Section 6142 of the Revised Statutes of the United States,
providing for the increase of the capital stock of a national bank
and declaring that no increase of capital stock shall be valid
until the whole amount of the increase is paid in, and until the
Comptroller of the Currency shall certify that the amount of the
proposed increase has been duly paid in as part of the capital of
such association, does not make void a subscription or certificate
of stock based upon capital stock actually paid in simply because
the whole amount of any proposed or authorized increase has not in
fact been paid into the bank; certainly the statute should not be
so applied in behalf of a person sought to be made liable as
shareholder when, as in the present case, he held at the time the
bank suspended and was put into the hands of a receiver, a
certificate of the shares subscribed for by him, enjoyed, by
receiving and retaining dividends, the rights of a shareholder, and
appeared as a shareholder upon the books of the bank, which were
open to inspection, as of right, by creditors.
As between the bank and the defendant, the latter having paid
the amount of his subscription for shares in the proposed increase
of capital was entitled to all the rights of a shareholder, and
therefore, as between himself and the creditors of the bank, became
a shareholder to the extent of the stock subscribed and paid for by
him.
That the bank, after obtaining authority to increase its
capital, issued certificates of stock without the knowledge or
approval of the Comptroller and proceeded to do business upon the
basis of such increase before the
Page 181 U. S. 203
whole amount of the proposed increase of capital had been paid
in was a matter between it and the government under whose laws it
was organized, and did not render void subscriptions or
certificates of stock based upon capital actually paid in, nor have
the effect to relieve a shareholder, who became such by paying into
the bank the amount subscribed by him, from the individual
liability imposed by section 5151.
Upon the failure of a national bank the rights of creditors
attach under section 5151, and a shareholder who was such when the
failure occurred cannot escape the individual liability prescribed
by that section upon the ground that the bank issued a certificate
of stock before, strictly speaking, it had authority to do so.
If a subscriber to the stock of a national bank becomes a
shareholder in consequence of frauds practiced upon him by others,
whether they be officers of the bank or officers of the government,
he must look to them for such redress as the law authorizes, and is
estopped, as against creditors, to deny that he is a shareholder,
within the meaning of section 5151, if, at the time the rights of
creditors accrued, he occupied and was accorded the rights
appertaining to that position.
The case is stated in the opinion of the Court.
MR. JUSTICE HARLAN delivered the opinion of the Court.
This case went off in the circuit court upon a motion for a
judgment in favor of the plaintiff upon the pleadings. The motion
was sustained, and judgment was entered in accordance with the
prayer of the petition. That judgment was affirmed in the circuit
court of appeals, Judge Sanborn dissenting. 89 F. 843, 856. The
case is here upon writ of error sued out by the defendant
Scott.
The case made by the petition is substantially as follows:
The First National Bank of Sedalia, Missouri, was organized on
the 30th of October, 1865, with a capital stock of $100,000 and
thereafter, until the 24th day of October, 1885, continued to do a
banking business.
On the day last named, the bank, pursuant to the provisions
of
Page 181 U. S. 204
the Act of Congress approved July 12, 1882, 22 Stat. 162, c.
290, extended the period of its succession for a term of twenty
years from and after the 30th of October, 1885, and on the 24th of
October, 1885, the Comptroller of the Currency issued his
certificate stating that the bank had complied with the provisions
of the act of Congress in thus extending the period of its
existence, and was authorized to have succession until the close of
business on the 30th of October, 1905.
On the 6th of September, 1890, the bank increased its capital
stock in the sum of $150,000, and on the 17th of January, 1891, the
Comptroller of the Currency certified that it had increased its
stock to the above extent in accordance with the provisions of the
Act of May 1, 1886, 24 Stat. 18, c. 73, and that such increase was
approved; also that the increase had been duly paid in as part of
the capital stock of the company.
The bank continued to do a banking business upon the basis of a
capital stock of $250,000 until the 4th day of May, 1894, on which
day it became insolvent, closed its doors, and ceased to do
business.
On the 10th of May, 1894, the original plaintiff, W. A. Latimer,
was duly appointed receiver of the bank by the Comptroller of the
Currency under the laws relating to national banking associations.
The defendant in error, Deweese, was after that date substituted in
his place as receiver.
