State ex rel. Smith v. Bone

266 P. 85, 125 Kan. 818, 1928 Kan. LEXIS 452
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedApril 7, 1928
DocketNo. 27,836
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 266 P. 85 (State ex rel. Smith v. Bone) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State ex rel. Smith v. Bone, 266 P. 85, 125 Kan. 818, 1928 Kan. LEXIS 452 (kan 1928).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Dawson, J.:

This proceeding chronicles another chapter of litigation concerning the bank guaranty law and presents a question ■concerning the proper method of distributing its fragmentary assets among its many creditors, in view of the admitted and familiar fact that the bank depositors’ guaranty fund is insolvent, and the methods devised by the statute for the rehabilitation of the fund have virtually ceased to function.

The case presented takes the form of mandamus, but in effect it ■calls for the distribution of a trust fund. The state’s application for mandamus and relief pertinent thereto alleges that many banks whose deposits were protected by the bank depositors’ guaranty fund have failed in the last few years; that many of these failed [820]*820banks have been liquidated; that the sums due depositors from the guaranty fund aggregate millions of dollars; that the cash in the guaranty fund is practically exhausted; that the withdrawal from membership of several hundred solvent banks which heretofore contributed to the fund has cut off its sources of rehabilitation; that the bank commissioner has in his possession bonds and other securities of the par value of $897,964.59 forfeited to the guaranty fund by voluntary withdrawal of banks from membership or otherwise.

The state further alleges that aside from certain miscellaneous claims against the guaranty fund aggregating about $160,000, which sum may be affected by pending litigation, the business affairs of some twenty-five insolvent banks whose deposits had been protected by the guaranty fund have been wound up and the depositors thereof holding certificates against the guaranty fund amounting to $1,648,498.36 are entitled to payment, but that the defendant bank commissioner has ceased to execute the law, and he should be required to sell the bonds and securities in his possession and pay out the proceeds to the certificate-holding depositors in the order of priority prescribed by the statute as far as the assets of the guaranty fund will reach.

In his answer and return to the alternative writ the bank commissioner admits most of the allegations of the plaintiff’s application, and alleges that the number of banks contributing to the guaranty fund has shrunk to 93; that the last assessment imposed on this number produced only $5,450.21; that the next assessment will yield only a negligible amount; that after making every reasonable allowance for the amounts that may yet be realized from the assets of failed banks there will be left valid and subsisting claims against the guaranty fund approximating $6,000,000; that the maximum assessment which can be levied on the constantly diminishing number of contributing banks will be wholly insufficient to pay even a substantial fraction of the interest on the lawful outstanding claims against the fund, and — •

“The fund is becoming more insolvent each day with no reasonable prospect of any improvement in the situation.
“. . . Defendant states that he is not only willing but anxious to make payment to the holders of the guaranty certificates, but that such serious and grave questions have arisen as to the proper priority of the various banks.
“For further return, the defendant states that the principal reason why he has not issued his checks is because he is unable to determine the proper priority of the holders of the certificates in the various banks. . . .
[821]*821“The defendant states that the funds available for distribution will pay in full, with interest, the holders of certificates of a number of banks, but there will be a large number who will receive nothing on their certificates. That it therefore becomes a matter of vital interest, particularly to those banks which have a chance only to participate in the fund, that the certificate holders of no other bank be improperly paid ahead of them.”

The bank commissioner's answer and return further narrates at length the complex, and difficult questions of fact and of law confronting him, and alleges—

“That his office is an administrative office; that he has no power to subpoena witnesses or otherwise explore and determine questions of fact or of law; and that all of the claimants have a right to a judicial determination of such judicial questions.
“The defendant further alleges that he is advised that the holders of each and every certificate of every bank named in the exhibit attached has a proper interest and a right to be heard in the determination of the question of priority of every other bank ahead of the bank in which he holds a certificate. That there are thousands of persons holding such certificates, and that each has a right to, and many are asserting their right to have such questions determined by a court of competent jurisdiction.”

The bank commissioner concludes with a prayer that this court take jurisdiction of the cause and protect him from being subjected to a multiplicity of actions by the thousands of individual and rival claimants holding certificates against the guaranty fund; that a commissioner be appointed to hear all persons concerned and to make findings of fact and conclusions of law concerning the order of priority of payments so far as the assets of the guaranty fund will reach.

The plaintiff joined in the bank commissioner’s application for the appointment of a commissioner. On admission of parties that the liabilities of the guaranty fund were far in excess of its assets, this court by a separate order directed the bank commissioner to sell securities in his hands pertaining to the fund, and ordered — •

“(1) That S. C. Bloss, esquire, of Winfield, Kansas, be and he is hereby appointed commissioner of this court for the purpose of hearing the evidence that may be adduced by the parties, and other parties interested, and for the purpose of making findings of fact and conclusions of law, all of which he shall report to this court. For the purpose hereof, he is hereby empowered to issue subpoenas for witnesses and compel their attendance and to compel the production of such books, documents and papers as in his judgment may be material to the issues in this cause.
“(2) The said commissioner is directed particularly to ascertain the order of priority in which banks, which at the time of their failure were members of [822]*822the bank depositors’ guaranty fund, were finally liquidated within the meaning of section 9-204 of the Revised Statutes of Kansas of 1923 as amended. If the holders of guaranteed certificates in banks which were members of the guaranty fund at the time of their failure, and which are not listed in exhibit A to the return, desire to be heard upon the question of their participation in the guaranty fund, the commissioner is directed to hear such evidence and to make his report thereon.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
266 P. 85, 125 Kan. 818, 1928 Kan. LEXIS 452, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-smith-v-bone-kan-1928.