A, an owner of shares in the capital stock of a national bank,
employed a broker and auctioneer to sell them by public auction.
They were bid off by B, who paid the auctioneer for them and
received from him the certificate of stock, with a power of
attorney for transfer duly executed in
Page 118 U. S. 656
blank. The auctioneer paid the purchase money to A. B was
employed by the president of the bank to make this purchase for a
customer of the bank, who had made a deposit in the bank for the
purpose, and he delivered the certificate and the power of attorney
to the president, and received from the bank the money for the
purchase. No formal transfer of the stock was made on the transfer
book of the bank. Shortly afterwards, the bank became insolvent,
and eventually went into the hands of a receiver, who made an
assessment on the stockholders under the provisions of Rev.Stat.
§ 5205, to make up the deficiency in the capital. Until after
the stoppage, A had no knowledge as to the purchaser or as to the
neglect to formally transfer the stock, and no reason to suppose
that the transfer had not been made. In an action against A by the
receiver to recover the amount of the assessment upon his said
stock,
held that the responsibility of A ceased upon the
surrender of the certificates to the bank and the delivery to its
president of a power of attorney sufficient to effect, and intended
to effect, as the president knew, a transfer of the stock on the
books of the bank.
This, like the case last reported, was an action at law by the
receiver of the Pacific National Bank of Boston against an alleged
stockholder in that bank to recover an assessment on his stock. The
facts in relation to the failure of the bank and the imposition of
the assessment by the receiver are the same as those reported in
the last case. The material facts upon which the defendant relied
to escape liability under the assessment were contained in the
"Agreed facts" set forth or referred to in the opinion of the
Court.
MR. JUSTICE HARLAN delivered the opinion of the Court.
The plaintiffs in error are the personal representatives of
Leonard Whitney, who, at the time of his death, held two
certificates, for fifty shares each, of the capital stock of the
Pacific National Bank of Boston. That bank suspended on November
18, 1881, and from that date until March 18, 1882, was in charge of
an examiner of national banks. On the day last named, with the
permission of the Comptroller of the Currency, it resumed business,
and so continued until May 20,
Page 118 U. S. 657
1882, when it failed and was placed by that officer in the hands
of a receiver to be wound up. At the time, the receiver took
possession, as well as when this action was brought, March 14,
1883, the above shares of stock stood in the name of Whitney on the
books of the bank.
This suit was brought against the executors of Whitney, pursuant
to the orders of the Comptroller of the Currency. It is based upon
those provisions of the statute which declare that the shareholders
of national banking associations shall be individually responsible,
equally and ratably, and not one for another, for all contracts,
debts, and engagements to the extent or amount of their stock
therein at the par value thereof, in addition to the amount
invested in such shares, and that estates and funds in the hands of
executors of persons holding stock shall be liable in like manner,
and to the same extent, as the testator would have been if living.
Rev.Stat. §§ 5151, 5152. The assessment by the
Comptroller upon shareholders to meet the bank's debts was for the
full amount authorized by the statute.
The defendants insist that they were not shareholders of the
bank, and did not hold, nor were entitled to hold, any certificates
of shares of its capital stock, either at the date of its
suspension, or when the receiver was appointed, or when the
assessment was made by the Comptroller. This defense was overruled,
and the executors of Whitney were adjudged to be liable, the
circuit judge observing:
"This being a suit brought by the receiver, who represents the
creditors, and it appearing that the stock was not transferred on
the books of the company, as provided by the bylaws, we think the
defendants liable. "
The question before the Court is whether, under the statute and
the facts specially found, the defendants were liable to be
assessed for the contracts, debts, and engagements of the bank. The
statute declares that the capital stock of a national bank shall be
transferable on its books in such manner as may be prescribed in
the bylaws or articles of the association, every person becoming a
shareholder by such transfer succeeding, in proportion to his
shares, to all the rights and liabilities of the
Page 118 U. S. 658
prior holder. Rev.Stat. § 5139. The bylaws of this bank
provide that its stock should be assignable only on its books,
subject to the restrictions and provisions of the statute; that a
transfer book be kept, in which all assignments and transfers of
stock should be made; that each certificate should state upon its
face that the stock is transferable only on the books of the bank,
and that when a transfer is made, the certificate shall be returned
and cancelled and a new one issued. Whether these bylaws were so
far complied with as to release the defendants, as executors, from
the liability imposed by statute depends upon the effect to be
given to certain acts of the executors and of the president of the
bank in connection with the sale of the stock standing in Whitney's
name.