In winding up and settling the affairs of the bank, the
Comptroller of the Currency determined that it was necessary to
enforce the individual liability of stockholders and to collect
from them an amount equal to 75 percent of their stock at par
value, and on the 13th day of April, 1895, that officer made an
assessment and requisition upon shareholders for the sum of
$187,500, to be paid by them ratably on or before the 15th day of
May, 1895, and made demand upon the defendant Scott for $75 upon
every share of the capital stock of the bank held or owned by him
at the time of the failure of the bank as above stated, payable on
or before the 15th day of May, 1895. The receiver was directed to
enforce against shareholders the payment of the amounts assessed
against them.
At the time of the failure and suspension of the bank, the
defendant
Page 181 U. S. 205
Scott was the owner and holder of fifty shares of its capital
stock of the par value of $100 each. The amount ratably due by him
as such shareholder under the above assessment was $3,750.
On the 17th day of April, 1895, the receiver of the bank
notified the defendant of the assessment and requisition and
demanded payment of the same, but he did not pay that sum or any
part thereof. Hence this action.
Judgment was asked for the sum of $3,750, with interest from May
15th, 1895, as well as for costs of suit.
The defendant in his answer admitted the organization of the
bank and the extension of the period of its incorporation as
alleged; also that the bank continued to do a banking business as
set out in the petition, and that it had become insolvent and
closed its doors. He also admitted the appointment and
qualification of the receiver and the allegations of the petition
as to the order of the Comptroller of the Currency.
Further answering, he alleged that, on September 6, 1890, the
bank, by a vote of the owners of two thirds of its capital stock,
voted to increase that stock in the sum of $150,000; that it
notified the Comptroller that the whole amount of such increase had
been paid in; that, on January 17, 1891, that officer -- then
knowing that more than the entire capital of the bank was loaned,
directly and indirectly, to its president, and that the amount so
loaned had been steadily increased for several years up to the date
just named by adding the interest which was not paid to the notes
evidencing the loans or the renewals thereof, and who based his
action wholly upon the notification from the bank -- issued a
certificate stating that the amount of the increase of capital was
$150,000, that the same was paid in, and that such increase was
approved; that thereafter, until May 24, 1894, the bank continued
to do business with a pretended capital of $250,000.
That
"in September, 1890, the officers of said bank informed and
represented to defendant as follows: that said bank contemplated
increasing its capital stock from $100,000 to $250,000; that said
intended increase of capital was made desirable on account
Page 181 U. S. 206
of the increasing business of said bank; that said bank was in a
flourishing condition and earning large dividends upon its capital
stock, and then had a surplus of $50,000 over and above its capital
stock and all liabilities; that from said surplus such dividends
would be declared as would make each of the 2,500 shares of stock
worth the sum of $108."
That, relying upon such representations, the defendant, never
having held or owned any stock in the bank, subscribed for fifty
shares of the proposed increase of $150,000, and in October, 1890,
deposited in the bank the sum of $5,400.
That it was the understanding between the defendant and the bank
that that sum was to be held by it and applied in payment of
defendant's subscription for fifty shares, when all of the proposed
increase was subscribed and the money therefor paid into the bank,
"and the issues of the shares of said increase could be legally
made."
That the bank gave to the defendant a receipt for said sum of
$5,400, and, about October 25, 1890, delivered to him a certificate
for fifty shares of "its said pretended increase of capital,"
and
That the
"bank then, falsely and fraudulently, and with intent to deceive
defendant, represented to defendant that the said increase of
capital had been lawfully made, and that the full amount thereof
had been subscribed for and paid in in full, and defendant,
deceived by said representations, and relying thereon, accepted and
retained said certificate, and that defendant held and claimed as
owner said certificate thereafter and until the closing of said
bank, and in the years 1891 and 1892 received and retained alleged
dividends aggregating eighteen percent of the par value of said
certificate; that said alleged dividends were paid out of the money
paid as aforesaid by defendant to said bank."
