State v. German Savings Bank

91 N.W. 414, 65 Neb. 416, 1902 Neb. LEXIS 342
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 1, 1902
DocketNo. 12,484
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 91 N.W. 414 (State v. German Savings Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. German Savings Bank, 91 N.W. 414, 65 Neb. 416, 1902 Neb. LEXIS 342 (Neb. 1902).

Opinions

Oldham, 0.

This is the ninth time that the reviewing jurisdiction of this court has been appealed to, either for relief from some order, judgment or.finding of the district court for Douglas county, in closing up the affairs of the defendant, German Savings Bank, or for mandates to compel the judge to settle bills of exceptions, or to approve bonds in this matter. On the 23d day of July, 1896, Thomas H. Mc-Cague was duly appointed receiver of the defendant, the German Savings Bank, and after much litigation and many vexatious delays, he had succeeded in the early part of 1901 in disposing of the assets of the bank. From the [417]*417proceeds of the sale of these assets a dividend of 33 1-3 per cent, was paid to the depositors, and on the 6th day of May, 1901, the court found that all the assets of the bank had been exhausted, and that there had been about $300,000 due depositors when the bank failed, and that after applying the proceeds of the sale of all the assets, there still remained due the depositors about $200,000. The court further found that there had been subscribed and issued of the capital stock of the German Savings Bank $500,000, divided into 5,000 shares of the par value of $100 each. It also found that there was no way left to pay all the debts, except by collecting the liability due from the stockholders, and ordered the receiver to bring suit against the stockholders for their unpaid subscription of stock, as well as for their double liability. Concerning these orders and findings of the district court there is no complaint. Shortly after suit had been ordered to be instituted by the receiver against the stockholders, a proposition of compromise was made by certain stockholders to the receiver in which they proposed to pay, in round numbers, the sum of $103,000 in settlement of their liabilities as stockholders. The report of the receiver on this proposition is duly verified, and his recommendation was as follows: “Your receiver reports that a careful investigation of the financial condition of the several stockholders in the German Sayings Bank discloses the following facts: A considerable number of the stockholders of the bank have died. Many others have moved beyond the jurisdiction of the court. Others are insolvent. Others are not financially responsible to the extent of their several liabilities. Others deny their liabilities upon various grounds and while a considerable proportion of the stockholders of the bank are solvent, yet your receiver believes that it will be for the interest of the estate of the German Savings Bank to accept the offers herein reported as a compromise of the liabilities of the said stockholders whose names are herein reported to the depositors of the bank. Wherefore your receiver asks the instructions of the court in the [418]*418premises.” This report was filed on the 5th day of July, 1901, and on the 8th day of July, 1901, after notice had been duly served upon and accepted by the bank, the court, after hearing the testimony as to the advisability of the settlement, accepted the report and directed a settlement as therein offered. Grant S. Cobb and others, the appellants in this cause, representing about one-fourth of the creditors, attempted to intervene on the 9th day of July, 1901, for the purpose of resisting the order; and subsequently, on the 18th day of July, 1901, eight of the appellants filed a motion to modify and set aside tlie order of the court of July 8th approving this report. The term of court adjourned on the 20th day of July, 1901, without action on these motions and objections. On the 10th day of September a “supplemental motion to vacate the order entered herein July 8th, 1901,” was filed by appellants. On the 2d day of October, 1901, the receiver filed a special and supplemental report containing the offer of nineteen other stockholders to pay certain sums therein named in compromise of their liability. The appellants filed an answer to this special report on the 7th day of October, 1901, objecting to its acceptance. On the 18th day of November after a hearing of all the motions and objections filed by the appellants to the receiver’s report approved July 8, 1901, and the supplemental report filed October 2, 1901, the court overruled all objections and confirmed both reports, and from this judgment, the creditors have appealed.

There is nothing in the record in this proceeding which shows that the trial judge was guilty of any abuse of the discretion reposed in him in directing the acceptance of this compromise. There is much evidence in the record tending to support the statements contained in the report of the receiver, before set out, with reference to the probability of the collection of these claims from the different, stockholders. It is urged by the appellants, however, that the court was without power and authority to direct the acceptance of this compromise, because it had no juris[419]*419diction over the different stockholders to enforce their compliance with the agreement when it was accepted, and because the receiver had no authority to compromise the liability of the stockholders created by the constitution of this state in section 7, article 115.

If the first objection had been folloAved by a showing that the stockholders had refused to comply with the terms of the agreement, it would have been worthy of serious attention; but the record shows that after the approval of the settlement the various stockholders did comply with the order of the court and paid the various sums which they had offered in compromise of their liability to the receiver, and that all the creditors, except the appellants, who refused to do so, have received about 50 per cent, of the remainder of their claims from the proceeds of this settlement.

In support of the second objection it was strongly urged by the appellants that the liability imposed upon stockholders by section 7, article 115, sapra. is a contractual obligation between the stockholders of the bank and the creditors of that institution, “certain as though it was evidenced by promissory note,” and one which the court and receiver had no authority to vary without the consent of each of the creditors of the bauk; that the power conferred by section 35, chapter 8, Compiled Statutes, upon the receiver to “sell and compound all bad or doubtful debts when approved by the court or judge,” does not confer on the receiver the right to compromise the double liability imposed upon stockholders of .a bank by section 7, article 115, supra. In State v. Bank of Rushville, 57 Nebr., 608, it was said that “a court appointing a receiver for an insolvent bank may authorize the receiver to settle and compromise a suit instituted by himself in behalf of the estate, where it appears that as large a sum will probably be realized in that way as if the litigation was continued, or it is disclosed that the best interests of the estate require that such settlement be effected.” The only difference between the issues involved in State v. Bank of [420]*420Rushville, supra, and the issues involved in the case at bar, was that the receiver in the former case had begun an action against' the stockholders of the bank to enforce the double liability imposed upon them by the constitution before the offer of compromise was made, while in the case at bar suit had been ordered, but had not been actually instituted, when the offer of compromise was made and accepted. In the later and unreported case of Morrison v. Lincoln Savings Bank and Safe Deposit Co., 1 Nebr.

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Bluebook (online)
91 N.W. 414, 65 Neb. 416, 1902 Neb. LEXIS 342, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-german-savings-bank-neb-1902.