Bates v. Clarion Savings Bank

252 N.W. 138, 217 Iowa 741
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedJanuary 9, 1934
DocketNo. 42175.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 252 N.W. 138 (Bates v. Clarion 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
Bates v. Clarion Savings Bank, 252 N.W. 138, 217 Iowa 741 (iowa 1934).

Opinion

Donegan, J..

The Clarion Savings Bank of Clarion, Iowa, was a banking corporation created and operating under the laws of the state of Iowa. In July, 1930, the state superintendent of banking notified the bank that corrections would have to be made in the setup of the bank’s assets, and the board of directors of the bank were summoned to Des Moines for a personal conference with the examiner in chief. Following this conference the matter of meeting the requirements of the state banking department was taken up with R.- E. Courson, as the agent of his mother, Clara M. Courson, who was the owner of 78 shares of the capital stock of the bank, and with O. P. Morton, who was a director of the bank and the owner of 45 shares of its capital stock. As a result of these negotiations, it was finally arranged that Clara M. Courson would pay $7,800, and that *742 Mr. Morton would pay $4,500 into the undivided profit account of the bank. The payment in behalf of Mrs. Courson was made by the execution and delivery to the bank of a note for $7,800, in accord-, anee with the terms of a written agreement signed by the president and cashier of the bank with the approval of the banking department. This written agreement contained a brief description of lines of credit which the bank had extended to some of its customers, and which it was therein agreed should be reduced, and also contained the following provision:

“We agree to the full limit of our power to meet in every way the recommendations and demands set out relative to the foregoing credit lines and'will to the best of our ability make the collections .suggested therein or obtain the security demanded, in consideration of the contributions made by O. P. Morton and R. E. Courson in cash to avoid the assessment that would otherwise have been necessary.”

Some time after the note for $7,800 of Mrs. Courson had been delivered to the bank, $1,000 was paid thereon and a new note for $6,800 was executed and delivered to the bank. This note for $6,800 was afterwards assigned as collateral to the Iowa Des Moines National Bank to secure money borrowed from said bank by the Clarion Savings Bank, and was in the possession of said Iowa Des Moines National Bank at all times thereafter.

On the 28th day of July, 1931, the bank closed its doors, and in due time L. A. Andrew, state superintendent of banking, was appointed receiver and took possession for the purpose of liquidation.

It appearing that the liabilities of the bank exceeded its assets in approximately the sum of $83,000, and that the amount of the capital stock outstanding was $50,000, the receiver brought an action in equity to enforce the statutory 100 per cent liability against each of the stockholders, including R. E. Courson, as administrator of ■Lhe estate of Clara M. Courson, who had died prior to the commencement of this action. The defendant Courson, as administrator of the estate of Clara M. Courson, deceased, answered, alleging that the $7,800 paid to the bank was not a voluntary assessment, that it was paid to the bank pursuant to the agreement signed by the president and cashier of the bank at that time, which agreement the bank liad failed to carry out, thus causing a constructive trust to come into *743 existence as to the $1,000 cash and the note for $6,800, and that $7,800 was thus held by the bank in trust and should be allowed as an offset on the stock assessment. The trial court held that under the statutes of this state the double liability was for the benefit of creditors of the bank, and that the advancement made to the bank by Mrs. Courson could not be allowed as a defense or offset against such statutory liability. From this decree of the trial court, the defendant R. E. Courson, as administrator of the estate of Clara M. Courson, appeals.

Appellant presented and argued several propositions upon which he relies for reversal. If, however, as held by the trial court, the defense set up by-the appellant cannot be considered and the advancement made by his decedent cannot he offset against her statutory liability as stockholder, this is decisive of the case as far as this appeal is concerned.

Sections 9246 and 9251, of .the Codes of 1927 and 1931, are as follows:

“9246. * * * Should the capital stock of any state or savings bank become impaired by losses or otherwise, the superintendent of banking may require an assessment upon the stockholders, and shall address an order to the several members of the hoard of directors of such bank, fixing the amount of assessment required. '

“9251. * ® * 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 held therein and any amount paid thereon, to an amount equal to their respective shares, for all its liabilities accruing while they remained such stockholders.”

In the case of Leach v. Arthur Savings Bank, 203 Iowa 1052, 213 N. W. 772, a stockholder who had made an advancement to the hank, in order to make good the impaired capital of the bank while it was a going concern, was sued by the receiver upon his statutory double liability. He set up the advancement made by him as a defense and asked an offset to the extent of such advancement. It was claimed by the stockholder that he was induced to make such advancement by the banking department in bad faith and that the department at all times had an intention to liquidate the bank and had simply secured such advancement as a means of augmenting the bank’s assets for that purpose. The statutes involved in that case *744 were sections 1878 and 1882, of the Code of 1897, which were practically the same in their provisions as the statutes now in force and above set forth. In that case we distinguished the provisions of these two statutes and held that a payment made upon an assessment to make good the impaired capital of a hank could not be set up as an offset against the double liability of the stockholder in case of insolvency, and that the same rule would apply where an advancement was made voluntarily for the purpose of repairing the impaired capital and said:

“The claim by appellants herein that, as against their statutory liability, they are entitled to offset the amount paid in by them on what they choose to call ‘an assessment’ made in October previous, is not tenable. The two sections of the statute carry separate liabilities. The question is not novel in the law, and has been passed upon by other courts. The assessment made under section 1878 is purely for the benefit of the bank itself and its stockholders, while the liability created under section 1882 is wholly for the benefit of ihe creditors of the banking corporation. The latter liability constitutes a fund available only when the bank is insolvent and unable to meet its obligations in full. The corporation itself can derive no benefit from the fund, and, as a corporation, cannot compel its payment, or any part of it. * * i:' We

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Younkin v. Rubio Savings Bank
284 N.W. 151 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1939)
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255 N.W. 301 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1934)
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Bluebook (online)
252 N.W. 138, 217 Iowa 741, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bates-v-clarion-savings-bank-iowa-1934.