The defendant further alleged that, in September, 1890, and for
many months prior thereto and afterwards, the bank was in fact
wholly insolvent, had no surplus whatever, and, at the time of the
increase of the stock, all of its capital had been lost -- its
liabilities irrespective of its capital stock and alleged
surplus
Page 181 U. S. 207
exceeding its assets -- and it was earning no dividends upon its
capital;
That said pretended increase of stock was never of any value or
validity whatever; that only about
two-thirds of the increased
stock was ever paid; that the officers of the bank made false
entries in its books and records for the purpose of showing an
apparent surplus, and declaring a dividend to themselves therefrom,
turning the dividends into the bank in pretended payment for a
large part of the increased stock;
That the whole transaction was a sham for the purpose of
bolstering up an insolvent institution by obtaining large sums of
money from the subscribers for the increased stock, and for the
further purpose of "watering" its capital stock and permitting its
officers to appropriate to themselves, without paying anything
therefor, a large part of such pretended increase, of all of which
defendant had no knowledge whatever until long after the bank had
closed its doors on May 4, 1894, nor had defendant any information
whatever that could in any way have created a suspicion
thereof;
That the books and records of the bank during all the time after
October 25, 1890, had shown, and it had been made by them to
appear, that all of the pretended increase of capital was paid in,
and that from a time prior to the last-named date until the bank
closed, its books and records were systematically, skillfully, and
cunningly falsified by its officers, and so kept that the defendant
could not by the utmost diligence have ascertained the true
condition of the bank; and,
That. as soon as he discovered that the increased stock was not
fully paid in, defendant disclaimed and denied that he was or ever
had been a stockholder of the bank.
Such being the case made by the pleadings, we are to inquire
whether there was error in giving judgment against the
defendant.
By section 5151 of the Revised Statutes,
"the shareholders of every national banking association shall be
held individually responsible, equally and ratably, and not one for
another, for all contracts, debts, and engagements of such
association, to the
Page 181 U. S. 208
extent of the amount of their stock therein at the par value
thereof, in addition to the amount invested in such shares."
Within the meaning of that section, was the defendant, in view
of the facts stated in the pleadings, to be deemed a shareholder of
the bank when it suspended and was put into the hands of a
receiver?
The defendant admits in his answer that he held, and for three
years and more previous to that date had held, a certificate for
fifty shares of the bank's stock, and exercised the rights of a
shareholder by receiving dividends for the years 1891 and 1892,
aggregating eighteen percent of the par value of the stock standing
in his name on the book of the association. He thus enjoyed the
privileges of a shareholder.
The defendant, however, contends that, although he may have
exercised the rights of a shareholder in holding a certificate of
shares and in receiving and retaining dividends, he was not a
shareholder within the meaning of section 5151 so as to become
individually liable, to the extent prescribed by that section, for
the contracts, debts, and engagements of the bank.
That position is supposed to be justified by section 5142 of the
Revised Statutes, declaring that
"any association formed under this title may, by its articles of
association, provide for an increase of its capital from time to
time, as may be deemed expedient, subject to the limitations of
this title. But the maximum of such increase to be provided in the
articles of association shall be determined by the Comptroller of
the Currency, and no increase of capital shall be valid until the
whole amount of such increase is paid in and notice thereof has
been transmitted to the Comptroller of the Currency, and his
certificate obtained specifying the amount of such increase of
capital stock, with his approval thereof, and that it has been duly
paid in as part of the capital of such association."
That section was modified, in some respects, by the Act of May
1, 1886, c. 73, which provided
"that any national banking association may, with the approval of
the Comptroller of the Currency, by the vote of shareholders owning
two-thirds of the stock of such association, increase its capital
stock, in accordance with existing laws, to any sum approved by the
said Comptroller, notwithstanding
Page 181 U. S. 209
the limit fixed in its original articles of association and
determined by said Comptroller, and no increase of the capital
stock of any national banking association, either within or beyond
the limit fixed in its original articles of association, shall be
made except in the manner herein provided."
Under this last statute, the bank proceeded when by the vote of
two-thirds of its shareholders it determined to increase its stock
by $150,000. 24 Stat. 18, § 1.
The defendant lays great stress on the words in section 5142,
"no increase of capital shall be valid until the whole amount of
such increase is paid in," and until the Comptroller shall certify
that the amount of the proposed increase "has been duly paid in as
part of the capital of such association." But does it follow that
one who claimed to be a shareholder in respect of an increase of
the bank's capital, and who was recognized as such by the bank,
particularly if he held a formal certificate stating that he was a
shareholder, can escape liability, under section 5151 by simply
proving, after the bank has suspended and has been placed into the
hands of a receiver, that the whole amount of the proposed increase
was not in fact "paid in" as required by section 5142, although the
contrary was certified by the Comptroller upon the bank's report to
that officer? We think not.
