Wasson v. Planters' Bank & Trust Co.

65 S.W.2d 528, 188 Ark. 343, 90 A.L.R. 141, 1933 Ark. LEXIS 58
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedDecember 4, 1933
Docket4-3358
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 65 S.W.2d 528 (Wasson v. Planters' Bank & Trust Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wasson v. Planters' Bank & Trust Co., 65 S.W.2d 528, 188 Ark. 343, 90 A.L.R. 141, 1933 Ark. LEXIS 58 (Ark. 1933).

Opinion

Butler, J.

On August 25, 1933, act No. 15 of the Extraordinary Session of the Forty-Ninth General Assembly of the State of Arkansas was approved. The purposes of this act are accurately stated in its title, which is as follows: “An act to qualify State banks for deposit insurance under congressional statute, and to recognize the rights of, and permit, the Bank Commissioner to co-operate and deal with federal deposit insurance corporation in respect to State insured banks and State member banks of the Federal Reserve System, as contemplated by said congressional statute; to authorize and validate the issuance by State banks in certain cases of common and/or one or more classes of preferred non-assessable and single-liability capital stock; and to reaffirm the legal and equitable remedies of creditors and other interested parties against banks under management of the Bank Commissioner.”

Section 1 of the act deals with the first purpose stated in the title of the act and gives to banks and trust companies and the Bank Commissioner the authority to effectuate that purpose.

Section 2 deals with the nature of the capital stock of banks and provides for the issuance by banks or trust companies, organized after the effective date of the act, of nonassessable and single liability preferred or common stock, and provides how and in what event and under what conditions banks and trust companies already existing, whether going concerns or operating on a restricted basis, or undergoing liquidation, or under the management of the Bank Commissioner, may convert stock held in such institutions into nonassessable and single liability stock either common or preferred.

Section 2-A relates to the status of the liability existing against owners of stock in banks existing at the time of the passage of the act.

Section 3 provides for the preservation of all remedies at law or in equity of creditors and other parties in interest against banks, trust companies, or building and loan associations, taken in charge for purposes of management by the Bank Commissioner, except in certain named particulars; and provides that the statute of limitations applicable to any claims against such institutions shall not be suspended or impaired during the management by the Bank Commissioner.

Section 3-A provides for the issuance by the Bank Commissioner of a certificate evidencing the claim of a depositor against any bank or trust company taken over for purpose of management where the right of withdrawal of the deposit is restricted in any way.

Section 4 provides for a repeal of all laws in conflict with the provisions of the act, and that, if any of its provisions should be held invalid for any reason, the remainder of the act should not be affected thereby.

Section 5 is the emergency clause setting forth the nature of the emergency existing and the necessity for the immediate operation of the act.

Section 2, among other things, provides that where the original charter did not provide for the issuance of preferred stock, the bank or trust company seeking to issue the same might so provide by an amendment to the charter, which action must be approved by the Bank Commissioner.

The appellee bank is seeking to partake of the benefits prescribed by the act of Congress, supra, and to accomplish that purpose its stockholders filed with the Bank Commissioner a proposed amendment to the charter of the bank by which authority was given the bank to convert its stock into nonassessable and single liability stock, a certain amount of which was to be preferred stock as provided for by act No. 15. The Bank Commissioner took the position that there was no legal authority for an amendment of the character proposed, and refused to entertain the application or to make any formal ruling on the merits thereof. Thereupon a petition for mandamus was filed in the second division of the Pulaski Circuit Court to compel the Bank Commissioner to exercise his discretion by passing upon the merits of the proposed amendment bearing upon the welfare of the bank, its stockholders and creditors, and to make a ruling either allowing or rejecting the proposed amendment. Prom the judgment of the circuit court granting the prayer of the petition, this appeal is prosecuted.

' The validity of the act is attacked on seven separate grounds. The first point made is that it authorized the conversion of outstanding stock subject to an assessment to the amount of 100 per cent, of its face value into non-assessable and single liability stock whereby the rights of existing creditors are impaired and results in the violation of the obligation of the contract, and depriving them of their property without due process of law within the meaning of the National and State. Constitutions prohibiting legislation of that character. It is contended that an analysis of § 2 shows that it specifically authorizes the conversion of outstanding assessable stock into nonassessable stock and contains no provision safeguarding the rights of creditors who hold obligations of the bank antedating the passage of the act, and thus extinguishes the stockholders’ liability to creditors of the bank then existing, and that there is no language in the act subsequent to § 2 which, properly construed, protects the creditors in their rights against the stockholders, existing prior to the enactment of act No. 15.

Section 2 consists of one long and involved paragraph, but there is no unsurmountable difficulty in arriving at its meaning. It simply provides that any bank or trust company then or thereafter organized, where withdrawal of its demand deposits shall have been restricted or where they may have been taken in charge by the Bank Commissioner, either for liquidation or management under existing laws, and if the corporation shall be reorganized by the removal of all restrictions on the withdrawal of its deposits except such as are expressly agreed to by the depositors, or where the Bank Commissioner’s charge for purposes of liquidation or management shall have been terminated, or where as a successor to it another bank or trust company shall be organized assuming in whole or in part its deposit liabilities, then, in either event, where the action is authorized in the original articles of agreement or so authorized «by amendment to the articles (the amendment to be submitted to and approved by the Bank Commissioner) all or part of the capital stock outstanding may be converted and the issuance of other shares may be authorized, which converted stock and such as is newly issued shall not “subject the owners thereof to any liability either to restore the capital or said respective bank or trust company, or, in addition to the amounts invested therein, for any of its debts, contracts or engagements.” The meaning of the language quoted is obscure, and if, as contended by the appellant, it relieves the stock of the banks existing prior to the passage of the act from assessment for the benefit of then existing creditors, it might be deemed as an impairment of the obligation of the contract existing between the bank and its creditor, and, for that reason, void on constitutional grounds.

It is well settled that a statute ought to he construed so that its validity be upheld, if any reasonable interpretation of its language justifies that action, and, where the language is of doubtful import, the entire act should be looked to.

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Bluebook (online)
65 S.W.2d 528, 188 Ark. 343, 90 A.L.R. 141, 1933 Ark. LEXIS 58, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wasson-v-planters-bank-trust-co-ark-1933.