It appears from the special finding of facts that Abner Coburn,
of Maine, desiring to buy two hundred and fifty shares of the stock
of this bank, made a special deposit in it of $25,000 to be applied
for that purpose. This fact appears from a letter addressed to him
by Benyon, the president of the bank, under date of September 21,
1881, in which the latter said:
"Yours of 20th received, with check $25,000, which we will use
pending the purchase of our stock, and will hold on your account as
a special deposit securities to the same amount till we succeed in
making the purchase. This leaves the amount in your control until
invested, and, I trust, will be satisfactory to you."
That the stock might be obtained, Benyon secured the services of
one Eager, who had a deposit account with the bank, and that the
latter might have money with which to buy the stock, Benyon placed
to his credit, as a temporary loan out of the funds of the bank,
the exact amount required for the purchase.
On November 8, 1881, the defendants, having no reason whatever
to believe that the bank was insolvent or was about to become so,
on the contrary, believing it to be solvent, and having no
information as to Coburn's order, placed the certificates held by
them in the hands of Day & Co., brokers, with directions to
sell the stock. They also placed in their hands a power of attorney
in the form usually adopted for transfers of stock. It was blank as
to the names of the attorney and the
Page 118 U. S. 659
purchaser, but was signed by the executors and duly witnessed.
It was in these words:
"Know all men by these presents that for value received, we, the
executors of the estate of Leonard Whitney, of Watertown, do hereby
make, constitute, and appoint, irrevocably, ___________, true and
lawful attorney (with power of substitution), for and in our name
and our behalf to sell, assign, and transfer unto __________ one
hundred shares, now standing in the name of L. Whitney, of
Watertown, Mass., in the capital stock of the Pacific National
Bank, and said attorney is hereby fully empowered to make and pass
all necessary acts for the said assignment and transfer. Witness
our hands and seals."
To that power of attorney was appended the following:
"For value received, I appoint, irrevocably __________, as my
substitute, with all the powers above given to me. Witness ___ hand
and seal, 187_. _____ _____. [Seal]"
The other papers were the two certificates of stock, and the
certificate from the proper probate court, showing the appointment
and qualification of the defendants as executors. Each stock
certificate contained the following words: "Transferable only on
the books of the said bank, in person or by attorney, on surrender
of this certificate."
On November 12, 1881, Day & Co., offered the stock for sale
at public auction, and the same was at Benyon's request bought by
Eager at the sum of $10,400. Three days thereafter, November 15,
1881, Eager offered to the brokers, in payment for the stock, his
check on the Pacific National Bank. The bank at which the brokers
did business declined to take that check in its deposit account.
Benyon, being informed of that fact, substituted for the check of
Eager a cashier's check on another bank; which last check being
paid, Day & Co., with the knowledge of Eager, delivered to
Benyon, the president of the bank, the foregoing certificates of
stock, with the power of attorney, the certificate from the probate
court, and other papers, he thereafter holding the same
"as purporting to be security for and as representing said loan,
awaiting the filling of Coburn's order, with the design then to
have the stock transferred to him as soon as his order had been
filled."
On the 16th of November the defendants received from the
Page 118 U. S. 660
brokers the proceeds of the sale of the Whitney stock. Benyon
obtained only fifty additional shares for the purpose of filling
the order of Coburn. All this happened before the bank suspended on
November 18, 1881.
The executors of Whitney did not know by whom the stock was
bought at the auction sale unless the knowledge of the brokers is
to be imputed to them. Believing in good faith, and having no
reason to doubt, that the purchaser had caused the transfer to be
made, neither they nor the brokers took steps to ascertain whether
it had in fact been done.
They had no knowledge or information, until after the
appointment of the receiver, as to the purpose for which either
Benyon or Eager held the before-mentioned papers or the stock.
While the bank did not purchase nor intend to purchase the stock
for itself, its president, in execution of Coburn's order, procured
Eager to buy this stock with funds furnished him for that purpose.
Coburn did not take it, and the receiver, after he took possession,
found the before-mentioned papers in an envelope, purporting to
represent a security for a demand loan to Benyon.
We do not think that the question arising upon these facts is
concluded by any of the cases cited in the opinion of the circuit
judge, [
Footnote 1] or in those
cited in the brief for the receiver. [
Footnote 2] In nearly all of them, where the issue was
between the receiver, representing the creditors, and the person
standing on the register of the bank as a shareholder, it is said
generally that the creditors of a national bank are entitled to
know who, as shareholders, have pledged their individual liability
as security for its debts, engagements, and contracts; that if a
person
permits his name to appear
and remain in
its outstanding certificates of stock, and on its register, as a
shareholder, he is
Page 118 U. S. 661
estopped, as between himself and the creditors of the bank, to
deny that he is a shareholder and that his individual liability
continues until there is a transfer of the stock on the books of
the bank, even where he has in good faith previously sold it and
delivered to the buyer the certificate of stock, with a power of
attorney in such form as to enable the transfer to be made. Some of
the cases hold that the seller is liable as a shareholder even
where the buyer agreed to have the transfer made on the books of
the bank, but fraudulently or negligently failed to do so. But it
will be found upon careful examination that in no one of the cases
in which these general principles have been announced, as between
creditors and shareholders, does it appear that the precaution was
taken, after the sale of the stock, to surrender the certificates
therefor to the bank itself, accompanied (where such surrender was
not by the shareholder in person) by a power of attorney which
would enable its officers to make the transfer on the register. The
position of the seller in such case is analogous to that of a
grantor of a deed deposited in the proper office to be recorded.