The literal construction insisted upon by the defendant might
produce results which we cannot suppose were ever contemplated by
Congress. Referring to that construction, the court below well
said:
"If this contention is well founded, then, as already said, it
follows that, if all the shares but one had been subscribed and
paid for, nevertheless the holders of the certificates for the
full-paid shares could not be heard to assert that they were the
owners of valid shares, which would be a most unjust result. If
this is the true meaning of the statute, it is made possible for
parties in control of a national bank, with the approval of the
Comptroller, to authorize the increase of the capital stock, to
obtain subscription and payment in full for all the shares but one
or two and then, if that be desirable, to deny to the holders of
these full-paid certificates any participation in the control of
the bank, or, in case the bank becomes insolvent,
Page 181 U. S. 210
to shield these holders of certificates from liability to
creditors. Certainly a construction of the statute having such
results should not be adopted unless the statute as a whole
imperatively demands it."
The primary object of the provision that "no increase of capital
shall be valid until the whole amount of such increase is paid in"
was to prevent the "watering" of stock -- that is, prevent banking
business being done upon the basis of an increased capital which
did not in fact exist. If this prohibition be disregarded by a
national bank, the conduct of its business could no doubt be
controlled by the representatives of the government so far as might
be necessary to compel obedience to the law. Rev.Stat. § 5205.
But the statute does not, in terms, make void a subscription or
certificate of stock based upon increased capital stock actually
paid in, simply because the whole amount of any proposed or
authorized increase has not in fact been paid into the bank.
Certainly the statute should not be so applied in behalf of a
person sought to be made liable as a shareholder when, as in the
present case, he held at the time the bank suspended and was put
into the hands of a receiver, a certificate of the shares
subscribed for by him, enjoyed, by receiving and retaining
dividends, the rights of a shareholder, and appeared as a
shareholder upon the books of the bank which were open to
inspection, as of right, by creditors. Rev.Stat. § 5210. As
between the bank and the defendant, the latter, having paid the
amount of his subscription for shares in the proposed increase of
capital, was entitled to all the rights of a shareholder, and
therefore, as between himself and creditors of the bank, became a
shareholder to the extent of the stock subscribed and paid for by
him. That the bank, after obtaining authority to increase its
capital, issued certificates of stock without the knowledge or
approval of the Comptroller and proceeded to do business upon the
basis of such increase before the whole amount of the proposed
increase of capital had been paid in, was a matter between it and
the government under whose laws it was organized, and did not
render void subscriptions or certificates of stock based upon
capital actually paid in, nor have the effect to relieve
Page 181 U. S. 211
a shareholder, who became such by paying into the bank the
amount subscribed by him, from the individual liability imposed by
section 5151.
In
National Bank v. Matthews, 98 U. S.
621,
98 U. S. 629,
it appeared that a national bank had made a loan of money, the
repayment of which by the borrower was in part secured by a deed of
trust on real estate. The borrower insisted that the taking of the
deed of trust as security was in violation of the act of Congress.
This Court conceded that the statute, by clear implication, forbade
a national bank from making a loan on real estate security, but
held that the violation of the statute by the bank was a matter of
which the borrower could not complain, saying:
"We cannot believe it was meant that stockholders, and perhaps
depositors and other creditors, should be punished and the borrower
rewarded by giving success to this 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. That has been always the punishment prescribed for the
wanton violation of a charter, and it may be made to follow
whenever the proper public authority shall see fit to invoke its
application. A private person cannot, directly or indirectly, usurp
this function of the government."
The doctrine of the
Matthews case has been often
reaffirmed.
Whitney v. Wyman, 101 U.
S. 392,
101 U. S. 397;
Jones v. New York Guaranty & Indemnity Co.,
101 U. S. 622,
101 U. S. 628;
Fritts v. Palmer, 132 U. S. 282,
132 U. S. 291;
Logan County Nat. Bank v. Townsend, 139 U. S.
67,
139 U. S. 76;
Thompson v. St. Nicholas Nat. Bank, 146 U.
S. 240,
146 U. S.
251.
By section 5201 of the Revised Statutes, it is provided that
"no association shall make any loan or discount on the security
of the shares of its own capital stock, nor be the purchaser or
holder of any such shares, unless such security or purchase shall
be necessary to prevent loss upon a debt previously contracted in
good faith, and stock so purchased or acquired shall, within six
months from the time of its purchase, be sold or disposed of at
public or private sale; or, in default thereof, a receiver may be
appointed to close up the business of the association."
"While this section," this Court said in
National
Page 181 U. S. 212
Bank of Xenia v. Stewart, 107 U.
