Wadsworth v. Duncan

45 N.E. 132, 164 Ill. 360
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 10, 1896
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 45 N.E. 132 (Wadsworth v. Duncan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wadsworth v. Duncan, 45 N.E. 132, 164 Ill. 360 (Ill. 1896).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Phillips

delivered the opinion of the court:

On August 25, 1893,. the Central Illinois Banking and Savings Association, a private bank owned by appellants and others, closed its doors, and a bill was filed by appellants and certain others, as complainants, for a dissolution of the partnership and the appointment of a receiver, making certain other partners defendants. This association was organized in 1867 as a joint stock company, with a capital of §100,000, divided into one thousand shares. The articles, provided for a board of directors, who were to elect their president and cashier and other officers and manage the business, which was prescribed and regulated by various provisions, and among others was one to the effect that stock in the association should be assignable and transferable on the books of the association with the assent of the board of directors, in the presence of the president or cashier, etc. That article further provided that in case of a refusal to assent to the transfer the association should take the stock at a price fixed, in a special manner. By the articles the association was to continue twenty years. Certificates were issued to the subscribers to the stock, and at the time of its organization there were twenty-eight members. By cancellation and sale of stock there was á reduced number of members, and the association acquired by purchase about $40,000 of the stock.

Appellee was a depositor in the bank at the time its doors were closed, and brought his action to recover against the stockholders, as alleged in the bill for the appointment of a receiver. Appellants pleaded the nonjoinder of twenty-six persons who had been stockholders, and the question presented on this record arises on that plea, on which issue had been joined, and on trial a verdict for plaintiff resulted. The twenty-six persons named in the plea, except Mrs. E. C. Adams, were persons who had been shareholders and had assigned their stock to either the association or to third persons before the bank suspended payment. In each case where stock was transferred by a stockholder to another a new certificate of stock was issued to the purchaser, but in only one instance was the transfer made on the books of the company in the manner provided by the articles. Where the stock was sold to the association the certificate was endorsed and surrendered to the association. The holder of the certificate thus transferred never afterwards drew any dividends, but the purchaser or the association took the same.

The members of a joint stock association are partners, and each member is liable for the debts of the association unless he has shifted his liability in the very mode pointed out in the articles of association. (Robbins v. Butler, 24 Ill. 387.) Between themselves, as members, and third persons, this liability would exist, but as among the members of the association a different rule would prevail. In this case most of the persons named in the plea of nonjoinder had owned stock, but had sold it (most of them to the bank) long prior to December 14, 1887, and after the sale of their stock never had anything to do with the affairs of the bank. When parties sold their stock the purchaser generally surrendered the certificate and the bank issued a new one to the purchaser, except in those cases where the bank purchased the stock, in which case the bank held that so purchased. In the cases where the bank purchased the stock the bank paid its value to the seller, took an assignment, and the seller’s connection with the affairs of the bank ceased. The association retained all the money and assets of the bank and nothing was said about either assets or liabilities. The remaining partners tacitly formed a new partnership and appropriated all the assets of the old firm, and in practice assumed the liabilities and paid the checks of the depositors who had deposited with the old firm.

On December 14, 1887, when the original articles of association expired, none of those who had previously sold their stock were notified that those who then owned the stock and bank intended to continue the business under the old name, nor was their consent asked or obtained. Prom December 14, 1887, to October 29, 1890, the bank did business under the old name, and on the last named date William Brown, named in the plea, sold, assigned and transferred his stock to the bank,—that is, to his co-partners,—and his co-partners retained all the assets of the bank, including all moneys on deposit, and from that time paid the checks drawn by the depositors of the old firm. In the winter and spring of 1892, at the request of the managers of the bank, Mrs. Hatch, Mrs. Brock and Mrs. Phillips, who were also named in the plea, severally, each sold her stock to the bank,—that is, to their co-partners,—and the co-partners so purchasing formed a new partnership under the old name and con-, tinned the business, taking all the assets of the old firm and paying checks drawn on them by depositors of the old firm. The evidence shows that the association bought shares from individuals as early as 1878, and all the stock so purchased was held and owned by the remaining shareholders in the proportion of the shares held by each. This was no more than certain partners buying out their co-partners and continuing business in the name of the existing partners under the same name. As between the remaining partners a new firm was thus created, and it is difficult to escape the conclusion that there was by the new firm an assumption of the debts, as it appears from the evidence the assets of the association were at all times apparently more than its indebtedness, and the business was continued without any change of methods, and money was paid out to and received from depositors and credited or debited on the same pass-books, without balancing them, up to the time of forming such new partnership.

The relation between the depositor and the bank was that of debtor and creditor, and the firm continuing the business after the retirement of a partner, retaining all the deposits, receiving other deposits and paying checks, was, as a firm, liable for money had and received. As between such retiring partner and the association the liability for the deposit existed on the part of the association, as it still existed. This would result from the manner in .which the business was done. If the depositor knew of the change in the association and acquiesced therein, and made other deposits and drew checks, etc., he could not hold the retiring partner liable, even though such partner or shareholder, in transferring his shares, did not do so in strict accordance with the articles of the association. Much stronger is the case among the partners or shareholders themselves. It is true that a depositor, with notice of who are shareholders, making a deposit, could have his action against all who were partners at the time of making such deposit. But that question is not presented on this record, for here the remaining partners are insisting the suit should be also against those who have retired from the association by a sale of their stock, which, as we have seen, as among the partners themselves, resulted in the organization of a new firm and the assumption of the indebtedness by it. Such partners of the new firm so continuing business have no right to demand that such shareholders so transferring their stock should be made defendants.

The case on this record is distinguishable from Page v. Brant, 18 Ill. 37, and Edwards v. Dillon, 147 id.

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Bluebook (online)
45 N.E. 132, 164 Ill. 360, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wadsworth-v-duncan-ill-1896.