Picklesimer v. Morris

132 S.E. 372, 101 W. Va. 127
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 2, 1926
DocketNo. 5674, No. 5675
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 132 S.E. 372 (Picklesimer v. Morris) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Picklesimer v. Morris, 132 S.E. 372, 101 W. Va. 127 (W. Va. 1926).

Opinion

Lively, Judge:

By these writs H. A. Abbott, Commissioner of Banking, and Hayes Picklesimer, receiver of the Bank of Benwood, and appointed as such by said Commissioner of Banking, ask that Honorable P. D. Morris, Judge of the Circuit Court of Marshall County, and Jacob Milbaugh who is a creditor of said bank and who sues in behalf of all other creditors of said bank similarly situated, be prohibited from further proceeding in a suit in chancery instituted by Milbaugh in said court.

It appears from the pleadings that the Bank of Benwood is a West Virginia corporation, and on June 9, 1925, Abbott, the Commissioner of Banking, declared it to be insolvent and appointed. Picklesimer as receiver therefor, by and with the consent of the Governor, and that the receiver qualified as *130 suck by giving a large bond, and took charge of the bank and began to wind up its affairs as directed by the banking laws; that Milbaugh instituted suit in chancery returnable to December Rules, 1925, iii behalf of himself and all other creditors of the bank (he being a depositor of about $2,500.) against Abbott, commissioner, Picklesimer, receiver, the officers, directors, stockholders (as far as he knew them) and various persons thought to be debtors of the bank, praying for an account of the assets and liabilities of the bank; that the stockholders be ascertained and their liability for double the amount of the stock held by them, the indebtedness of the officers and directors to the bank; that such indebtedness be asserted, as well as the double liability of the stockholders; that the commissioner of banking and a former commissioner be made to pay damages for not properly examining the bank and sooner ascertaining its insolvent condition; that the debts against the bank be ascertained in the order of their priority, and paid out of the assets when collected under direction of the court, and for general relief. The bank, as such, does not seem to have been made a party. No relief is prayed for against the receiver.

The bill filed is a general creditor’s bill and is for the purpose of marshalling assets and converting them into money, ascertainment of the indebtedness in the order of dignity and priority; in short, for winding up the affairs of the insolvent bank in the interest of the creditors and stockholders. Abbott, commissioner, and Picklesimer, receiver, demurred and answered. Picklesimer offered a plea in abatement to the jurisdiction of the court. The demurrers were overruled, and the plea was rejected. However, the demurrer was sustained as to Abbott, commissioner, and Jackson, former commissioner, and the bill dismissed as to them. The court assumed jurisdiction and referred the cause to a master commissioner to make a comprehensive report, required the receiver to bring his books and doings before the commissioner, and, in effect, stayed his hand in further collecting or distributing the assets. Suits which the receiver had instituted against the officers and directors for negligent discharge of their duties were consolidated with Milbaugh’s suit. At this stage of the case, *131 plaintiffs obtained this rule in prohibition, on the ground that the court below had no jimsdiction to entertain the bill.

The only question we have before us is, whether the circuit court has jurisdiction of a general creditor’s'bill to wind-up the affairs of an insolvent bank which has been closed and its affairs taken charge of and being wound up under the commissioner of banking; or having jurisdiction, has exceeded its legitimate powers. Prohibition lies as a matter of right where there is lack of jurisdiction to perform any judicial act. Code, Chap. 110, Sec. 1. To sustain jurisdiction in the lower court counsel attack that part of the banking act which gives authority to and directs the commissioner of banking to take charge of an insolvent bank by appointment of a receiver, by and with the consent of the governor, and to administer the affairs and liquidate the bank for the benefit of all persons concerned, asjnmonstitutional. It is argued that the commissioner is not a court/ and cannot appoint a receiver to the exclusion of a court in the appointment of its own receiver; that a court has that inherent power, and it cannot be legislated into discord. Courts are never quick to nullify an act of the law-making power, a co-ordinate branch of the government, unless there is a plain and positive conflict in the act with some part of the Constitution. All doubts are solved in favor of the constitutionality of the banking act. The Constitution says that banks may be created by the legislature by a general banking law. Art. 11, Sec. 6. The power granted is very broad and comprehensive. The only restriction is that the stockholders shall not be exempt from double liability on the stock held by them for purposes of paying the liabilities of the bank. Corporations created by a state may be subjected by its laws to supervision, visitation, regulation and control, not only in the life of .the corporation and conduct of their affairs, but also in the method by which they may be wound-up and liquidated. The power which gives the life, has the power to extinguish it and prescribe the method and by whom it shall be done. For dissolution of an ordinary corporation the method is prescribed by a suit in equity at the instance of not less than one-fifth in interest of the stockholders. Chap. 53, Sec. 57, Code. Many decisions uphold *132 the constitutionality of acts for winding-up the affairs of insolvent banks by a state officer or department as a valid exercise of the police power. The business of banking is so intimately interwoven with the business of the State, that public welfare demands that it should be supervised, visited, examined, controlled and liquidated, if need be, by experts. The exercise of such power by the Legislature is dictated and warranted by sound public policy. Koch v. Missouri-Lincoln Trust Co., 181 S. W. (Mo.) 44; State v. Scranton Title Guaranty &c. Co., 152 Pac. (Idaho) 189; McDavid v. Bank of Bay Minette, 69 So. (Ala.) 452; Noble State Bank v. Haskell, 219 U. S. 104, Anno. Cas. 1912A 487; Jeffries v. Bacastown, 90 Kan. 495, 135 Pac. 582. In the last cited case the statute authorizing the bank commissioner to appoint a receiver for an insolvent bank was held not to be unconstitutional on the ground urged that such appointment could only be made by a court of equity, and that the inherent power of a court of equity to appoint a receiver could not be interferred with by legislative enactment. Sec. 81a (7) Chap. 54, Code, which gives the commissioner of banking power to take, charge of a banking institution found to be insolvent by him, appoint a receiver with the consent of the governor, and wind-up its affairs in the manner therein prescribed, is not unconstitutional. It is a valid exercise of the State’s police power, and is authorized by the Constitution which says that the legislature may enact a general banking law.

The statute being constitutional, it only remains to determine whether under the statute the jurisdiction of the commissioner of banking to wind-up the affairs of such bank is exclusive.

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Bluebook (online)
132 S.E. 372, 101 W. Va. 127, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/picklesimer-v-morris-wva-1926.