock, an interest of four per cent, on the balance remaining unpaid. In the session of 1829. an act was passed, entitled an act to enable the State Bank to wind up gradually, and to fix a uniform rate of collection.” This act, under certain limi-' tations and restrictions, continued the corporate powers of the institution until the 1st of January, 1838; prohibited the making of new loans, except in renewal or substitution for a subsisting debt, after the 31st of December, 1834: prohibited the making of accommodation loans,, after the 1st of September, 1830, on more indulgent terras than the payment of three equal instalments every ninety days; prohibited the issuing of notes under five dollars, after the 31st of December, 1832; and the issuing of any notes *548 after the 31st of December, 1834; required, of the president and directors so to regulate the collection of debts a]rea(jy cju6) as t0 permit them to be paid by instalments of a twentieth every ninety days; authorized the president and directors to receive shares of stock in the bank in payment of debts at a reasonable value, to be fixed on by the stockholders, and to, be approved of by the public treasurer; authorized the stockholders, after the 1st of’ January, 1833, to. declare dividends of the capital,, as the same should accumulate,, provided that the amount of capital should not be reduced to less than the amount of debts due from the bank; and made other provisions for the convenience of the institution and the community, which were called for by the approaching expiration of the charter.

This act was accepted by the stockholders in general meeting, on the 12th of January 1830 ; and on the sue-, ceeding day the stockholders passed a resolution authorizing the president and directors to receive shares of the stock of the bank,, in payment- of debts at seventy-five dollars per share, which resolution was approved by the treasurer of the state.. In December 1830, 1831 and 1832; the president and directors declared dividends of profits upon the capital of the. bank, of four per cent, and passed the same to. the credit of the state on account of her stock, which then greatly exceeded the two hundred and fifty thousand dollars originally subscribed for, but retained out of the dividends so declared four percent, on the unpaid part of the stock so.subscribed for. On the 14th of January 1833, the stockholders in general meeting declared a dividend of capital of fifty per cent, to be paid to the respective stockholders, after the 1st of February, then next ensuing. When the treasurer claimed the dividend of capital on the stock of the state, the officers of the bank claimed as of right to deduct therefrom, 'the sum of eighty-three thousand nine hundred and six dollars, and eleven cents, the whole sum remaining unpaid of the state’s original subscription ; and. refused to pay more than the balance after making this deduction,. In December 1833, the president *549 and directors declared a further dividend of profits of two per centum.

The first question raised, is as to the right of the bank to apply this sum of eighty-three thousand nine hundred arid six dollars and eleven cents, to the entire extinguishment of the debt of the state.

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Bluebook (online)
21 N.C. 545, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/attorney-general-v-president-of-the-state-bank-nc-1837.