Dawson v. Real Estate Bank

5 Ark. 283
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedJuly 15, 1843
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 5 Ark. 283 (Dawson v. Real Estate Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dawson v. Real Estate Bank, 5 Ark. 283 (Ark. 1843).

Opinion

By the Court,

Ringo C. J.

The demurrers to the first, second and fifth amended pleas, in the view which we have taken of the subject, present but two questions: First, can the bank maintain an action at law on the notes or obligations of a stockholder, given on account of money obtained by him from the bank? Second, could the bank legally take from a stock holder such note or obligation as that sued on, as a security for money obtained therefrom by him on account of his credit therein as guarantied by the 17th section of her charter?

In controverting the first proposition, it is urged on the part of the plaintiffs in error, that the corporators have a joint or common interest in the subject matter in litigation; that it is parcel of t-he joint stock of the company, and one of the numerous unsettled transactions existing in respect of their joint business, over which a court of common law has no jurisdiction: that the pleadings show a transaction, of which no tribunal but a court of equity can take cognizance.

To determine this question correctly, the rights of the respective parties and the relation each bears to the other, in regard to the demand in question, must first be ascertained. The first section of the charter declares that a bank shall be established “under the name and title of‘The Real Estate Bank of the State of Arkansas,’ with an original cash capital of two millions of dollars, to be raised by loans or negotiations on the security of real property, at its cash value, with the guarantee of the public credit as hereinafter provided:” The 4th section provides “that books of subscription for the sum of two millions two hundred and fifty thousand dollars, divided into shares of one hundred dollars each, and intended to secure the said loan of two millions of dollars,” shall be opened and kept open as therein prescribed. The 5th section provides, amongst other things, for the appointment of managers, and their award of the capital stock of said bank, to such of the subscribers as should appear to them to be entitled thereto, under the provisions of the charter. The 7th, 8th and 9th sections, provide for the election and appointment of directors, and the organization of the different boards of directory. The 10th section pledges the “faith and credit of the State” for the security of the capital stock of the bank and interest, and provides for issuing bonds of the State for two millions of dollars, payable to the order of the bank and transferable by her. The 11th section binds the bank to pay said bonds and interest, as the same shall become due and payable. Section 13 requires all subscriptions to the capital stock to be guarantied and secured by mortgages and bonds executed to-the bank, to be in all cases equal to the amount of stock subscribed; which bonds and mortgages are by the 11th section transferred to-the State, and the holders of the bonds, which may be issued by the State in virtue of this act. Sections 15 and 16 prescribe what lands1 may be mortgaged by the subscribers to the capital stock. By the-21st section, the subscribers to the capital stock are “created a corporation and body politic for the term of twenty-five years from the passage of this act, and shall be and are hereby made capable, under the name of the ‘Neal Estate Bank of the State of Arkansas,’ to receive, possess and hold all kinds of property, either movable or immovable, to sell, grant, bargain, alien or demise, and dispose of the same; to loan, negotiate, to take mortgages and pledges, and to discount on such terms and such securities as they shall think proper; provided, the whole amount of their discounts and loans do not exceed double the amount of the effective capital of said bank; and provided also, that the debts due by said principal bank or any of its branches, exclusive of deposits, shall not exceed double the amount of their said capital.” Section 37 declares “that the whole of the profits arising from the employment and use of said capital stock of two millions of dollars, as the same accumulates, shall become capital, remain with and be employed by said bank and branches, until the full and final payment of the bonds of the State, and all the responsibilities of said Real Estate Bank are fully and finally paid off and discharged, when a dividend shall be made to the slock holders of all the remaining funds, to each in proportion to his share of stock, to be paid in such instalments as the funds of, and debts due to the bank, will justify being made from time to time, after the twenty-second year of this charter.” Section 38, declares “that the said corporation shall nevei suspend or refuse the payment, in current money of the United States, of any of its notes or obligations, or of any funds received by them on deposit.” Section 40, provides “that the bills or notes obligatory, which it shall be lawful for the said corporation to issue, shall not be for a less denomination than five dollars, and if payable to order, trans ferable by endorsement; and if payable to bearer, they shall be trans ferable by delivery;” and the 17th section declares “that each and every stockholder shall be entitled to a credit equal to one half of the total amount of his shares; provided, that as he may use said credit, notes or obligations for the amount so used shall be furnished, and the interest thereon shall be annually paid in advance, and the principal shall be paid in equal instalments, so that the whole shall be paid in twenty years from the passage of this act.”

These quotations from the charter embrace, we think, every provision contained in it, which can possibly have any influence upon the question under discussion. From them, we consider it perfectly manifest that the stockholders have a joint, or, more properly speaking, common interest in the capital stock of the bank. It is a fund raised upon the negotiation or sale of certain bonds of the State, for the security and payment of which, with interest, each original stockholder was required by law to become bound by bond and mortgage of real estate equal in amount, at least, to his proportion of stock as awarded to him by the managers. The object for which this common fund was to be raised, and for which it was to be exclusively used, was banking. The principal, perhaps the only object for which the bank was established, was to aid the great agricultural interests of the State. This common fund, constituting the capital stock of the bank, was to be, and so far as it has been raised, was raised upon securities, the legal interest in which was vested in the bank: they were negotiated and disposed of by her authority; she received the funds thus raised, and held them legally in her custody, to be used and applied by her exclusively to the legitimate objects of banking, according to the common usages and practice of similar institutions, with a constant view to the advancement of the agricultural interests of the State; and in a manner consistent with the rules prescribed by her charter, and the general laws of the land.

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Bluebook (online)
5 Ark. 283, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dawson-v-real-estate-bank-ark-1843.