Crawford v. Swicord

94 S.E. 1025, 147 Ga. 548, 1918 Ga. LEXIS 23
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedJanuary 16, 1918
DocketNo. 388
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 94 S.E. 1025 (Crawford v. Swicord) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Crawford v. Swicord, 94 S.E. 1025, 147 Ga. 548, 1918 Ga. LEXIS 23 (Ga. 1918).

Opinion

George, J.

(After stating the foregoing-facts.) The question presented is, should the petition, in order to assert liability, disclose that the defendant acquired his stock from the bank, and not by purchase through or from one who was an original subscriber. The answer to this question involves a construction of § 2270 of the Civil Code (1910). This section is taken from an act of 1893 (Acts 1893, p. 70), and is as follows: “Said corporation shall be responsible to its creditors to the extent of its capital and its assets, and each stockholder shall be individually liable for all the debts of said corporation to the extent of his or her unpaid shares of stock, and said stockholders shall be further and additionally individually liable equally and ratably (and not one for another as sureties) to depositors of said corporation, for all moneys deposited therein, in an amount equal to the face value of their respective shares of stock, it being the true intent and purpose of this section, that, as to depositors for all moneys deposited with said corporation, there shall be an individual liability upon such stockholder in such corporation, over and beyond the par' valúe of his or her original shares of stock, equal in amount to the. face value of said shares of stock: Provided that said liability of the stockholders shall not prevent depositors from having equal rank with all other creditors upon the capital, property, and assets of said bank.”

“Prior to the act of 1893 there was no general law of this State regulating the individual liability of stockholders in banks. The superadded liability of the stockholder was, in each instance, prior to that act, dependent upon the provisions of the particular .charter.” Wheatley v. Glover, 125 Ga. 710, 716 (54 S. E. 626). In [550]*550Reid v. DeJarnette, 123 Ga. 787, 793 (51 S. E. 770, 3 Ann. Cas. 1117), Mr. Justice Evans, after a review of a number of bank charters that had been passed prior to 1893, said: “In view of all this legislation on the subject, we can not but conclude that the General Assembly intended each act of incorporation to speak for itself.” So it resulted that the statutory liability of stockholders in banks — and such was very generally imposed — was in no-two instances precisely the same. The charter considered in Reid v. DeJarnette, supra, imposed a statutory liability upon “subscribers to the capital stock,”' while the charter considered in Wheatley v. Glover, supra, limited the liability to those who held stock “at the time of suit.” Still other charters might be cited under which this liability was imposed upon the’ stockholders who were such “at the time the debt was ’created.” A further reference to the varying liability of stockholders in banks and other corporations might be made; but the point we wish to emphasize is that prior to the act of 1893 the policy adopted by the legislature of this State was to provide “in each instance under what circumstances and to what extent the owners of stock in such institutions may be held liable for corporate debts.” This policy, or, more accurately, the absence of a general policy, bears somewhat upon the construction which we give to that portion of the act of 1893 codified in § 2270, supra. We think this manifest by the decision in Reid v. DeJarnette, supra. The author of Morse on Banks and Banking, 5th ed., vol. 2, § 679, p. 394, seems to so interpret the decision in that case. He says: “In Georgia, if the charter was granted prior to the act of 1893 (Acts-1893, p. 70; Civil Code 1895, §§ 1903-1911), liability attaches only upon stockholders who became such by subscribing to the capital stock, and not upon stockholders who by way of succession from the original stockholders became owners of stock,” citing Reid v. DeJarnette, supra. The author overlooks the fact, however, that this statutory liability, prior to the act of 1893, was not uniformly imposed upon subscribers. The legislation of 1893 adopting a uniform policy with respect to the statutory liability of stockholders in banking corporations, was in a sense remedial, and not wholly in derogation of the common law. Statutes imposing individual liability upon stockholders in corporations are, in a strict sense, -in derogation of the common law. This is very generally conceded. It is recognized in the decisions of [551]*551this court hereinbefore cited. Our statute is in derogation of the common law, in its'technical sense, but is. likewise remedial when considered in the light of legislation in this State fixing a separate and different liability upon the stockholders in practically all banks chartered by the legislature of this State prior to 1893. The statute is hot, however, penal, and is not to be construed with the strictness required in the construction of a purely penal statute. Cf. Ham v. Robinson Co., 146 Ga. 442 (2), 444 (91 S. E. 483). Properly considered, a stockholder’s liability for his stock and assessments thereon, though fixed by statute, should be 'regarded as contractual. There is a contract running against each stockholder in a banking corporation in this State to the corporation itself, creditors of such corporation, ancb depositors as a special class of creditors. Looking to § 2270, supra, and considering it clause by clause: (1) “Said corporation shall be responsible to its creditors to the extent of its capital and its assets.” This provision is merely declaratory of the common law, and refers to the liability existing against all corporations under the common law and the law of this State as it existed prior to the act. (2) “And each stockholder shall be individually liable for all the debts of said corporation to the extent of his or her unpaid shares .of stock.” Again, this clause is merely declaratory of the common law as applied to all corporations. 1 Cook on Corporations (7th ed.), § 199; Commercial Bank v. Warthen, 119 Ga. 990, 994 (47 S. E. 536). (3) “Said stockholders shall be further and additionally individually liable equally and ratably (and not one for another as sureties) to'" depositors of said corporation, for all moneys deposited therein, in an amount equal to the face value of their respective shares of stock.” It is insisted by the defendant in certiorari that inasmuch as the common-law liability recited in the second clause of the section exists only against stockholders who have an unpaid subscription, it follows that the special 'statutory liability .exists only against stockholders who have once had an unpaid subscription, that is, subscribers. If this highly technical construction is given to the statute, it requires no argument to show that only those subscribers who have an unpaid subscription at the time the liability arises come within its- provisions. This is not contended. The phrase “said stockholders,” occurring in the clause of the statute last above quoted, creating or declaring the individual liability, relates [552]*552to “each stockholder” in the preceding clause of the statute. It is erroneous to assume that only subscribers to the capital stock of a corporation were at common law liable for the balance of an unpaid subscription to the capital stock. This assumption is the major premise in the argument of counsel for defendant in certiorari. Generally, “the transferee succeeds, not only to the rights, but also to the liabilities, of the transferrer; he is bound to pay the unpaid purchase-money of the shares as it shall be called for by the directors.” 10 Cyc. 701 (3), and citations; 1 Michie on Banks and Banking, 208, § 48 (2); 1 Cook on Corporations (7th ed.), §§ 256, 257, 258.

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Bluebook (online)
94 S.E. 1025, 147 Ga. 548, 1918 Ga. LEXIS 23, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/crawford-v-swicord-ga-1918.