Dunn v. O'CONNOR

89 F.2d 820, 67 App. D.C. 76, 1937 U.S. App. LEXIS 3598
CourtCourt of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit
DecidedFebruary 23, 1937
Docket6711
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 89 F.2d 820 (Dunn v. O'CONNOR) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dunn v. O'CONNOR, 89 F.2d 820, 67 App. D.C. 76, 1937 U.S. App. LEXIS 3598 (D.C. Cir. 1937).

Opinion

GRONER, J.

This is an appeal from an order of the District Court dismissing the bill of complaint and the several intervening petitions filed below in this cause. The bill was filed on behalf of plaintiffs as stockholders of Continental Trust Company of Washington, D. C., and other stockholders intervening and making themselves parties. The original plaintiffs did not perfect their appeal and appellants are in-terveners representing stockholders of Continental Company owning together above 6,000 shares of its stock. The original defendants were the Comptroller, the receiver of Continental, receiver of Commercial National Bank, and Continental itself. Pending hearing the bill was amended, making the receiver of District National Bank, the receiver of United States Savings Bank, and Loudoun National Bank of Leesburg, Va., parties defendant. Service of process against the last named was quashed. All the defendants except Continental filed ' motions to dismiss. Continental filed no pleading. The court below sustained the motions to dismiss. A condensed statement of facts follows:

Continental was organized January 30, 1912, under the laws of the District of Columbia with fully paid capital of $1,-000,000. Thereafter and until January 18, 1930, it operated in the city of Washington as a trust company and bank of deposit. On the last-named date it entered into a written agreement with Commercial by which Commercial agreed to buy and Continental to sell for $100,000 in cash all the deposits of Continental, aggregating $2,-600,000, and Continental agreed to place with Commercial to cover depositor liability all its assets except the cash’ payment of $100,000, “said assets to be liquidated by The Commercial National Bank, without compensation, in conjunction with a committee to be appointed by the Continental Trust Company, and the excess beyond that necessary to cover such deposit liability, returned to the Continental Trust Company.” Thereafter Continental ceased to do a banking business, but simultaneously with the transaction and from time to time thereafter during 1930 borrowed from Commercial and from the other defendants, United States Bank, District Bank, and Loudoun National Bank, large sums of money for the purpose of purchasing stock of Commercial and also for the purpose of purchasing its own stock. As a result, it became the owner of 4,000 shares of Commercial stock and an unstated number of shares of its own stock. It received from time to time dividends aggregating $105,000 on Commercial stock and presumably distributed these to its own stockholders as dividends. Con *823 tinental’s depositors acquiesced in the arrangement transferring their accounts to Commercial and accepted Commercial with respect to their deposits; and the liquidation of the assets of Continental proceeded under the terms of the contract and resulted — as is now claimed — in a loss to Commercial of around $600,000, which is asserted as a liability of Continental.

In March, 1933, the Comptroller, having previously taken possession, of Commercial, ordered a 100 per cent, assessment on its stockholders, and in March, 1933, took possession of Continental. The bill alleges that the receiver of Commercial is demanding of the receiver of Continental the sum of $400,000 on account of the 100 per cent, assessment on 4,000 shares of Commercial stock in the name of Continental and that the Comptroller has tentatively rejected this demand, but that in order to provide funds to pay other sums ascertained by Comptroller to be due by Continental, the Comptroller has ordered an assessment of 100 per cent, against the stockholders of Continental.

Appellants, as stockholders of Continental, ' resist the assessment on the grounds—

First, that the double liability of Continental stockholders, under the provisions of the District of Columbia laws with relation to the incorporation of trust companies, is a general liability to creditors and a direct property right of such creditors which the Comptroller is without authority to enforce.

Second, that the purchase of stock of Commercial by Continental was ultra vires and therefore does not constitute a legal claim upon which a liability for assessment on Continental shareholders can be predicated.

Third, that the contract between Commercial and Continental was an outright sale and that an alleged indebtedness of several hundred thousand dollars growing out of the liquidation of assets transferred by Continental to Commercial does not constitute a valid claim against Continental.

Fourth, that the debts evidenced by notes alleged to be due United States Bank, District National, Loudoun National Bank, and Commercial were incurred by Continental for the purpose of purchasing Commercial stock and that the lending banks had full knowledge of this ultra vires purpose, as a result of which the debts are uncollectible — in consequence of all of which Continental was free of debt and the Comptroller was without authority in assessing the stockholders.

Enough has been said to explain the prayers of the bill—

(a) For an injunction against the collection of the assessment against the stockholders of Continental;

(b) For the invalidation of certain debts of Continental;

(c) For the cancellation of the receiver’s demand against Continental on account of its ownership of stock of Commercial ;

(d) For accounting between Continental and its alleged creditors; and

(e) For a declaratory judgment as to the rights and liabilities of appellants and other stockholders of Continental.

It appears from the pleadings that the claims against Continental which have been allowed by the Comptroller amount to $375,050. The itemized statement of these includes the note loans to Continental by Commercial and a little less than a hundred thousand • dollars of note Joans by the other defendant banks to Continental and some two thousand dollars of sundry indebtedness. But the claims against Continental which the Comptroller has allowed, amounting, as we have seen, to $375,050, do not include any sum of money claimed as arising out of the contract between Continental and Commercial of January 18, 1930, or the $400,000 assessment of Continental as a stockholder of Commercial. As to the contract, the Comptroller has authorized and directed the institution of a suit for an accounting, and has rejected the $400,000 stockholder assessment claim against Continental.

The District Judge held that the Comptroller was empowered under the District of Columbia statutes to impose and collect the double liability of stockholders of Continental and that his action in making the assessment was neither illegal nor arbitrary. He held as to the debts for borrowed money due the defendant banks, including Commercial, that Continental had received the benefits of the money and was bound on principles of equity and justice to its repayment; and that, inasmuch as there was a pending suit to ascertain the contract rights as between Continental and Commercial, which it would require time to determine, nothing growing out of *824 that transaction would justify interference with the assessment; and, finally, that if it should later develop that the amount of the assessment was more than necessary to pay Continental's debts, provision was made by statute for the return of the excess collected.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

In Re Anjopa Paper & Board Manufacturing Co.
269 F. Supp. 241 (S.D. New York, 1967)
Wagner ex rel. Molner v. South Chicago Sav. Bank
146 F.2d 686 (Seventh Circuit, 1944)
Nieman v. Bethlehem Nat. Bank
113 F.2d 717 (Third Circuit, 1940)
Robbins v. Mitchell
107 F.2d 56 (Ninth Circuit, 1939)
Greaney v. Deitrick
103 F.2d 83 (First Circuit, 1939)
Nettles v. Rhett
94 F.2d 42 (Fourth Circuit, 1938)
Nettles v. Rhett
20 F. Supp. 48 (E.D. South Carolina, 1937)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
89 F.2d 820, 67 App. D.C. 76, 1937 U.S. App. LEXIS 3598, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dunn-v-oconnor-cadc-1937.