Mudge v. Commissioners of the Exchange & Banking Co.

10 Rob. 460
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMay 15, 1845
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 10 Rob. 460 (Mudge v. Commissioners of the Exchange & Banking Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mudge v. Commissioners of the Exchange & Banking Co., 10 Rob. 460 (La. 1845).

Opinion

Bullard, J.

The petitioners represent that they are either stockholders of the Exchange and Banking Company, or its creditors. That in virtue of several acts of the legislature, that institution was duly put into forced liquidation by a judgment of the District Court of the First District, and that commissioners were appointed to liquidate said institution according to law. That as stockholders and creditors, all its property was and is vested in them, as stockholders, to the extent of their interest, and that, as creditors, said property forms the common pledge for the- payment of their claims and demands. That, on the 25th March, 1844, the legislature passed an act incorporating a company by the name and style of the St. Charles Hotel Company, and did direct and enact that the said liquidating commissioners should transfer and convey to the said St. Charles Company, the building and lots composing the St. Charles Hotel, with all its furniture and appurtenances, which is of great value, and comprises nearly all the property of said corporation; and did direct that all the other property or assets should be sold. They represent that all the enactments and provisions of the said' act touching the alienation and transfer of the property of the said bank, are repugnant to the constitution of the United States, and utterly null and void, and ought not to be carried into effect; that it invades the rights of property, and takes from the stockholders of the said bank their lawful property, and vests it in others, not for any public purpose, but for the private benefit of the St. Charles Hotel Company, and deprives the creditors of the bank of their pledge, without providing any adequate, lawful, or valuable consideration or compensation. They pray that the St. Charles Hotel Company, by their president, and the liquidating commissioners may be cited, and that the act of the legislature may be declared unconstitutional and void, and that the commissioners may be ordered to retain the said property and assets, and to proceed with the administra[462]*462tion thereof. They pray for damages, and for an injunction until the further order of the court. An injunction was accordingly granted.

A majority of the commissioners answer, that they have never consented to, nor refused to comply with the requisitions of the act of the legislature, but they require' that the parties try their own rights, and the question, whether they, the commissioners, have the right to transfer the property of the stockholders, as required by the charter of the St. Charles Hotel Company.

The third commissioner answers, that he has always been ready and willing to comply with the law creating the St. Charles Hotel Company, and he submits the question to the decision of thq court.

The St. Charles Hotel Company answer, that the Exchange and Banking Company was totally insolvent and unable to pay its liabilities. That it was put in liquidation according to law, and commissioners appointed to carry on the liquidation. That the system of liquidation established by law, being found to be expensive, insufficient, and destructive of the interests of the creditors, a large majority of them presented a petition to the legislature, praying that the assets of the Company should be administered by the creditors themselves, and that the said creditors should be incorporated, and that the assets, consisting almost entirely in the premises known as the St. Charles Hotel, should be transferred to them, thus united as corporators under the style of the St. Charles Hotel Company. That, accordingly, the act in question was passed, which, they allege, is valid and binding, providing especially for the liquidation of an insolvent corporation, divests no property of the stockholders for any other purpose than that of paying their debts, and is in no manner repugnant to the constitution of the United States, or of Louisiana. That the bank being- utterly insolvent, the stockholders have no interest whatever in the manner of dividing its assets among the creditors. That none of the creditors are injured by said act, but their interests and rights fully protected. The answer contains other matters which it is unnecessary to set forth, as the case turned, in the court below, altogether upon the constitutional validity of the act incorporating the new com[463]*463pany, and that is the only question which has been argued in this court. That act was pronounced constitutional by the Commercial Court, and the plaintiffs appealed.

We have had occasion more than once to pronounce upon the analogy which exists between cases of a surrender by insolvent debtors to their creditors and the administration of the property by them surrendered by syndics, and the liquidation of corporations put in liquidation under the acts of 1842, and administered by commissioners. In both, the property vests, in effect, in the creditors, and the former owner has no longer any right or interest, except that of receiving such residuum as may be left after the payment of all the debts. It follows, that neither the insolvent debtor, nor the stockholders of an insolvent corporation, have any faculty to appear in court to control the administration of the assets. Their title is divested, and they retain no other right than to receive a residuum, and, for that purpose, perhaps, to coerce a final settlement by the commissioners. Such of the plaintiffs, therefore, as base their right to sue on the fact that they were stockholders, cannot maintain their action ; and our attention must be confined to the case as it relates to the creditors of the Exchange and Banking Company.

And this brings us to the enquiry, what is the true character of the new corporation, styled the St. Charles Hotel Company? The preamble to the act of incorporation contains the key to its construction. It is recited that certain creditors of the Exchange Bank have represented that, in their opinion, the interest of the creditors of said bank imperiously requires that the St. Charles Hotel, which comprises a large portion of the value of the assets of the said bank, should be divided into-shares of small amounts, and sold at public auction, payable in the obligations of the said bank. To carry out these views the new corporation was created, with a stock divided into twenty thousand shares, estimated nominally at twenty-five dollars per share. Twelve thousand shares are to be handed over to the commissioners for liquidating the bank, to represent the hotel and appurtenances, which is to be transferred to the new corporation, subject to its liens and incumbrances; and the other eight thousand shares are to be sold to pay off the incumbrances, and for carrying into [464]*464effect the objects of the incorporation. It is made the duty of the liquidating commissioners to sell the remaining assets of the bank, payable in the obligations of said bank, and, immediately after the sale of the other assets, to dispose of said twelve thousand shares to the highest bidder, after certain public notices, not more than three thousand shares in any one month, and not more than one hundred shares in a lot, payable in the obligations of the Exchange and Banking Company, or specie, or in part of each, at the option of the purchaser; and it provides that the whole concerns of said bank shall be closed on or before the 1st of January, 1845, when the commissioners shall file their final tableau, on the homologation of which they shall be discharged. The hotel thus transferred to the new company is to be administered by directors chosen by the stockholders.

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Bluebook (online)
10 Rob. 460, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mudge-v-commissioners-of-the-exchange-banking-co-la-1845.