Biltrite Bldg. Co. v. Elliott

165 S.E. 340, 166 S.C. 534, 1932 S.C. LEXIS 174
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedAugust 1, 1932
Docket13461
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 165 S.E. 340 (Biltrite Bldg. Co. v. Elliott) 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
Biltrite Bldg. Co. v. Elliott, 165 S.E. 340, 166 S.C. 534, 1932 S.C. LEXIS 174 (S.C. 1932).

Opinions

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. W. C. Cothran, Acting Associate Justice.

Through the medium of the original jurisdiction of this Court the plaintiffs, by a verified complaint and a rule to show cause, seek an injunction against the defendants to prevent them from instituting actions against the stockholders of the People’s State Bank of South Carolina to collect the amounts due by th,e stockholders to the depositors upon what is generally termed “stockholders’ liability.” In the present condition of banking affairs in this State and from the many experiences of stockholders in the past few years, it would appear rather superfluous to- give a definition of “stockholders’ liability.” At the risk, however, of repeating what every one must surely know, we venture to say that it is a liability of the stockholders of the banks to pay to depositors one dollar for each dollar of stock owned by them. This liability is irhposed by the Constitution of this State in Article 9, § 18.

Some of the facts, with their dates, will be set forth for a complete understanding of this controversy.

On January 2, 1932, the Peoples’s State Bank of South Carolina was closed by resolution of the directors and its affairs turned over to the state bank examiner.

On January 27th the defendants herein were appointed receivers by order of Hon. J. Pyles Glenn, United States District Judge. Notice of appeal from this order was duly given through the office of the Attorney General of South Carolina.

On April 22d, a hearing was had before the United States Circuit Court of Appeals for leave to docket and dismiss the appeal. This motion was granted msv and, the condition not having been complied with, the appeal was dismissed.

*537 We may here say that in so far as the record now before us in concerned, but carefully refraining from passing upon the jurisdiction of the Federal Court to appoint the receivers, the defendants are the receivers of the People’s State Bank of South Carolina by an order from which no appeal has been taken, and are clothed with such power and authority as were given them by the order appointing them and by the general federal laws applicable to such appointments.

On April 25th the receivers filed their petition with Judge Glenn praying for authority to bring suits against the stockholders on their statutory liability, and on the following day Judge Glenn signed an order authorizing and directing the receivers to collect the stockholders’ liability.

Also on April 26th, Hon. M. M¡. Mann, Circuit Judge, signed an order restraining all depositors, other than those in a suit then pending in the Court of Common Pleas for Richland County, from attempting to enforce liability against the stockholders in any other action; the pending suit having been brought by the plaintiffs herein for the benefit of themselves and all other depositors in like plight.

The order of Judge Glenn was filed in the office of the district Court in Charleston on April 27th, the same day the order of Judge Mann was filed in the clerk’s office for Rich-land County.

On April 28th Circuit Judge Mann appointed Joseph L. Nettles, an attorney of Columbia, receiver of the fund to be collected by the plaintiffs in their pending action, and on the next day Joseph R. Nettles was appointed receiver for the same purpose by an order of Circuit Judge W. H. Townsend; the occasion for the double appointment of Mr. Nettles not being apparent from the record. Nor is he a party to this action.

The order directing the receivers to show cause before this Court was dated April 30, 1932, and pursuant thereto a full hearing was Had before this Court on May 14th upon the complaint by the plaintiffs and the return to the rule by the defendants.

*538 It is conceded by the attorneys representing both sides of this action that the sole question before this Court is the construction of the Act of 1929 (Act March 16, 1929, 36 St. at Large, p. 199), which appears as Section 7855 of the Code of 1932. The question is further brought to a focus by limiting it to the first sentence in subdivision 6 of that section. In other words, is the phrase “any receiver” broad enough to cover receivers appointed by the federal Court to take over and administer the affairs of a state bank?

The Act in question appears simple enough at a glance, but an unprecedented and totally unexpected condition has arisen because'of the order of the federal Court in appointing the receivers. Elaborate arguments have been filed by the attorneys and much time and thought have been expended by all concerned in the decision of this case.

The Act contains eight sections, and these sections cover the following subjects:

Section 1 provides for the nomination by the depositors and unsecured creditors of one or more persons to act as receivers and for the Court to appoint such nominee in the absence of a valid objection.

Section 2 provides that all receivers appointed under the provisions of this Act shall receive the compensation therein mentioned.

Sections 3, 4, 5, 7 and 8 are not involved in this cause and throw no material light upon the question to be decided.

Section 6 is the casus belli and around it the battle has been, and is now being, fought. This section gives to “any receiver appointed to liquidate the assets of any closed State bank” the power to demand the statutory liability of the stockholders and to enter suit if necessary.

As before stated, can “any receiver” include federal receivers ?

In undertaking the preparation of this opinion the first impression was that the words “any receiver” in Section 6 could only refer to' any receiver ap *539 pointed under this Act, for the reason that the word “any,” being most general in its meaning, must refer to the particular descriptive words preceding it in the first section and that its meaning must be so restricted under the doctrine of ejusdem generis. Ex parte Leland, 1 Nott & McC., 460, and subsequent cases. The impression was also gained that since the Act should be construed as a whole, effect being given to every portion of it, to permit chancery receivers, not appointed according to the provisions of the Act, to exercise all of the powers of the receivers provided for in this Act, would, in effect, nullify the requirements of the Act as to the method of appointment. While these points apparently were not raised in the cases of Branchville Motor Company v. Adden, 158 S. C., 90, 155 S. E., 277, 281, Ex parte Love, 158 S. C., 249, 155 S. E., 428, and Fischer v. Chisolm, 159 S. C., 395, 157 S. E., 139, yet these cases hold that a chancery receiver is fully empowered to act under this statute and the correctness of that holding is not now being questioned.

The defendants argue from these cases that since this Court has construed the words “any receiver” as appearing in the Act to embrace other chancery receivers that therefore federal chancery receivers should likewise be included.

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Related

Nettles v. Walcott
107 F.2d 738 (Second Circuit, 1939)
Nettles v. Rhett
94 F.2d 42 (Fourth Circuit, 1938)

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Bluebook (online)
165 S.E. 340, 166 S.C. 534, 1932 S.C. LEXIS 174, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/biltrite-bldg-co-v-elliott-sc-1932.