Wallace v. Hood

89 F. 11, 1898 U.S. App. LEXIS 3012
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Kansas
DecidedAugust 18, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 89 F. 11 (Wallace v. Hood) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wallace v. Hood, 89 F. 11, 1898 U.S. App. LEXIS 3012 (circtdks 1898).

Opinion

PHILIPS, District Judge

(after stating the facts). Deferring for later consideration the application of the motion and demurrer interposed to the last amended answer herein, a general discussion of the relation of the defendant to the creditors of the bank at the time of its declared insolvency and the appointment of a receiver will determine whether or not the matters pleaded in the answer constitute a good defense in law to the action brought by the receiver to recover the assessment made upon the defendant as a stockholder in the insolvent bank.

[13]*13In respect of what may he termed the first defense, It is settled law that, notwithstanding the party may have been inveigled by fraudulent representations of the vendor into the purchase of shares of stock in an incorporated company, the contractual relation thus apparently established between him and the corporation .and the other stockholders is not void, but only voidable at the election of the party defrauded. He may, notwithstanding the deception practiced upon him, prefer to stand by his bad bargain, and make the most of it. Therefore, the defendant not having discovered the alleged fraud nor having made his election to repudiate the contract at the date of the appointment of the receiver, both by the terms of his certificate and the stock book of the bank he was an apparent stockholder.

And, in respect of what is termed his second additional matter of defense, it is equally clear that he became and was at the time of the appointment of the receiver the legal and equitable owner of the 100 aliares of stock purchased by him, both as against the bank and its creditors. Alien first issued, the stock in question was the authorized stock of the bank. It was not an overissue or an unauthorized issue, and therefore its issue was not. ultra, vires. In this respect the case is radically different from that class of cases cited by defendant’s counsel where the bank .had issued stock in excess of its authorized capital, or in the instance of stock purporting to be part of the increased capital, which had not been authorized by the approval of the comptroller of Hie currency. In such instances the act of the bank was clearly ultra vires. The stock so issued was void ab initio, as it never had any legal existence; and therefore, in contemplation of law, the purchaser of such stock acquired no properly rights, nor privileges of a stockholder, and consequently did not become subject to the respcnnihilil ios and liabilities oí a stockholder. Hot go in respect of the purchaser of authorized valid stock. It must be conceded by the defendant that the first purchasers of the stock, when sold by the bank, became bona fide holders for value; and if, when they transferred their stock to the alleged dummy man of the bank, they did so in good faith, in ignorance of the alleged scheme of the bank, they wore discharged from their liability as. stockholders. And it is further to be conceded, under the. allegations of the answer, that the transfer of stock to the employes of the bank as mere instruments of the bank— the bank in fact paying the consideration money lor the transfer — rendered the bank the real purchaser. Under the statute the bank was not allowed to thus buy its stock, but this did not invalidate and make void the slock itself. The object and the policy of the statute in prohibiting a bank from purchasing outright its stock is to prevent the reduction of its outstanding stock, and the withdrawal pío tanto of its capital. Bank v. Lanier, 11 Wall. 374, 375. While the bank or receiver may go upon the vendor to recover back the purchase money in order to restore the capital, it must be the law that where a subsequent purchaser from the bank, like the defendant, acquires the stock through a simulated holder for the bank, in ignorance of the fact that the bank had employed its funds in placing the stock in the name of such simulated owner, the defendant paying therefor in good faith, his title to the stock is good against the bank and its creditors. The [14]*14purchase money paid by defendant went into the funds of the bank, whereby the equilibrium of the capital was restored; and no injury thereby was done to any stockholder, or to any creditor, or to the defendant. No one could complain, but the government, which might, if it deemed it politic, proceed as for a forfeiture of the charter of the bank. In Bank v. Stewart, 107 U. S. 676, 2 Sup. Ct. 778, Mr. Justice Field, in discussing section 5201, Rev. St. (National Banking Act), which prohibits a banking association from making a loan upon the security of shares of its own bank, said:

“It imposes no penalty, either upon the bank or the borrower, if a loan upon such security is made. If, therefore, the prohibition can be urged against the validity of the transaction by any one except the government, it can 'only be done before the contract is executed, while the security is still subsisting in the hands of the bank. It can then, if at all, be invoked to restrain or defeat the enforcement of the security. When the contract has been executed, security sold, and proceeds applied to the payment of a debt, the courts will not interfere in the matter. * * * Supposing it was unlawful for a bank to take those shares as security for a loan, it was not unlawful to authorize the bank to sell them when the contingency occurred. The shares being sold pursuant to the authority, the proceeds would be in the bank, as his property.”

On principle, therefore, if it was unlawful for the bank to purchase, as alleged, the shares of stock in question, it certainly was not unlawful to sell them. Being sold, the proceeds went into the bank, restoring its capital, inuring to the benefit of its creditors. As said by Mr. Justice Swayne in Bank v. Matthews, 98 U. S. 626:

“The intent, not the letter, of the statute, constitutes the law. t * * Where a corporation is incompetent by. its charter to take a title to real estate, a conveyance to it is not void, but only voidable, and the sovereign alone can object It is valid until assailed in a direct proceeding instituted for that purpose. * * * So, an alien forbidden by the local law to acquire real estate may take and hold title until office found. We cannot believe it was meant that stockholders and depositors and other creditors should be punished, and the borrower rewarded, by giving success to the defense whenever the offensive fact shall occur. The impending danger of a judgment of ouster and dissolution was, we think, the check, and- none other, contemplated by congress.”

Iu legal effect, the attitude of the defendant is precisely like that of the purchaser of real estate from a corporation, the charter of which prohibits it from taking and holding real estate beyond certain specified quantities and for certain uses. The purchaser for value, in good faith, nevertheless acquires a good title as against the corporation, and its creditors cannot avoid payment of the purchase money. Railway Co. v. Proctor, 29 Vt. 93; Land v. Coffman, 50 Mo. 243-254. No authority has been cited, and, we take it, none can be found, sustaining the proposition that the defendant’s purchase of stock under such circumstances was void. Certainly neither the bank nor the receiver has any ground of action against him for the cancellation of his certificate of stock. The bank obtained his money, which went to augment its assets for the benefit of both the stockholders and creditors.

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Bluebook (online)
89 F. 11, 1898 U.S. App. LEXIS 3012, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wallace-v-hood-circtdks-1898.