S. 676,
107 U. S.
677,
"in terms prohibits a banking association from making a loan
upon the security of shares of its own stock, it imposes no
penalty, either upon the bank or borrower, if a loan upon such
security be made. If, therefore, the prohibition can be urged
against the validity of the transaction by anyone 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,
the security sold, and the proceeds applied to the payment of the
debt, the courts will not interfere with the matter. Both bank and
borrower are in such case equally the subjects of legal censure,
and they will be left by the courts where they have placed
themselves."
These principles are, in our judgment, applicable to the case
before us.
The defendant alleged that he subscribed for the fifty shares of
the proposed increase of the bank's capital and deposited in the
bank the amount necessary to pay for the stock upon an
understanding with the bank that the amount so deposited should be
applied in payment of his subscription when all of the proposed
increase of capital had been subscribed for and paid in, so that
shares based upon such increase could be legally issued. But this
does not present the whole case. The defendant, having paid in the
amount subscribed, subsequently accepted a certificate for the
shares subscribed for by him, knowing, as he must be conclusively
presumed to have known, that the money paid in by him was the basis
of such certificate. He assumed the position, and claimed and
exercised the rights, of a shareholder. He drew money from the bank
as dividends upon his stock. No understanding which the defendant
may have had with the officers of the bank prior to his completed
subscription of stock could, under the circumstances disclosed,
relieve him from the liability attaching to him as a shareholder,
after he had, in the most unequivocal manner, claimed and was
accorded by the bank the rights of a shareholder. It may be --
although upon this question we express no opinion -- that the
Page 181 U. S. 213
defendant, by proper proceedings instituted in good faith and in
due time before the suspension of the bank, could have had his
subscription cancelled upon the ground that the whole amount of the
proposed increase of capital had not in fact been paid in,
although, according to the pleadings, the contrary was certified by
the Comptroller. But, immediately upon the failure of the bank, the
rights of creditors attached under section 5151, and a shareholder
who was such when the failure occurred could not escape the
individual liability prescribed by that section upon the ground
that the bank had issued to him a certificate of stock before,
strictly speaking, it had authority to do so. We concur with the
circuit court of appeals in holding that, under section 5142, as
modified by the Act of May 1, 1886, each subscription for portions
of increased capital,
"when paid up in full, becomes valid and binding until the
maximum is reached, and the statute does not incorporate into such
subscriptions a condition that the subscriber paying his
subscription in full cannot become a holder of valid stock unless
the maximum amount of the proposed increase is subscribed and paid
for."
If this be a sound view, as we think it is, it follows that one
holding stock in a national bank which is so far valid as to
entitle him to enjoy, and who is accorded the right to enjoy, the
privileges of a shareholder, as against the bank, is a shareholder
upon whom assessments may be made in conformity with section
5151.
The present suit is primarily in the interest of creditors of
the bank. It is based upon a statute designed not only for their
protection, but to give confidence to all dealing with national
banks in respect of their contracts, debts, and engagements, as
well as to stockholders generally. If the subscriber became a
shareholder in consequence of frauds practiced upon him by others,
whether they be officers of the bank or officers of the government,
he must look to them for such redress as the law authorizes, and is
estopped, as against creditors, to deny that he is a shareholder,
within the meaning of section 5151, if, at the time the rights of
creditors accrued, he occupied and was accorded the rights
appertaining to that position.
Although this question has not arisen in any former case in
Page 181 U. S. 214
the precise form in which it is here presented, the views we
have expressed are in line with former adjudications.
In
Aspinwall v. Butler, 133 U.
S. 595,
133 U. S.
607-609, the principal question was as to the liability
under section 5151 of one who had subscribed and paid for a part of
an authorized increase of the stock of a national bank, the whole
amount of such increase not having been taken up by subscriptions.
Referring to a bylaw of the association relating to the power of
the directors when there was a deficiency in subscriptions arising
from the failure of some to take stock who had the privilege of
doing so, the Court, speaking by Mr. Justice Bradley, said:
"There was no express condition that the individual
subscriptions should be void if the whole $500,000 was not
subscribed, and in our judgment there was no implied condition in
law to that effect. Each subscriber, by paying the amount of his
subscription, thereby indicated that it was not made on any such
condition. It is not like the case of creditors signing a
composition deed to take a certain proportion of their claims in
discharge of their debtor. The fixed amount of capital stock in
business corporations often remains unfilled, both as to the number
of shares subscribed and as to payment of installments, and the
unsubscribed stock is issued from time to time as the exigencies of
the company may require. The fact that some of the stock remains
unsubscribed is not sufficient ground for a particular stockholder
to withdraw his capital. There may be cases in which equity would
interfere to protect subscribers to stock where a large and
material deficiency in the amount of capital contemplated has
occurred. But such cases would stand on their own circumstances. It
could hardly be contended that the present case, in which more than
ninety-two percent of the contemplated increase of capital was
actually subscribed and paid in, would belong to that category. In
Minor v.
