Rockwood v. Foshay Trust & Savings Bank

261 N.W. 697, 195 Minn. 64, 1935 Minn. LEXIS 804
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedJune 28, 1935
DocketNo. 30,424.
StatusPublished

This text of 261 N.W. 697 (Rockwood v. Foshay Trust & Savings Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rockwood v. Foshay Trust & Savings Bank, 261 N.W. 697, 195 Minn. 64, 1935 Minn. LEXIS 804 (Mich. 1935).

Opinion

- Holt, Justice.

Defendant appeals from an order sustaining a demurrer to the answer alleging certain set-offs or counterclaims, and directing judgment for xolaintiff.’

For brevity plaintiff will hereinafter be referred to as the company and the defendant as the bank. The company, a Delaware corporation, some time previous to November 1, 1929, owned 470 and a fraction of shares of the capital stock of the bank, 470 shares of *65 which it had pledged to one Warner to secure a loan of $500,000. The hank was organized under the laws of this state, having an authorized capital stock of $200,000, divided into 2,000 shares of the par value of $100 a share. On November 1, 1929, a general receiver was appointed for the company, by the federal court, Avho at once qualified. Coincident Avith such appointment the bank ceased to do active business and began liquidation, although the stockholders did not authorize the board of directors to dissolve the bank until in September, 1933. When the bank ceased active banking, another bank assumed and agreed to pay the bank’s depositors and creditors and obtained the pledge of certain of the bank’s assets as security. On December 21, 1933, the liquidation had progressed so far that a liquidating dividend of $30 upon each share of its capital stock was declared. It also appears that the receiver had brought suit against Warner to cancel the $500,000 debt as usurious and to recover the 470 shares of stock of the bank pledged to secure the debt; that the receiver recovered the stock, demanded of the bank the liquidating dividend thereon, Avas- refused, and thereupon, by order of the court, was permitted to bring this action. The pleadings show that claims to the amount of more than $1,600,000 had been filed against the company, including tAvo claims of the bank aggregating $846.20, and that the assets will pay only a small fraction thereof. The answer practically admits the allegations of the complaint; but sets forth six “defenses, counterclaims and-set-offs,” aggregating some $40,000 due the bank from the company on November 1, 1929, and asks that the $14,122.17 liquidating dividend upon the 470 and a fraction shares held by the receiver be applied or offset upon the $40,000 debt due the bank from the company. As Ave vieAV the legal question presented by the demurrer, it will not be necessary further to detail the averments of the pleadings.

Counsel for the bank concede that if the bank had continued in an active business for some space of time after the appointment of the receiver for the company the right of set-off would not exist. But the contention is that the bank did in fact go into liquidation coincident with the appointment of the receiver for the company. This, hoAvever, is not so. The bank Avas not taken over by the com *66 missioner of banks. It was not in the custody of the law. The statute provides how state banks may voluntarily go into liquidation. 2 Mason Minn. St. 1927, § 7691. Not until September, 1933, did the stockholders of the bank authorize its dissolution. At any time before that date, with the approval of the commissioner of banks, it might have resumed active business. The liquidating dividend indicates that the bank was not insolvent on November 1, 1929. When the company went into the hands of a receiver mutual debts then existing could be set off. But at that time the shares of stock in the bank held by the company were not a debt against the bank, nor was the stock pledged to secure any debt from the company to the bank. Until the liquidating dividend was declared there was no right of action in the conrpany or its receiver to sue the bank on account of any rights growing out of being a stockholder therein. Brown v. Deposit Nat. Bank, 231 App. Div. 521, 256 N. Y. S. 82, appears to be in point that there is here no right of set-off. Another ease is Matter of Peoples Surety Co. 186 App. Div. 663, 175 N. Y. S. 74 (affirmed 226 N. Y. 697, 123 N. E. 884) where the distinction between prior New York decisions and that case are pointed out, particularly Matter of Hatch, 155 N. Y. 401, 50 N. E. 19, 10 L. R. A. 664, and Bridges v. National Bank of Troy, 185 N. Y. 116, 77 N. E. 1005, 7 Ann. Cas. 285, followed. There the liquidating dividend was declared on the capital stock of the Peoples Surety Company, which was indebted to the Union Bank in a large sum at the time that bank was taken over by the superintendent of banks. The Union Bank owned 55 shares of the capital stock of the surety company, when so taken over. The assets of the bank were insufficient to pay the claims allowed against it. Subsequently the surety company was dissolved and a receiver' appointed, who was directed by the court to pay a liquidating dividend of $50 a share. A set-off of this dividend against the debt due the surety company from the bank, when it was taken over by the superintendent of banks, was denied, the court saying [186 App. Div. 667]:

“The superintendent in charge was a liquidator authorized to collect claims in the name of the bank. At the time the superin *67 tendent took charge no right of action upon the capital stock of the surety company existed; therefore, when that right of action subsequently arose, the previous indebtedness of the bank was not a set-off. The test is, was this surety company stock at the time it was appropriated to the payment of the debts of the Union Bank subject to any set-off? These shares of stock were subject to no set-off. They constituted no claim against the Peoples Surety Company. The shares the bank held it could have sold immediately prior to their going into possession of the superintendent of banks and given good title thereto. Immediately after taking possession, the superintendent of banks could have done the same thing. The creditors were, therefore, entitled to have this property applied to the payment of their debts, undiminished by any set-off not existing at that time.”

So here, the creditors of the company were entitled to have these 470 and a fraction shares of stock in the bank applied to the payment of their debts undiminished by any set-off of the bank not existing when such creditors’ rights attached, mts., November 1, 1929, upon the appointment of the receiver. If set-offs are allowed it would virtually result in giving a preference to the bank over other creditors of the company.

Counsel for the bank contend that equitably a set-off should be allowed, stating the proposition thus:

“If the Bank ceases transacting business and goes into liquidation before, or coincident with, the appointment of an equity receiver for the Company and as a result of the liquidation of the Bank, it later declares a liquidating dividend on its stock, such liquidating dividend on the stock of the Bank owned by the Company may be offset against the indebtedness of the Company to the Bank owing at the time the liquidation began.”

The bank did not see fit to file the noiv asserted counterclaims or set-offs against the company in the receivership proceeding. It filed only two small claims aggregating $846.20 therein. The receiver went into expensive litigation which resulted in recovering these 470 shares of stock pledged to secure a usurious loan to the *68

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
261 N.W. 697, 195 Minn. 64, 1935 Minn. LEXIS 804, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rockwood-v-foshay-trust-savings-bank-minn-1935.