Ham v. . Norwood

147 S.E. 291, 196 N.C. 762, 1929 N.C. LEXIS 100
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedMarch 20, 1929
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 147 S.E. 291 (Ham v. . Norwood) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ham v. . Norwood, 147 S.E. 291, 196 N.C. 762, 1929 N.C. LEXIS 100 (N.C. 1929).

Opinion

STACY, C. J., dissenting: BROGDEN, J., concurring in dissent. Action by certain depositors and creditors of an insolvent bank, in behalf of themselves and all other depositors and creditors, to recover damages sustained by said bank, resulting in its insolvency, and caused by the wrongful acts of defendants, as its officers and directors. *Page 764

The receiver of said bank is a party defendant. It is alleged in the complaint that said receiver, upon demand duly and regularly made upon him, prior to the commencement of this action, refused to bring suit to recover said damages. It is further alleged therein that "by reason of the unlawful, wrongful and negligent conduct on the part of said defendants as hereinbefore alleged, these plaintiffs have been damaged in the sum of $177,117.59, less such amounts as the receiver has been able to realize from such assets as were left intact at the time of the closing of the doors of the said Snow Hill Banking and Trust Company, which said amount is not exactly known to these plaintiffs, but upon information and belief, they allege said amount to be about $55,000, and these plaintiffs here demand that the defendant, the National Bank of Snow Hill, receiver of the Snow Hill Banking and Trust Company, file in this cause a true and complete statement of the net receipts from the said Snow Hill Banking and Trust Company's assets which were turned over to such receiver."

From judgment overruling his demurrers to the complaint, both written and ore tenus, defendant, G. A. Norwood, appealed to the Supreme Court. The demurrer, in writing, of the defendant, G. A. Norwood, for that it appears upon the face of the complaint (1) that there is a defect of parties defendant; (2) that there is a defect of parties plaintiff, and (3) that several causes of action have been improperly united therein, was properly overruled. The said demurrer cannot be sustained.

The cause of action set out in the complaint, as will appear by reference to the allegations contained therein, is not for the recovery of damages which the several plaintiffs have sustained as individual depositors and creditors of the Snow Hill Banking and Trust Company, by reason of its insolvency; it is not alleged that each of the plaintiffs has sustained damages peculiar to himself, which he alone would be entitled to recover of defendants, under the authority of Bane v. Powell, 192 N.C. 387,135 S.E. 118, cited and approved in Wall v. Howard, 194 N.C. 310,139 S.E. 449. The cause of action is for the recovery of damages sustained, primarily, by the Snow Hill Banking and Trust Company, resulting in its insolvency, and caused, as alleged in the complaint, by the wrongful acts of defendants, acting not as individuals, but as its officers and directors, charged with certain specific duties to said Banking *Page 765 and Trust Company, which it is alleged they have wilfully, wrongfully and unlawfully failed to perform. The allegations of the complaint are sufficient to constitute a cause of action in favor of the Snow Hill Banking and Trust Company, under the authority of Douglass v. Dawson,190 N.C. 458, 130 S.E. 195, also cited and approved in Wall v. Howard,supra. In Corporation Commission v. Bank, 193 N.C. 113, 136 S.E. 362, it is said, in the opinion written by Stacy, C. J.:

"That the right of action against the officers and directors of a banking corporation, for loss or depletion of the company's assets, due to their wilful or negligent failure to perform their official duties, is a right accruing to the bank, enforceable by the bank itself, prior to insolvency, and hence enforceable by the receiver for the benefit of the bank, as well as for the benefit of its creditors, is the holding or rationale of all the decisions on the subject." Douglass v. Dawson,190 N.C. 458, 130 S.E. 195; Besseliew v. Brown, 177 N.C. 65,97 S.E. 743; Bane v. Powell, 192 N.C. 387, 135 S.E. 118; Wall v.Howard, 194 N.C. 310, 139 S.E. 449.

Upon the appointment of its receiver, after the adjudication that it was insolvent, the cause of action against the defendants herein, which upon the allegations of the complaint had accrued to the Snow Hill Banking and Trust Company, passed to and vested in said receiver, as an asset of said Banking and Trust Company, to be administered by said receiver for the benefit of creditors, depositors and stockholders of said Banking and Trust Company. It is well settled that it is the right of said receiver, and ordinarily his duty, to realize, if possible, by suit or otherwise, upon said asset, by reducing same to money. Money realized from such asset, by suit or otherwise, must be distributed ratably and equally, first, until they are paid in full, among the creditors and depositors, having regard, of course, for priorities, where they exist, and then among the stockholders of said insolvent company. Corp. Com. v. Bank, supra; Zane on Banks and Banking, sec. 86. It was held by this Court in Wall v. Howard,supra, that the receiver of an insolvent bank, alone, nothing elseappearing, can maintain an action to recover of officers and directors of such bank, damages for a wrong done by them to the bank. In Douglass v.Dawson, supra, it is said:

"Actions to recover such assets must be brought and prosecuted by the receiver, in his name, as representing all the creditors as well as the corporation in process of liquidation, or if such actions are brought by creditors or stockholders, it must be alleged in the complaint that demand was made upon the receiver to institute the action, and that he has refused to comply with said demand. In an action brought by creditors, depositors or stockholders to recover assets belonging to the *Page 766 corporation, the title to which has vested in the receiver, upon his refusal to bring the action, the receiver may properly be made a defendant, to the end that the recovery may be subject to orders and decrees of the court, in the judgment, as to its application to the claims of creditors and depositors, or to its distribution among stockholders."

The procedure suggested in the opinion in Douglass v. Dawson, supra, and approved by this Court, is in accord with the principle, upon which Moorev. Mining Company, 104 N.C. 534, 10 S.E. 679, and Merrimon v. PavingCo., 142 N.C. 539, 55 S.E. 366, were decided. In the opinions in both these cases, Hawes v. Oakland, 104 U.S. 450, 26 L.Ed., 827, is cited and followed. In that case it was held that to entitle a stockholder in a corporation to maintain an action in his own name, for a wrong done to the corporation, he must allege that he has, before instituting the action, exhausted all the means in his power to obtain redress of his grievances, within the corporation.

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Bluebook (online)
147 S.E. 291, 196 N.C. 762, 1929 N.C. LEXIS 100, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ham-v-norwood-nc-1929.