Roundup School District No. 11 of Mellette County v. Agricultural Credit Corp.

280 N.W. 659, 66 S.D. 186, 1938 S.D. LEXIS 40
CourtSouth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedJune 30, 1938
DocketFile No. 8132.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 280 N.W. 659 (Roundup School District No. 11 of Mellette County v. Agricultural Credit Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering South Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Roundup School District No. 11 of Mellette County v. Agricultural Credit Corp., 280 N.W. 659, 66 S.D. 186, 1938 S.D. LEXIS 40 (S.D. 1938).

Opinion

SMITH, J.

By this appeal the plaintiff challenges the propriety of an order of the circuit court denying plaintiff, a creditor of a defunct state bank, the right to institute or maintain a suit on 'behalf of itself and other creditors of said bank to enforce a claim against the defendant, the Agricultural Credit Corporation, which suit the defendant, the Superintendent of Banks, had refused to> bring. For convenience we refer to the Miurdo State Bank as “the *188 Bank,” and to the defendant, the Agricultural Credit Corporation, as “the Corporation.”

From a showing made to the court it appears that in 1924, some eleven years prior to the date of plaintiff's application, the Bank borrowed $35,000 from the Corporation, and pledged as security therefor collateral of the Bank of the value of $70,573.41. This collateral included a $10,000 mortgage on the lot upon which the Bank building was situated. The Bank was closed for liquidation in M’ay, 1926. In November, 1926, pursuant to an arrangement with the then Superintendent of Banks, the Corporation advanced the additional sum of $2,450.80 to the War Finance Corporation on behalf of the Bank, and there was then transferred to the Corporation to be held by it as collateral for the aggregate amount due it from the Bank, additional collateral of a face value of $291,741.46.

In the inventory and reports made by the Superintendent of Banks with reference to his administration of the liquidation of the Bank, no mention was made of any claim of the Bank against the Corporation. At about the .time the Superintendent was ready to wind up the liquidation of the Bank, the plaintiff made demand that he proceed against the Corporation to charge it as a trustee of the above described securities. The Superintendent refused to proceed, and thereafter this application Was made to the court for an order permitting plaintiff to maintain the suit on behalf of itself and other creditors at their own cost and expense. This application was resisted by the Corporation and iby the Superintendent of Banks. The ruling of the court was against the plaintiff, and was grounded upon the lapse of time and the conclusion that plaintiff had “* * * failed to make any sufficient showing of the disqualification of the present Superintendent of Banks or error in his judgment warranting any order displacing him or interfering with his liquidation' of said bank * * The application of plain *189 tiff was addressed to the court of the domicile of the Bank having supervision of the liquidation of the Bank, and purported to invoke the supervisory powers of the court as well as its general jurisdiction.

Appellants assert that the 'Superintendent abused his discretion and acted arbitrarily in refusing to proceed against the Corporation, thus giving rise to a proper occasion for the exercise of an established jurisdiction of the court. The respondents, on the other hand, urge that the Superintendent of Banks is an administrative officer charged by statute with- the duty and power to liquidate insolvent banks, that his decisions in the premises are final, and that a “mere difference in judgment between the Court and the trustee will not warrant interfering 'with his

Courts of equity have long afforded protection to minority interests in a going corporate concern and to creditors in an insolvent corporation as against the fraudulent, wrongful or arbitrary conduct of those in control. With some show of logic it has been suggested that efficient liquidation requires that the Superintendent of Banks have a free hand and that creditors and stockholders of -insolvent banks no longer have need for the protecting arm of equity -because the 'State has supplied them with a public officer as an independent, disinterested, liquidating agent. For these reasons it is said that courts of equity should refuse to exercise that particular jurisdiction for the benefit of those interested in insolvent banks. The contention has, however, been universally overruled by the courts. The cases are collected in 97 A. L. R. 169. The answer is well and fully stated by the Wisconsin court in the case of Pallange v. Liberty State Bank et al., 216 Wis. 418, 256 N. W. 708, 97 A. L. R. 164, wherein it states:

“We agree with the respondent that the giving to- the commissioners of an exclusive right to control all claims without providing for an adequate remedy to a creditor upon refusal by the commissioners to prosecute and collect such claims is unreasonable and would result in the -denial of due process of law. But the law placing the commissioners in charge of the management of the business of a bank does not offend in that particular. The commissioners are officers of the state. Broad powers are conferred upon them, and, in the exercise of these powers, they are to use discretion. Their decisions, however, must be based upon sub *190 stantial reason. They cannot extinguish or forgive a debtor, a valid claim by abandoning it any more than they can settle one upon partial payment. Unless sufficient reason for a compromise exists from the standpoint of the estate in their charge, the commissioners must collect in full. The proceeding under the statute is in effect a winding up proceeding. If the commissioners were receivers deriving their power from a proceeding in court, an independent action by a creditor to enforce a right of the corporation against defaulting officers or others would not be proper until the court had so ordered. Cunningham v. Wechselberg, 105 Wis. 359, 81 N. W. 414. The statute placing the management in the hands of the commissioners does not change the procedure and, while not depriving a creditor of any of his rights, it regulates his remedies. Due and effective administration of the law requires the preventing of the creditor’s ill-timed interference. The reasons which underlie the practice of having the court regulate the time and manner of a creditor’s intervention in the affairs of an insolvent bank in the hands of a receiver are present in the instant case and are just as potent in this instance as in the other against such interference with the management of 'the commissioners. Should the commissioners’ effort or proposal to compromise any claim be objectionable to any creditor, such creditor has the right toi be heard in opposition to such compromise. Mismanagement in such a matter through carelessness or other fault of the commissioners is a wrong upon which the court’s control will act. The important right of a creditor to intervene, 'when circumstances call for such intervention, is a creature of the courts of equity.”

The oppositeness of the foregoing statements, -when applied to the precise phase of liquidation now under consideration, appears from an examination of the language of our statute dealing with debts due and 'claims belonging to an insolvent bank. “He shall collect all debts due and claims belonging to it and may upon order of the circuit court, after having made application therefor, sell or compound any or all bad or doubtful debts * * Section 8928 of the Revised -Code of 19.19. From this it appears that the primary duty of the Superintendent of Banks is to collect debts due or claims belonging to a trust. If he desires to sell or compromise bad or doubtful claims, he must secure authority from the supervisory -court in a proceeding which will permit interested per *191

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Bluebook (online)
280 N.W. 659, 66 S.D. 186, 1938 S.D. LEXIS 40, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/roundup-school-district-no-11-of-mellette-county-v-agricultural-credit-sd-1938.