Knickerbocker Trust Co. v. Iselin

109 A.D. 688, 96 N.Y.S. 588
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedDecember 15, 1905
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 109 A.D. 688 (Knickerbocker Trust Co. v. Iselin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Knickerbocker Trust Co. v. Iselin, 109 A.D. 688, 96 N.Y.S. 588 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1905).

Opinions

Clarke, J.:

The complaint alleges that the plaintiff at ¡all the times, therein-after mentioned was and now is a corporation organized and existing under the laws of the State of Hew York, duly authorized to loan money on real and personal' securities and to transact the general business of a trust company; that the City Trust and Banking Company was duly organized and incorporated and .transacted business under the laws of the State of Maryland ; that by- chapter 109 of the Laws' of -1892 of said State, which, among other things, added'section 851 to article 23 of the Public General Laws of that [689]*689State, governing said Corporation, it was provided: “ Each stoekhold er shall be liable to the depositors and creditors of any such corporation for double the amount of stock at the par value held by such stockholder in such corporation; ” that on the 20th day of April, 1903,'all the aforesaid statutes being at the time in full force and effect, plaintiff loaned to said City Trust and Banking Company $100,000 at six. ' per cent, to be repaid October 20, 1903; that at the time said loan was made defendant was a stockholder in said City Trust and Banking Company and was the holder and owner of 100 shares of the: capital stock thereof, of the par value of ten dollars p'er share;, that prior to the 20th of October, 1903, the said company became- and now is insolvent, and on the 6th of June, 1903, at which time, defendant still was the owner of said shares of stock, the property and business of said company were placed in the hands of receivers, in a proceeding duly brought in Circuit Court Xo. 2 of Baltimore, a court of competent jurisdiction, for the purpose of winding up its affairs; that there is still due to plaintiff upon its loan to said-company $49,000, with interest; that by virtue of the provisions of the said charter' of the City Trust and Banking Company, and the aforesaid laws of Maryland as defined, construed, administered and enforced by the courts of the State of Maryland, defendant is. personally and individually indebted to plaintiff in an amount equal to double the amount of stock at par held by defendant as aforesaid in the said City Trust and Banking Company, to wit, in the sum of $2,000, to recover which plaintiff may have an action against defendant. The complaint alleges demand and refusal, and demands judgment for $2,000 and interest from the date of demand. The defendant demurred, the court at Special Term overruled the demurrer, and from the interlocutory judgment the defendant appeals. '

Appellant claims that Marshall v. Sherman (148 N. Y. 9) is a controlling authority in his favor. That case was decided in 1895. What was decided was, that in a case brought by a foreign creditor of a Kansas corporation, which was insolvent and had gone into the hands of a receiver, against a citizen of this State, who was a stockholder in said corporation, under provisions of the Constitution and statutes of. Kansas, which made the stockholder liable to the extent [690]*690of the par value of his Stock and provided an- express and compli-' cated remedy unknown to our law and impossible o'f administration by our courts in its entirety, where the complaint contained no allegation as to the meaning or effect of these statutes or of the Constitution under the adjudications of the courts of Kansas, and the courts of this State were, therefore, obliged to construe them With the aid of such rules-and upon such principles as the courts of this State apply in the construction of such enactments here, that, as under oúrstatutés, an action by a single creditor against a single - stockholder would not lie, but that an action in equity must be brought-bringing in all the Creditors and all the stockholders, so that action would not lie. The opinion concluded with this language ; • ■“ When the courts of this State are asked to administer the; statutes / of Kansas, and we can see that the' case is surrounded by such complications,' and the circumstances are such that it cannot be done ' without injustice to our .own citizens, or that it will be impossible to, do full and complete justice to all the parties in interest, it is reasonable and just to decline to administer them at all,” The Court of Appeals has admonished us that we are bound by What it decides Only. If, as sometimes happens, broader statements were, made by way of argument or otherwise than Were essential to the decision of the questions presented, they are the dicta of the writer of the opinion and not the decision of the court; A judicial opinion, like evidence, is only binding so far as it- is' relevant, and when it ’wanders from the, point at issue it no longer has force as an official utterance. The failure to read the opinions of courts with this fact in mind gives rise to much fruitless litigation.” (Colonial City T. Co. v. Kingston R. R. Co., 154 N. Y. 493, 495.)

Subsequent to the decision of Marshall v. Sherman, and in March, 1900, the Supreme Court of the United States handed down its ojunion in Whitman v. Oxford National Bank (176 U. S. 559), This case arose in the United States Circuit Court for the southern district of New York and involved the precise Kansas Statutes passed upon in the Marshall case, That court said : “ The liability which by the Constitution and statutes is thus declared to rest upon the stockholder, though statutory in its origin, is contractual in its nature.” After referring to partnerships and limited partnerships and the contractual nature of the obligations to cred-. [691]*691itors therein assnmed, the court proceeded, “and it is none the less so when these same stockholders organized a corporation under a law of Kansas which prescribed the nature of the obligations which each thereby assumed to the others and to the' creditors. While the statute of Kansas permitted the forming of the corporation under certain conditions, the action of these parties was purely voluntary. In other words, they entered into a contract authorized by statute. * * * This liability is fixed and does not depend on the liability of other stockholders. There is no necessity for bringing in other stockholders ;■ * * * and as this liability is one which is contractual .in its nature, it is also clear that an action therefor can be maintained in any court of competent jurisdiction.”

It is true, when no Federal question is involved, that where the views of the United State's Supreme Court and the Court of Appeals differ, we are bound to follow the Court of Appeals. (Towle v. Forney, 14 N. Y. 423; Clements v. Yturria, 81 id. 285.) In Howarth v. Angle (162 N. Y. 179),, where an action was brought against a stockholder- by the receiver of - an insolvent bank of the State'of Washington, the Court of Appeals said: “According to the decisions of the highest court of the State where it was made, the so-called statutory liability of stockholders is part of the assets. The defendant took stock in the Tacoma bank subject to the burden of the law, which he impliedly agreed to bear, as he could not otherwise have become a stockholder. * * * That burden is an asset, vested in the receiver, and can be enforced in this State the same as a promissory note, not because the laws of Washington are in force here, but because the defendant, voluntarily assented to the conditions upon which the bank was organized-.

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Bluebook (online)
109 A.D. 688, 96 N.Y.S. 588, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/knickerbocker-trust-co-v-iselin-nyappdiv-1905.