In re the Estate of Warren

18 N.W. 356, 52 Mich. 557, 1884 Mich. LEXIS 814
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 6, 1884
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 18 N.W. 356 (In re the Estate of Warren) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re the Estate of Warren, 18 N.W. 356, 52 Mich. 557, 1884 Mich. LEXIS 814 (Mich. 1884).

Opinion

Cooley, C. J.

This case was tried in the circuit court upon an appeal from the report of commissioners on claims appointed by the probate court. The circuit court, sitting without a jury, made the following findings:

1. The Grand Bapids Savings Bank is a corporation doing business at the city of Grand Bapids and elsewhere hi the State of Michigan.
2. On about the month of March, 1871, the Exchange Bank of Big Bapids was organized under the general banking law of the State of Michigan ; the capital stock of said bank'was fixed atone hundred and fifty thousand dollars, divided info one thousand five hundred shares of one hundred dollars each.
3. That George B. Warren, now deceased, who was a resident of the state of New York, subscribed for fifty share's of the said capital stock and paid the regular assessment of fifty per cent, of the face thereof, which was called in for the working capital of the bank soon after the last date mentioned.
1. The said Exchange Bank of Big Bapids commenced [559]*559business in 1871 and carried on a banking and exchange business at Big Bapids, Michigan, until about the year 1875, when, it having become deeply involved, its business was discontinued. . -
5. The said George B. "Warren continued to hold his aforesaid stock in said bank until the time of his death in the year 1879.
6. Between the 26th day of July, 1873, and the 13th day of April, 1874, both inclusive, "the Exchange Bank of Big Bapids became liable to the Grand Bapids Savings Bank, as endorser of six promissory notes, all of which were dishonored and unpaid at maturity. Judgments were thereafter recovered in the circuit court for the county of Mecosta, by the Grand Bapids Savings Bank, against Exchange Bank of Big Bapids and others, for the sum due and unpaid upon said several .notes. One of said judgments was recovered October 12, 1875, and the remainder of them October 24, 1876. A writ of execution was issued October 18, 1875, upon the first of said judgments, which writ was addressed to the sheriff of the county of Mecosta, and was in due course returned by the sheriff wholly unsatisfied. A writ of execution was also issued October 30, 1876, upon each of the judgments recovered October 24, 1876, all of which writs were addressed to the sheriff of the county of Mecosta, and were in due course returned by the sheriff wholly unsatisfied. The aggregate amount remaining due and unpaid upon said judgments, including interest to April 30, 1883, is the sum of twenty-eight thousand four hundred and eighty dollars and seventy-three cents ($28,480.73).
From the foregoing facts I find the following conclusions of law:
1. That no demand for the framing of any issue in this ■cause having been made by either party, and both parties having repeatedly noticed the cause for trial in this court, ■and the questions involved being such as appear to the court capable of trial and determination without the framing of any formal issue, it was competent for the court to proceed to try the cause without the framing of a formal issue, and any objection upon that ground must be deemed to have been waived.
2. That the remedy given by Act number 141 of the Session Laws of 1877, is not exclusive of the remedy claimed in this cause.
3. The entries in the stock-ledger of the Exchange Bank [560]*560of Big Bapids are competent evidence to show that George 'B. Warren was a stockholder in that bank, although the same fact was fully proven by the testimony of the witnesses sworn upon the trial, and the letters of George B. Warren.
4. That the Grand Bapids Savings Bank, appellant, is entitled to recover judgment in this case against the estate of George B. Warren, deceased, for the sum of nine hundred and fifty-three dollars and fifty-seven cents ($953.57), that being the ratable proportion due from the said estate as owner of fifty shares of the capital stock of the Exchange Bank of Big Bapids of the entire $2S,607.03, due the Grand Bapids Savings Bank from the Exchange Bank of Big Bapids, upon the judgments aforesaid.”

Upon these findings judgment was rendered against the estate in the circuit court, and the case is brought to this Court by writ of error.

Proof of the plaintiff’s case was made by showing by the stock-ledger of the Exchange Bank of Big Bapids that Warren in his life-time had a certain amount of stock in that bank which did not appear to have been transferred, and then by showing a judgment recovered by the plaintiff against that bank. This showing gave a basis upon which to compute the liability of the defendant estate. It is insisted on the part of the defense that the judgment against the bank was not evidence of the demand as against the stockholder. It is admitted that it would have been evidence under the General Banking Law before the amendment made to it in 1871. By the original law suit against a stockholder was only to be brought after return of execution against the bank, unsatisfied in whole or in part; and the recovery against a stockholder was upon the basis of the judgment already obtained against the bank; Comp. L. 1857 p. 1648 § 40; but this was so amended in 1871 as to provide that the officers and stockholders of every corporation or association formed under this act shall be individually liable for all debts contracted during the term of their being officers or stockholders of such corporation or association, equally and ratably, to the extent of their respective shares of stock in any such corporation or associa[561]*561tion.” How. St. § 3174. There is no doubt, we think, that before this amendment the judgment against the bank would have been evidence against the stockholder ; whether conclusive, we need not determine; but we doubt if there was any purpose in the amendment of 1871 to introduce any new rule of evidence, or to' make the remedy of the creditor in any respect more difficult or uncertain. On the contrary, the purpose would seem to have been to make the remedy of the creditor more speedy and certain, and to permit him, if he should so elect, to proceed against the shareholders more directly. The shareholder, it is true, occupies as regards the creditor 'the position of surety for the bank; Hanson v. Donkersley 37 Mich. 184; but he is something more than a surety; he is one of the associates in the bank, and by the very terms of the association he is deemed to undertake for the debts which the bank contracts. Bank of Australasia v. Nias 16 Q. B. 717; Copin v. Adamson L. R. 9 Exch. 345. And a judgment purporting to be rendered for a debt of the corporation is at least prima facie evidence that a debt was contracted, if not conclusive. Milliken v. Whitehouse 49 Me. 529; Wilson v. Pittsburg &c Coal Co. 43 Penn. St. 424; Hawes v. Anglo-Saxon Co. 101 Mass. 385, 397; Grund v. Tucker 5 Kan. 70; Donworth v. Coolbaugh 5 Ia. 300; Bohn v. Brown 33 Mich. 257, 263. In New York, where the decisions have been somewhat conflicting, a different view is taken, and a creditor who pursues the shareholders is not permitted to rely upon the judgment against the corporation, but is compelled to.make proof of the indebtedness lippiT which the judgment was recovered. Miller v. White 50 N. Y. 137, and cases cited.

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Bluebook (online)
18 N.W. 356, 52 Mich. 557, 1884 Mich. LEXIS 814, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-estate-of-warren-mich-1884.