Casey v. Galli

94 U.S. 673, 24 L. Ed. 168, 1876 U.S. LEXIS 1928
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMarch 26, 1877
Docket15
StatusPublished
Cited by241 cases

This text of 94 U.S. 673 (Casey v. Galli) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Casey v. Galli, 94 U.S. 673, 24 L. Ed. 168, 1876 U.S. LEXIS 1928 (1877).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Swayne

delivered tbe opinion of tbe court.

The declaration .avers as follows: On and before the third day of June, 1864, the Bank of New Orleans was a banking corporation organized under the laws of the State of Louisiana, and as such carried on the business of banking until about the first day of July, 1871, when the bank, by dire proceedings under the act of Congress, entitled “ An Act to provide a national currency, secured by a pledge of United States bonds, and to provide for the circulation and redemption thereof,” approved June 3, 1864, became a national banking association under said act of Congress, and as such took the name and style of the “ New Orleans National Banking’Association,” and carried on the business of banking until the fourth day of October, 1873, when it failed and suspended payment.

Thereupon, the comptroller of" the currency, after due proceedings had, appointed a receiver for the association, and it was put in liquidation under the act of Congress before mentioned and the acts amending it, and the plaintiff is such receiver, being lawfully appointed under the said act. By the conversion of the Bank of New Orleans into such banking association every holder of the shares of the capital stock of said Bank of New Orleans became a shareholder of the capital stock of said New Orleans Banking Association to the amount of his shares, and as such subject to the liabilities imposed by said act of Congress on such shareholders. There is owing by the association to its creditors large sums of money. Its assets are insufficient to pay its debts. It lias become necessary, in order to pay the debts, to enforce the liability of the shareholders. The comptroller has decided that this shall be done. On the seventh day of June, 1875, by his order in writing, he required the plaintiff, as such receiver, to enforce such liability against each stockholder to the amount of the par value of his stock held at the time of the failure of the association. The capital stock of the association was $600,000; divided into twenty thousand shares of the par value of $80 each.

*677 The defendant is an alien, a subject of the kingdom of Italy, and vice-consul, &c. At the date of the failure of the associar tion he was the owner of fifty shares of the capital stock of the par value of $80 for each share. By reason thereof he is liable to pay the sum of $1,500. He has been specially requested to pay that sum, and has refused to do so. The plaintiff is, therefore, entitled by force of the statute to recover the said sum of $1,500, with interest at the rate of five per cent per annum.

It was agreed by the parties that demurrers, pleas, replications, and other pleadings might be filed without reference to the order in which they were properly pleadable.

The defendant demurred to the declaration, and assigned the following causes: —

1. That the defendant is bound to contribute ratably, and that the proper amount can be ascertained only in equity.

2. That the defendant is bound to contribute ratably to pay a large sum ; that this sum is not stated in the declaration, and hence what would be ratable and proper does not appear.

3. That the obligation of the defendant is to pay into the hands of the comptroller of the currency a ratable portion of the debts of the association proved before him, and that the declaration does not show that any debts had been so proved.

4. That the declaration demands a larger sum than the defendant is required by the statute to pay, and also an additional sum by way of interest.

In regard to the first three of these objections, it is sufficient' to say that Kennedy v. Gibson and Others, 8 Wall. 498, is conclusive against them. It is there said that the amount to be paid rests in the judgment and discretion of the comptroller ; that his determination cannot be controverted by the stockholders in suits against them; and that, when the order is to collect the full amount of the par of the stock, the suit must be at law. It is unnecessary to reproduce the reasoning of the court in support of these propositions. The sum to be paid being liquidated, and due and payable when the comptroller’s order was made, it follows that the amount bears interest from the date of the order. Otherwise there would be no motive to pay promptly, and no equality between those who should pay then *678 and those who should pay at the end of a protracted litigation. The defendant filed three pleas in abatement: —

1. Nul tiel corporation.

2. That there was not then, nor when the plaintiff was appointed such supposed receiver of said New Orleans Banking Association, nor before nor since that time, any such corporation in existence, because the Bank of New Orleans had no power by its cha*, ter, nor authority otherwise from the State of Louisiana, to change its organization to that of a national banking association under the laws of the United States; wherefore it was prayed that the deckuation be quashed.

3. That there was not then, nor when the plaintiff .was appointed such supposed receiver of the New Orleans Banking Association, nor before nor since that time, any such corporation in existence, because the owners of two-thirds of the capital stock of the Bank of New Orleans did not authorize the bank to be converted into a national banking association under the laws of the United States, nor to accept an organization certificate as such banking association; wherefore it was prayed that the declaration be quashed. .

The plaintiff ¿led a joint demurrer to all these pleas. At the argument the first plea was abandoned. ' The other two remain to be considered.

The pleas were properly framed in' abatement, and not in bar. Jones v. The Bank of Tennessee, 8 B. Mon. (Ky.) 122; Woodson v. The Bank of Gallipolis, 4 id. 203.

The second plea is clearly bad. No authority from the State was necessary to enable .the bank so to change its organization. The option to ao that was given by the forty-fourth section of the Banking Act of Congress. 13 Stat. 112. The power there conferred was ample, and its validity cannot be doubted. The act is silent as to any assent or permission by the State, j It was as competent for Congress to authorize the transmutation as to create such institutions originally.

The third plea is also bad.

The eighteenth section of the act requires the comptroller to make a careful examination in all cases of original applications, and, if he found the association was “ lawfully entitled to commence the business of banking,” he was to give a certificate *679 to that effect; and it is declared that the association “shall transact no business except such as is incidental to its organization, and necessarily preliminary, until authorized by the comptroller of the currency to commence the business of banking.” 13 Stat. 101. A like examination and certificate are required by the forty-fourth section, where an existing bank organizes under the act.

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Bluebook (online)
94 U.S. 673, 24 L. Ed. 168, 1876 U.S. LEXIS 1928, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/casey-v-galli-scotus-1877.