Crane v. Pacific Bank

39 P. 215, 106 Cal. 64, 1895 Cal. LEXIS 570
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 5, 1895
DocketNo. 15863
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 39 P. 215 (Crane v. Pacific Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Crane v. Pacific Bank, 39 P. 215, 106 Cal. 64, 1895 Cal. LEXIS 570 (Cal. 1895).

Opinion

Haynes, C.

Appeal from an order dissolving an attachment.

On the tenth day of August, 1893, the plaintiff brought his action in the superior court of the city and county of San Francisco to recover from the defendant, a banking corporation, a certain sum alleged to have been deposited with it as a commercial deposit, and, on the same day, procured a writ of attachment to issue in said action, and which was on the same day levied upon assets of said bank sufficient to cover his claim.

On November 17, 1893, the defendant served upon plaintiff notice of a motion to dissolve said attachment “ upon the ground that the attachment was improperly issued and levied, and on the ground that said attachment is dissolved by operation of law by reason of the transaction of unsafe business, and the insolvency and [66]*66suspension of business by said Pacific Bank, defendant, prior to the issuance of said attachment, and by reason of the judgment of said superior court, duly made and entered, that it was unsafe for said bank to continue business, and that said bank was insolvent, and enjoining said bank from transacting business.”

Said motion was based upon affidavits served therewith, and upon the records and papers in said superior court in the action entitled The People etc. v. Pacific Bank, No. 42,863.

The affidavit of A. Gerberding read in support of said motion shows, in substance, the following facts:

That from January 5, 1891, he was a member of the state board of bank commissioners; that the defendant was incorporated in 1863 under an act of the legislature, entitled “An act to provide for the formation of corporations for the accumulation and investment of funds and savings,” approved April 11, 1862, under the name and style of the “Pacific Accumulation and Loan Company,” with a capital stock of one million dollars; that in 1886 the name of said corporation was changed to that of the “PacificBank” under an act of the legislature approved March 31, 1866, authorizing it to change its name; that said, corporation closed its doors for business and wholly suspended payment of its debts, dues, and liabilities on the twenty-third day of June, 1893, and has not since resumed payment; that on said last-mentioned day said bank held in trust for persons, partnerships, and corporations an aggregate fund amounting to about one million eight hundred and sixty-eight thousand and forty-one dollars and forty-five cents; that prior to said last-mentioned day said bank commissioners examined said bank and found that it had been guilty of a violation of law in conducting business contrary to its articles of incorporation in an unsafe manner, and so as to seriously jeopardize the capital, property, and business of the bank, and thereupon directed it by an order addressed to it to discontinue such illegal and unsafe practices, and to conform to the requirements of its [67]*67charter, but that the bank refused and neglected to comply with said order; that on said twenty-third day of June, 1893, the indebtedness of said bank was largely in excess of the reasonable and actual value of its assets; that the entire capital stock, together with the surplus, had become completely exhausted, and that the directors and stockholders neglected and refused to pay in said depleted stock or any part of it, and “ that on said twenty-third day of June, 1893, said Pacific Bank was wholly insolvent and remains so insolvent”; that the commissioners reported the condition of the bank to the attorney general, as required by law; that said attorney general commenced an action in the superior court on the fourteenth day of October, 1893, entitled “ The People of the State of California v. The Pacific Bank, a corporation, et al.,” in which action it was decreed on November 3, 1893, that said bank was insolvent, etc., and enjoining it and its officers from transacting any further business.

The complaint in said action of People v. Pacific Bank alleged substantially the facts stated in the foregoing affidavit of Mr. Gerberding, and, in addition, specified particular acts of mismanagement and of losses sustained by the bank, and its insolvency.

The answer of the bank in that case denied all acts of fraud and mismanagement, admitted its insolvency, and alleged that the interest of' the creditors and stockholders required that the bank should be enjoined from the transaction of any further business, and that its business and affairs should be closed under the provisions of the Bank Ccommissioners’ Act. This answer, it was further alleged, was duly authorized by vote of the board of directors.

Appellant excepted to the reading of the said complaint, answer, and decree in support of said motion, upon the ground that he was not a party to said action, and was not bound by the proceedings therein.

The affidavits read by appellant in opposition to the motion did not deny that the Pacific Bank was insolvent [68]*68on the twenty-third day of June, 1893, which was prior to the issuance of the attachment, nor that said bank was incorporated under the act of 1862, providing for the formation of corporations “ for the accumulation and investment of funds and savings” (Stats. 1892, p. 199), but alleged that it conducted the business of a commercial bank and no other, and advertised and held itself out as “ the oldest chartered commercial bank on the Pacific Coast”; that the claim upon which his attachment issued was a balance due him upon an ordinary commercial deposit; and upon these facts appellant contends that the property and assets of the bank were properly subject to attachment, and that the court erred in dissolving it; while counsel for respondent contend:

1. That the Pacific Bank is a savings bank; that the act of 1862, under which it was organized, declared that “ the capital stock and assets of the corporation shall be a security to depositors who are not stockholders,” and that such security is sufficient to prevent an attachment under section 538 of the Code of Civil Procedure; and,
2. That at the time respondent moved to dissolve the attachment the bank was in liquidation under the Bank Commissioners’ Act, and that the judgment of the superior court in the case of the People ex rel. Bank Commissioners v. Pacific Bank, rendered November 3, 1893, related back to the time the bank became insolvent, viz., June 23, 1893, which was prior to the attachment.

Whether the Pacific Bank should be held to have been a commercial bank or a savings bank is an important question, in some aspects, affecting the settlement and adjustment of its affairs; but, so far as this appeal is concerned, I think it immaterial, and therefore not necessary to be considered or decided; for, if it were beyond doubt or question that it not only conducted its business as a commercial bank, but was chartered as such, I think the attachment was properly dissolved.

Under the act creating a board of bank commissioners and prescribing their duties and powers (Stats. [69]*691877-78, p. 740), and the amendments thereof (Stats. 1887, p.

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Bluebook (online)
39 P. 215, 106 Cal. 64, 1895 Cal. LEXIS 570, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/crane-v-pacific-bank-cal-1895.