Baird v. Eidsvig

230 N.W. 721, 59 N.D. 484, 1930 N.D. LEXIS 166
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedApril 26, 1930
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 230 N.W. 721 (Baird v. Eidsvig) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Baird v. Eidsvig, 230 N.W. 721, 59 N.D. 484, 1930 N.D. LEXIS 166 (N.D. 1930).

Opinion

BuRKE, Oh. J.

On December 10, 1923, the Farmers State Bank of Kathryn closed, and one Jensen, who was cashier of the bank was placed in charge as special deputy bank examiner.

On the 28th of January, 1924, the plaintiff L. R. Baird, as receiver petitioned the district court of Burleigh county for a blanket *486 order levying an assessment against the Farmers State Bank of Kathryn, together with thirty-seven other banks, and on the 29th of January, 1924, Judge Charles M. Cooley signed such order for the assessment for the full amount of the added statutory shareholders’ liability to be levied on the capital stock of said bank, and that said receiver was authorized -to fix the date when such assessment should be paid and was required to give notice of said assessment to each of said stockholders.

In August, 1924, the directors of said bank made an application to the Depositors Guaranty Fund Commission to reopen the bank, and on August 9, 1924, the Depositors Guaranty Fund Commission authorized the reopening of the bank upon certain conditions, which in effect required the officers of said bank to remove all doubtful paper, to restore the impaired capital and surplus, to collect and remove all cash items and overdrafts, obtain agreements from all depositors, and where possible, other creditors, to defer the time of payment of their claims; in fact to put the bank in a solvent condition, acceptable to the Commission. Sometime thereafter the Guaranty Fund Commission sent one Desmond as a representative of the said commission to Kathryn to investigate and determine whether the officers of the bank had complied with the conditions imposed by the commission.

About the first of November, 1924, Jensen who was still in charge of the bank as a special deputy bank examiner called up A. E. Jones, district manager of closed banks, by phone at Lisbon, N. D. and requested him to come to Kathryn, as they wanted to reopen the bank.

Jones testified, that at that time he did not know of the order of Judge Cooley for an assessment, but he went to Kathryn and represented the receiver of the bank. All the stockholders were at the meeting which Jones and Desmond attended and Jones testified that, “Desmond said, ‘we will get the stock liability, these men are willing to pay it in, and they were all there.’ I was there helping the banking department, that was the capacity I was there in. I was interested in opening the bank to this extent, that if I thought it was a good thing for the stockholders I did not want to hinder them as receiver. I collected $17,500 the total amount of stockholders’ liability, outside of the Jensen stock which amounted to $7,500. Mr. Desmond wrote the receipt and I signed it as receiver.” The Jensens could not pay their *487 assessment, and it was agreed at the meeting, that if tbe stockholders would pay the assessment on the Jensen stock, fifty per cent in cash, and fifty per cent by endorsement upon certificates of deposit it would be accepted in settlement. Later $3,750 in cash was paid to Mr. Stortroen who later became cashier and $3,750 was endorsed on certificates of deposit owned by the stockholders who paid for and took over the Jensen stock. Desmond remained in the bank representing the banking department or the Guaranty Fund Commission, and Mr. Jones sent over Mr. Erick and Mr. Eldridge to assist.

Preparatory to the opening of the bank the stockholders were required to take oirt or make good, bad paper of the face value of a little more than fifty thousand dollars. They entered into an agreement with the stockholders by which the stockholders were to accept thirty-five per cent discount on the face of their certificates of deposits, and for repayment to the stockholders from profits to be made by the said bank in the future. When the bank had complied with all of the conditions necessary for the opening of the bank án application was made by the Guaranty Fund Commission to the court to discharge the receiver, and on the 16th day of December, 1924, the court on the application of the Guaranty Fund Commission, and on the motion of the receiver of said bank ordered that further proceedings in insolvency against said bank be discontinued and that said receiver be discharged, and that said bank be readmitted under the Guaranty Fund.

On the 15th day of December, 1924, L. E. Baird made his report in which he alleged, that the said bank made application to the Guaranty Fund Commission for leave to organize and remedy its condition and be readmitted under the Guaranty Fund; that said commission prescribed conditions as to assets, payment of liabilities and the character and competency of the managing officers to be placed in charge of the affairs of the said bank, and such other requirements as in its judgment is necessary and proper. This final and only report of the receiver relates exclusively to the reopening of the bank. There is not a word in it relating to any assessment or any action of the receiver which in any way related to the liquidation of the bank.

The bank was reopened for business on the 16th day of December, 1924, and the money collected by the receiver together with other collections amounting to $26,574.27 were paid into the bank as an asset *488 of tbe bank by tbe receiver, and tbe bank continued to operate as a going institution for a little more than three years- and was closed again on December 28, 1927.

It is agreed that tbe bank was insolvent at tbe time, that its assets were not worth probably $60,000, and that tbe assets without the stockholders’ double liability would not pay tbe debts.

Tbe plaintiff was again appointed receiver and on March 3, 1928, an order was made by Hon. Thomas H. Pugh, judge of tbe district court having jurisdiction of tbe receivership levying and assessing against tbe stockholders an assessment of $100 on each of their shares. It is agreed that at all times tbe Farmers State Bank of Kathryn was operating under its original charter, that there was no change in the name, or in the corporation, and that the same bank was closed in December, 1927, also closed in December, 1923, and that all the stockholders who were such at the time the bank first closed in December, 1923, and when it closed in December, 1927, held the same original capital stock certificates, except, that new certificates were issued for the Jensen stock to those who paid the stock liability, and no other assessments were ordered or made, save and except, the order of Judge Cooley in January, 1924, and that ordered by Judge Pugh in March, 1928. The stockholders refused to pay the last assessment and this action is for the recovery of such assessment.

From a judgment in favor of the defendants the plaintiff appeals and demands a trial anew in this coirrt.

It is the contention of respondent, that the stockholders paid one assessment and that they cannot be made to pay again. It is true, that an assessment made for the liquidation of the bank paid by the stockholders for and used to liquidate the bank ends the stockholders’ liability; but the evidence in this case clearly shows that the payment made by the stockholders was not a payment for the liquidation of the bank, but was paid for the purpose of enabling the bank to reopen.

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Bluebook (online)
230 N.W. 721, 59 N.D. 484, 1930 N.D. LEXIS 166, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baird-v-eidsvig-nd-1930.