Mister v. Thomas

89 A. 844, 122 Md. 445, 1914 Md. LEXIS 69
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJanuary 15, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 89 A. 844 (Mister v. Thomas) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mister v. Thomas, 89 A. 844, 122 Md. 445, 1914 Md. LEXIS 69 (Md. 1914).

Opinion

Burke, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The Farmers’ Trust, Banking and Deposit Company was incorporated by the Act of 1902, Chapter 141. Its home office or place of business was located in Baltimore City. The act of incorporation provided that the capital stock of the corporation should consist of five thousand shares of the par value of $50 each, and that when the amount of $50,000 should have been subscribed and fully paid in, the corporation should be entitled to begin the prosecution of business *447 under its charter. The second section of the act declared that “when the par value of any share shall have been full paid, the same shall thereupon become non-assessable and non-liable for or on account of any purpose whatever.”

Broad and varied powers were conferred upon the company. It was empowered to purchase and hold, bargain and sell, grant and assign lands, or any interest or estate therein, chattels, choses in action, checks, notes, bills receivable, bills payable, bills of exchange1, due bills, certificates of deposit, warehouse receipts, stocks, bonds, mortgages on real estate, leasehold, and chattel property. It was empowered to guarantee the security, integrity, and income of investments in mortgages upon real or leasehold property, or chattel interest in ground rent annuities, in stocks and bonds of any State, city, county, municipality or corporation, or stock company or co-partnership, to guarantee the validity of title to real estate, leasehold or chattel property, and to guarantee the payment of credit or of any part thereof, given or extended by or to any person or persons, firm or firms. It was given the right to invest, upon such terms as may be agreed upon or established by said corporation, any sum or sums of money in any mercantile, manufacturing, commercial or other business, or in any lawful enterprises transacted or carried on, or to be transacted or carried on, in the State of Maryland, or elsewhere, in connection with any person or persons, firm or firms, or co-partnerships, corporation or joint stock companies. By the sixth section of the charter, the corporation was given the right “to receive money on deposit, evidence of debt for collection, for discount or otherwise, chattels,, stocks, bonds, and all proper writing on storage or as collateral security, upon such terms as may be agreed upon or established by said company, and shall have the right to guarantee, endorse and secure the payment, punctual performance and collection of notes, debts, due bills, bills of exchange, contracts, bonds, accounts; claims, rents, securities, mortgages and interest thereon, titles to property, indebtedness of individuals, or of co-partnerships, firms, corporations, or of *448 joint stock companies, loans of Stales, cities, counties and municipalities, upon such terms as may be agreed upon or established by said company.” It was granted the power to act as a fiscal or transfer agent of any State, municipality, body politic, or corporate and in such capacity to receive and disburse money, h> accept and execute trusts of any and every description, to act as executor or administrator, receiver, guardian, committee, etc.

Section 11 of the charter reads as follows:

“Be it enacted, That said corporation be subject at all times to the provisions of the Act of eighteen hundred and ninety-two, Chapters one hundred and nine and two hundred and seventy-nine, so long as said chapters shall respectively remain in force; provided, that said corporation shall be subject at all times to the provisions of the Act of eighteen lmnrded and ninety-two, Chapters one hundred and nine and two hundred and seventy-nine, or amendments or sixpplements thereto.”

The amount of $50,000.00 of the par value of its stock was subscribed and fully paid for, and thereupon the company established an office in Baltimore City, effected an organization, and' began the prosecution of the business authorized by its charter. It sold other shares of stock at par and received the money therefor, conducted a large business and received large sums of money on deposit, paying the same to its depositors on checks, and also exercised other rights vested in it by its charter. It established branch offices within the State for the conduct of its business — one at Galena, called the Galena Bank : another at Darlington, called the Darlington Bank; another at Keedysville, called the Keedysville Bank; another at Mount Airy, called the Mount Airy Bank, and another at Hancock, called the Washington County Bank. These several branch offices conducted banking business in the name of the corporation and by virtue of the powers conferred by its charter,

*449 The corporation became insolvent, and a bill was bled against it in the Circuit Court Ho. 2 of Baltimore City by Alexander H. Robertson, a creditor of the company, alleging that it was unable to meet its obligations,, and that it was utterly insolvent, and praying that a receiver he appointed to take charge of all the assets of every kind and description, properties, hooks, papers and accounts goods and effects of the said company, and that the corporation he declared insolvent, and that it he dissolved and its affairs wound np, and that an account of its business assets and liabilities he taken under the direction.of the Court and applied to the payment of its debts and obligations, and the residue thereof, if any, distributed among the stockholders of the company. The company appeared to the suit and bled an answer admitting its insolvency and consenting to the appointment of receivei’s, and on October 9, 1907, receivers were appointed as prayed.

On the twenty-third of March, 1910, the receivers — the appellants on this record, bled a petition under oath in the Circuit Court Ho. 2 of Baltimore City, wherein the insolvent estate was being administered, in which they recited:

“Eirst: That three divide,nds have been declared and paid by them to the creditors of the defunct trust company, aggregating eighty-eight (88) per cent, upon the gross amount, of their claims, aggregating two hundred and twenty-two thousand, seven hundred and sixty-three dollars and two cents ($222,763.02), leaving a remnant of assets in the hands of your receivers.
“Second: That this remnant of assets is very uncertain in value and its reduction to money most difficult, and your petitioners would not like to say, therefore, just what will he realized thereon; hut because your petitioners do not believe that it will yield sufficient to pay the creditors dollar for dollar upon their claims, they have attempted to value the said remnant of assets, and do report the result of their attempt as follows:
“Third.: Real property carried on the hooks of the company at nineteen thousand, four hundred and thir *450

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Bluebook (online)
89 A. 844, 122 Md. 445, 1914 Md. LEXIS 69, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mister-v-thomas-md-1914.