Main v. Mills

16 F. Cas. 506, 6 Biss. 98
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Western Wisconsin
DecidedMay 15, 1874
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 16 F. Cas. 506 (Main v. Mills) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Western Wisconsin primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Main v. Mills, 16 F. Cas. 506, 6 Biss. 98 (circtwdwi 1874).

Opinion

BLODGETT, District Judge

(charging jury). The controverted questions of fact to be passed upon by you are comparatively few. It is conceded that on or about the 10th of April, 1S60, defendant Mills and one James L. Hill united under the general hanking law of this state in the organization of a bank by the corporate name of the Bank of Madison, with a capital stock of 825,000, of which each held one-lialf; that said bank commenced the transaction of the usual classes of business carried on in this city by banking corporations and bankers, and continued in said business until tlie 7th day of October, 1S73, when it was adjudicated bankrupt in this court on its own petition; that up to about the middle of January, 1SG0, defendant continued to hold half the stock of said bank and acted as its president; that during the time aforesaid, said hank paid the defendant dividends on his stock as follows: January 1, 1SG5, $0.084.00: January 1, 1SG6, $1,030.37; July 1, 1S6G, $1.-740.2S; January 1, 1S07, $3.003.05; July 1, 1S67, $815.55; January 1, 1SGS, $2.0SS.14; July 1, 1SG8, $1,505.57; January 1, 1809. $1.014.9.1; and that dividends to the same amount were declaimed and paid to said Hill, who held the other half of the stock at the same time. It was also admitted that about the middle of January, 1809, defendant sold to said Hill his stock and interest in said bank at a price much below par. But I think it may be taken as an admitted fact that tbe stock was treated between tlie parties to this transaction, Hill and Mills, as of little intrinsic [507]*507value at that time; that the defendant retained the presidency of the bank until January, 1871, although the evidence tends to show that his connection with it was merely nominal after he sold his stock.

It is also admitted that during the time the bank continued in business, regular reports of its financial condition were made as required by law to the bank comptroller of this state, and filed in the office of the secretary of state, and that these reports are mostly, if not all, signed, and purport to be sworn to, by the defendant as president.

The plaintiff has also given evidence tending to show that at the time these dividends were paid the capital stock of the bank had become so impaired by losses from bad debts and mismanagement that no actual profits were made from the business of the bank; that at the time when each of these dividends was paid the current losses of the bank by hopelessly bad and suspended debts were such as to have absorbed and sunk all the profits of the business, so that in fact no dividend was really earned and payable to stockholders.

Upon the facts thus admitted to be true or claimed to be proven, plaintiff insists that he is entitled to recover from defendant the dividends which he has from time to time received from January 1, 1805, to January 1, 1S69, inclusive; To this the defendant interposes by way of defense: (1) A general denial of the plaintiff’s right under the law to recover upon the facts set forth in the complaint; (2) a denial of those facts, which puts the plaintiff upon proof of such as have not been admitted on the trial; (3) that as to part of said dividends the right of action accrued more than six years before the commencement of the suit, and is therefore barred by the statute of limitations.

It is the province of the court to instinct you upon'some of these questions of law which arise upon the facts which you may find in the case. There is, perhaps, at this day no better established rule of law than that the capital stock of a moneyed corporation, whether it be a banking, insurance, mining or manufacturing company, is to be treated and deemed as a trust fund for the purpose of securing the payment of the debts of the corporation. In banks the capital stock stands as a guaranty to the extent of its amount, for the payment of the creditors of the bank. Theoretically under your law this stock and a certain degree of personal liability of the stockholders is pledged, first to secure the payment of the circulating notes of the bank, and after that to the general creditors. But it being admitted that there is no circulation in this case, the general creditors may be said to be the parties directly interested in this fund.

The officers of such a corporation have no right to make dividends to stockholders unless there are profits to be divided, over and above all losses, because the necessary result of so doing is to deplete the capital fund. The capital stock being, as I said, a trust fund, the first duty of the officers of the bank is to keep this fund intact and unimpaired. If there are gains and losses, the gains should be set off against the losses so far as may be necessary to keep the capital fund whole. All net profits above what are requisite for that purpose, may, as a general rule, be rightfully divided to stockholders. And while it is not necessary for me to say in this ease how far in my opinion a stockholder who is not an officer might be protected in the receipt of dividends, I will say that officers, who know and are bound to know the condition of the affairs of the bank, have no right to take dividends unless legitimately earned and on hand.

Applying these general principles to the case before us, you see that it becomes an important inquiry for you, and really the only material and important issue of fact for you to determine in this case, whether the bank had gains or profits which it rightfully could divide to its stockholders at the time the dividends in question were made.

You have heard the testimony bearing upon this branch of the case. The plaintiff has put in proof, which as he claims, shows that at the time each of these dividends was declared the losses, or suspended debts which ultimately proved to be losses, greatly exceeded the gains then on hand, and he therefore insists that those dividends were wrongfully made to the defendant and should be returned by him, because he, being an officer of the bank, was bound to know that these debts were either hopelessly lost, or so precarious and uncertain of collection that the bank had no right to consider them as part of its living available assets.

The defendant, on the contrary, insists that at the time these dividends were paid no serious losses had been sustained; that while some paper was suspended or overdue, and some accounts overdrawn, yet the debtors were all substantially solvent and good for their indebtedness to the bank. And it is for you to say whether the proof satisfies you that at the time any or all these dividends were paid the bank had made or had not made gains over and above its losses which authorized the making of the dividends.

If you are satisfied from the evidence that at the time these several dividends, from January 1, 1865, to January 1, 1869, were made, or either of them, the losses of the bank did at the time exceed the gains, so that in fact there were no profits over and above losses, then you should find for the plaintiff as to such of said dividends as you are satisfied from the evidence were made when there were no profits over and above losses to divide.

But in passing upon this testimony you must, view it as far as possible from the standpoint of the transaction itself, and not [508]*508in the light of subsequent revelations.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
16 F. Cas. 506, 6 Biss. 98, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/main-v-mills-circtwdwi-1874.