Wilson v. First State Bank

95 P. 404, 77 Kan. 589, 1908 Kan. LEXIS 308
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedApril 11, 1908
DocketNo. 15,326
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 95 P. 404 (Wilson v. First State Bank) 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
Wilson v. First State Bank, 95 P. 404, 77 Kan. 589, 1908 Kan. LEXIS 308 (kan 1908).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Burch, J.:

The First State Bank of Jetmore obtained a judgment against T. C. Wilson upon a promissory note,'dated August 28, 1896, and given to the bank by a partnership of which Wilson was a member. The validity of this judgment depends upon the following facts found by the district court:

“ (1) That the First State Bank of Jetmore, plaintiff in this action, obtained a charter from the secretary of the state of Kansas, April 19, 1892; that its place of business was Jetmore, Hodgeman county, Kansas, the purpose of the corporation being that of receiving money on deposits and to allow interest thereon, giving to the person depositing credit therefor, and buying and selling exchange, gold, silver, foreign coin, bullion, current money, bonds of the United States and state of Kansas, bonds and warrants of cities, counties and school districts in the state of Kansas, of loaning money on real estate, chattel and personal security at a rate of interest not exceeding the [591]*591legal rate allowed by law, of discounting negotiable notes and notes not negotiable, and to own a suitable building, furniture and fixtures for the transaction of its business of the value not to exceed one-third of .the capital of such bank, which was fixed at $10,000, divided into shares of $100 each — the duration of such banking corporation as fixed in said charter being twenty-five years; that it commenced business as such banking corporation in 1892, and continued to operate under said charter as a banking corporation until 1897.
“ (2) In February, 1897, it voluntarily proceeded to liquidate and wind up its affairs as a bank, and on December 7, 1897, there was filed in the office of the bank commissioner of the state of Kansas an official statement showing the financial condition of said bank at» the close of business November 29, 1897, and said bank surrendered to the bank commissioner of the state of Kansas its certificate to transact business as a bank that had been issued to it by the bank commissioner January 4, 1892.
“(8) Since December 7, 1897, it has not made any reports to the bank commissioner of the state of Kansas or to the secretary of state regarding its condition, and no requests have been made upon the officers of said corporation for a report as to the condition of the affairs of said corporation.
“(4) After said bank commenced to liquidate, in February, 1897, it did not receive deposits, and before December 7, 1897, it had paid all of its depositors in full, and since November 17,1897, it has never received deposits or paid out money' on deposits or renewed any notes — in fact has hot .transacted any business as a bank, and since that time C. E. Wilson, who was then cashier of said bank, has transacted what business has been transacted — that is, collected such of the indebtedness due the bank as he could, and paid the proceeds so collected to the stockholders of the corporation in closing up the affairs of the bank.”

The questions argued relate to the corporate character and existence of the plaintiff, to its capacity to bring suit, and to its right to sue without rendering statements respecting its financial condition either to the bank commissioner or to.the secretary of state.

The only way to determine the class to which a cor[592]*592poration belongs is to look at its charter. The very purpose of that document is to establish the nature and character of the corporation and to fix its constitution as an organization for manufacturing, for banking, or for some other defined purpose; and so long as its charter stands unrevoked and unmodified the intrinsic nature and character of the corporation remains unchanged. Reading the plaintiff’s charter as epitomized in finding No. 1 with the banking act in force when the charter was granted (Laws 1891, ch. 48), it is plain that the plaintiff organized as, and actually became, a banking corporation and nothing else. So far as the findings of fact disclose, this charter has never been amended, and if the corporation is still in existence, it is still a banking corporation.

At the time the plaintiff organized, and ever since, there have been but three ways in which the corporate existence of a banking corporation might be terminated —by expiration of the period for which it was chartered, by a judgment of dissolution in voluntary proceedings to that end, and by forfeiture and judgment of dissolution in an adversary proceeding. None of these things has occurred, and, the plaintiff is still a banking corporation.

Although organized and in existence from the date its charter is filed (Laws 1891, ch. 43, § 3; Laws 1897, ch. 47, § 3; Gen. Stat. 1901, § 409; The State v. Mason, 61 Kan. 102, 107, 58 Pac. 978,) a banking corporation can do nothing except to elect officers, approve bonds and receipt for stock subscriptions and the like until it is authorized to commence the real business of banking by the certificate of the bank commissioner. So that at the beginning we have a banking corporation chartered, existing and organized for business, but unable to take a single step in the substantial attainment of its corporate ends. After a certificate has been secured from the bank commissioner the corporation may do everything its charter and the law authorize, and it may continue to do this as long as it is in existence, is solvent, [593]*593obeys the law and retains the certificate given by the bank commissioner.

Of course the distinctive feature of the banking business is the receiving of other people’s money on deposit subject to check, or on certificates or other obligations of the bank, and it is this fact, and the using of such money by the bank, to its own profit, which make regulation and supervision by the bank commissioner necessary. But a banking corporation may loan money on real estate, chattel and personal security, and may discount notes, negotiable and non-negotiable; that is, among numerous things which it may do is the power to conduct a loan and a discount business. In the course of time a banking corporation may desire to discontinue all business except that of conducting a loan and discount business with its own money. If so it may pay off its depositors, discharge all its liabilities and surrender its certificate of authority to do a general banking business, whereupon it may continue to transact a loan and discount business. (Laws 1897, ch. 47, § 30; Gen. Stat. 1901, § 436.) If a banking corporation do this its charter powers are not affected; its corporate character is not changed, and its corporate organization is not modified. It is still a banking corporation the most of whose powers are suspended and whose remaining activities are restricted to a circumscribed field. If it should again desire to resume a general banking business it would not be necessary for it to obtain a new charter. It would still possess that right as an original power. It would only be necessary for it to obtain a new certificate from the bank commissioner.

If the banking corporation desire to give over the prosecution of all the purposes for which it was organized and to wind up its affairs, it may do so. When all its liabilities have been paid and its certificate from the bank commissioner has been surrendered the bank commissioner has no further concern with it, but its corporate integrity remains unimpaired and it may con[594]

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

In re the Appeal of Federal Deposit Insurance
822 P.2d 627 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1991)
Brown v. Westport Finance Company
145 F. Supp. 265 (W.D. Missouri, 1956)
The Alpha Corp. v. Multnomah Co.
189 P.2d 988 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1948)
City of Mount Vernon v. Best Development Co.
197 N.E. 299 (New York Court of Appeals, 1935)
Shippee v. Commercial Trust Co.
161 A. 781 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1932)
State ex rel. Griffith v. Knights of the Ku Klux Klan
232 P. 254 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1925)
Graham v. Wichita Terminal Elevator Co.
222 P. 89 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1924)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
95 P. 404, 77 Kan. 589, 1908 Kan. LEXIS 308, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilson-v-first-state-bank-kan-1908.