Gormley v. Eison

5 S.E.2d 643, 189 Ga. 259, 1939 Ga. LEXIS 675
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedOctober 13, 1939
Docket13066.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 5 S.E.2d 643 (Gormley v. Eison) 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
Gormley v. Eison, 5 S.E.2d 643, 189 Ga. 259, 1939 Ga. LEXIS 675 (Ga. 1939).

Opinion

Grice, Justice.

1. Petitioners base their right to prevail on the contention that the superintendent of banks, after having paid them the full amounts of their principal, is in duty bound to pay them interest on their general demand deposits. It was not alleged that the bank contracted to pay them interest, or that the fund in the hands of the superintendent of banks had produced interest. The bank in process of liquidation having paid all costs and expenses of liquidation, and having paid the principal amount of all claims of depositors and other creditors, and the superintendent of banks having in his possession cash and other assets of an appraised value of more than $8000, the petitioners assert that they and all others similarly situated are entitled to interest on their deposits from the date of the suspension of the bank. “The law allows interest only because of a contract, express or implied, for its payment, or as damages for the detention of money, or for breach of some contract, or the violation of some duty. It is very generally stated that interest, being of purely statutory origin and not the creature of the common law, should not be awarded except in such cases as fall within the terms of the statute, unless it has been contracted for either expressly or impliedly. In other words, there is no absolute right, independent of contract, express or implied, or of statute, to interest.” Best v. Maddox, 185 Ga. 78, 82-83 (194 S. E. 578). There is in our rather comprehensive banking law of 1919 (Ga. L. 1919, pp. 135 et seq.), and the act amendatory thereof (Ga. L. 1925, pp. 119 et seq.), codified as title 13 of our Code of 1933, §§ 13-101 et seq.), no provision in the liquidation of insolvent banks, for the payment of interest. Section 24 of article 7 of the original act contains the sole reference to interest on deposits of. an insolvent bank. It requires the superintendent of banks to deposit in a bank dividends and unclaimed- deposits remaining in his hands unpaid for six months after the order for final distribution, the same to be in trust for the several depositors in, and creditors of, the liquidated bank; *262 “and the superintendent may pay over the money so held by him to the persons respectively entitled thereto, as and when satisfactory evidence of their right to the same is furnished.” The section concludes with the following statement: “The interest earned on the monies so held by him shall be applied toward defraying the expenses incurred in the payment and distribution of such unclaimed deposits or dividends to the depositors and creditors entitled to receive the same. The balance of interest, if any, shall be deposited and held as other funds to the credit of the Department of Banking.”

The language in the first part of the section, with reference to being held in trust for the several depositors in, and creditors of, the liquidated bank, does not refer to interest. It is the latter part of the section, quoted above, that deals with interest, and specific provision is there made for the application of interest so earned. There is no allegation in the petition as to where the sum of $8000, alleged now to be in the hands of the defendant, was derived from. ' If it was interest earned by the superintendent of banks, since the failure of the bank, on the dividends and unclaimed deposits remaining in his hands for six months after the final order of distribution, then by virtue of the very terms of the Code section the sum is not available for the payment of plaintiffs’ claims, because the law applies it otherwise. By its terms, the act approved March 15, 1935, striking section 13-822 of the Code of 1933 (6a. L. 1935, pp. 103-105), does not affect a bank which, as in this case, was taken over by the , superintendent for liquidation pursuant to title 13 of the Code. If the $8000 represents money paid by the stockholders as assessments imposed upon them by the law in force at the time (Code, § 13-822), the plaintiffs are in no better position, because our banking law applicable to this case provides: “After all the indebtedness of such bank is paid in full, the remaining assets of such bank shall be applied first to reimbursing the stockholders who have paid such assessment or assessments, and thereafter pro rata to all the stockholders.” We think the context shows that the word “indebtedness” as there used can. not refer to interest, but only to the principal amounts of indebtedness. We are supported in this construction by the very wording of the first part of the section from which the language last quoted was taken (Code, § 13-822) :

*263 “Within 90 clays after the superintendent of banks has taken possession of the assets and business of any bank, as in this title authorized, he shall make a careful estimate of the value of the cash assets of said bank which can probably be converted into cash within one year after so taking possession of the assets and business of said bank, and of the amount of such cash assets which will be available to pay depositors; and he shall immediately thereupon make an assessment upon the stockholders of said bank, sufficient, when added to the cash assets so available for depositors, to pay the said depositors in full.” If within 90 days he is to make an assessment against the stockholders of an amount sufficient, when added to the cash assets available, to pay the depositors in full, he must at that time have before him the amount of the indebtedness to depositors. We all know that various delays occur in the liquidation of a bank. Lengthy litigation sometimes occurs; and if it were intended to include interest in the term “indebtedness,” an uncertain quantity would enter, and his estimate would be little more than a guess, for of necessity he’ would not know for how long a time the interest would run.

While the petition fails to show where the $8000 of assets came from, and is silent as to whether it represents money paid in by stockholders on their assessments, or money remaining after those stockholders have been reimbursed, the answer avers that “This defendant has in his possession [not eight thousand dollars, but] the cash sum of $3119.37, together with certain real estate, notes, and choses in action, having an appraisal value of $7000. This defendant shows that payment of the principal amounts of the deposits in question was partially made out of collections realized under assessments levied against the stockholders of said bank, which said assessment collections totaled $10,908.62; and that said-stockholders who paid said assessments have not been reimbursed to any extent on account of said assessments paid by them.” The bill of exceptions recites that counsel for the plaintiffs admitted the facts thus alleged. The petition does not allege that all the debts of the bank have been paid, or that the funds in hand are sufficient to pay them. True, the petition alleges that the defendant has paid all costs and expenses connected with the liquidation of the bank, and in addition thereto has paid to plaintiffs and others similarly situated one hundred per cent, of the *264 principal amount of their claims, not including interest; but, as pointed out in the briefs filed by counsel for the plaintiff in error, by that part of the banking act now codified as § 13-821, taxes, judgments, contractual obligations, and unliquidated claims for damages and the like were made inferior to debts due to depositors.

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Bluebook (online)
5 S.E.2d 643, 189 Ga. 259, 1939 Ga. LEXIS 675, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gormley-v-eison-ga-1939.