The general rule is that the deed is considered as recorded from
the time of such deposit. 2 Washburn on Real Prop. B. 3, c. 4, par.
52. Where the seller delivers the stock certificate and power of
attorney to the buyer, relying upon the promise of the latter to
have the necessary transfer made, or where the certificate and
power of attorney are delivered to the bank without communicating
to its officers the name of the buyer, the seller may well be held
liable as a shareholder until at least he shall have done all that
he reasonably can do to effect a transfer on the stock
register.
In the case before us, the personal presence of the defendants
at the bank was not required in order to secure their release from
liability as shareholders. Besides, the certificates of stock
authorized them to act by attorney. Through their agents, the
brokers, who sold the stock and through whom they received the
money paid for it, they surrendered the certificates and power of
attorney to the president of the bank, he receiving them with
knowledge not only that defendants had parted with all title to the
stock and had been paid for it, but also
Page 118 U. S. 662
that it had been purchased at public auction by Eager. He knew
equally well that the surrender of the certificates, and the
delivery of the power of attorney and the certificate from the
probate court, could only have been for the purpose of having it
appear, by means of a transfer on the books of the bank, that
Whitney's executors were no longer shareholders. The right to have
the transfer made, and thereby secure exemption from further
responsibility, was secured to the defendants both by the statute
and by the bylaws of the bank. They did all that was required by
either as preliminary to such transfer. Nothing remained to be done
except for some officer of the bank to make the necessary formal
entries on its books. If, when the agents of defendants delivered
the certificates and power of attorney to the president of the
bank, the latter had given any intimation of a purpose not to make
the transfer promptly or had avowed an intention to postpone action
until a sufficient amount of stock was obtained to fill Coburn's
order, it may be that the failure of the defendants to take legal
steps to compel a transfer would, in favor of the creditors of the
bank, have been deemed a waiver of the right to an immediate
transfer on the stock register. But no such intimation was given;
no such avowal was made. No objection was made to the power of
attorney, or to the discharge of the defendants from liability. So
far as the record shows, nothing was said or done by the bank's
officers to raise a doubt in the minds of the defendant's agents
that the transfer would be made at once.
It was suggested in argument that the defendants should have
seen that the transfer was made. But we were not told precisely
what ought to have been done to this end that was not done by them
and their agents. Had anything occurred that would have justified
the defendants in believing, or even in suspecting, that the
transfer had not been promptly made on the books of the bank, they
would perhaps have been wanting in due diligence had they not, by
inspection of the bank's stock register, ascertained whether the
proper transfer had in fact been made. But there was nothing to
justify such a belief or to excite such a suspicion. Their conduct
was,
Page 118 U. S. 663
under all the circumstances, that of careful, prudent
businessmen, and it would be a harsh interpretation of their acts
to hold (in the language in some of the cases, when considering the
general question under a different state of facts) that they
allowed or permitted the name of Whitney to remain on the stock
register as a shareholder. We are of opinion that within a
reasonable construction of the statute, and for all the objects
intended to be accomplished by the provision imposing liability
upon shareholders for the debts of national banks, the
responsibility of the defendants must be held to have ceased upon
the surrender of the certificates to the bank, and the delivery to
its president of a power of attorney sufficient to effect, and
intended to effect, as that officer knew, a transfer of the stock
on the books of the association to the purchaser.
For the reasons stated, the judgment is
Reversed and the cause remanded with directions to enter a
judgment for the defendants.
[
Footnote 1]
Davis v. Society of Essex, 44 Conn. 582;
Adderly v.
Storm, 6 Hill 624;
Anderson v. Philadelphia Warehouse
Co., 111 U. S. 479,
111 U. S. 483;
Johnston v. Laflin, 103 U. S. 800,
103 U. S. 804;
Turnbull v. Payson, 95 U. S. 418;
Brown v. Adams, 5 Bissell 181.
[
Footnote 2]
Davis v. Stevens, 21 F. 198;
Irons v.
Manufacturers' Nat. Bank, 27 F. 591;
Bowdell v. National
Bank, Brown Nat.Bk.Cas. 146.