Mechanics' Bank, 1 Pet. 46, only $320,000 out of
$500,000 of capital authorized by the charter was subscribed in
good faith, but the Court did not regard this deficiency in the
subscriptions as at all affecting the status of the corporation or
the validity of its operations. Some reliance is placed on the
words of the act of Congress which authorizes an increase of
capital within
Page 181 U. S. 215
the maximum prescribed in the articles of association. They are
found in section 5142 of the Revised Statutes, which declares that
any banking association may, by its articles, provide for an
increase of its capital from time to time, but adds,"
"no increase of capital shall be valid until the whole amount of
such increase is paid in, and notice thereof has been transmitted
to the Comptroller of the Currency, and his certificate obtained
specifying the amount,"
etc. This clause would have been violated by an issue of
$500,000 of new stock when only $461,300 was paid in, but not by an
issue of the exact amount that was paid in. The clause in question
was intended to secure the actual payment of the stock subscribed,
and so as to prevent what is called watering of stock. In the
present case, the statute was strictly and honestly complied with.
The argument of the defendant asks too much. It would apply to the
original capital of a company as well as to an increase of capital.
And will it do to say, after a company has been organized and gone
into business, and dealt with the public, that its stockholders may
withdraw their capital and be exempt from statutory liability to
creditors if they can show that the capital stock of the company
was not all subscribed? Again:
"The stock was lawfully created, the defendant subscribed for
the shares in question and paid for them, and received his
certificate, and nothing was afterwards done by the directors, the
Comptroller of the Currency, or the stockholders in meeting
assembled, which they had not a perfect right to do. The defendant
became a stockholder; he held the shares in question when the bank
finally went into liquidation, and, of course, became liable under
section 5151 of the Revised Statutes to pay an amount equal to the
stock by him so held."
In
Pacific National Bank v. Eaton, 141 U.
S. 227,
141 U. S.
233-234, the Court, again speaking by Mr. Justice
Bradley, said:
"The defendant in error was just as much bound by her
subscription to the new stock as if the whole $500,000 had been
subscribed and paid in. The only question to be considered,
therefore, is whether the fact that the defendant in error did not
call for and take her certificate of stock made any difference as
to her status as a stockholder. We cannot see how it could make
the
Page 181 U. S. 216
slightest difference. Her actually going or sending to the bank,
and electing to take her share of the new stock, and paying for it
in cash, and receiving a receipt for the same in the form above set
forth, are acts which are fully equivalent to a subscription to the
stock in writing, and the payment of the money therefor. She then
became a stockholder. She was properly entered as such on the stock
book of the company, and her certificate of stock was made out
ready for her when she should call for it. It was her certificate.
She could have compelled its delivery had it been refused. Whether
she called for it or not was a matter of no consequence whatever in
reference to her rights and duties. The case is not like that of a
deed for lands, which has no force, and is not a deed, and passes
no estate, until it is delivered. In that case, everything depends
on the delivery. But with capital stock it is different. Without
express regulation to the contrary, a person becomes a stockholder
by subscribing for stock, paying the amount to the company or its
proper officer, and being entered on the stock book as a
stockholder. He may take out a certificate or not, as he sees fit.
Millions of dollars of capital stock are held without any
certificate, or, if certificates are made out, without their ever
being delivered. A certificate is authentic evidence of title to
stock, but it is not the stock itself, nor is it necessary to the
existence of the stock. It certifies to a fact which exists
independently of itself, and an actual subscription is not
necessary. There may be a virtual subscription, deducible from the
acts and conduct of the party."
To the same effect was
Thayer v. Butter, 141 U.
S. 234.
It is supposed that
Concord First National Bank v.
Hawkins, 174 U. S. 364,
174 U. S. 372,
is in opposition to the views herein expressed. We do not think so.
In the case referred to, it appeared that the bank, located at
Concord, New Hampshire, purchased, for purposes of investment, one
hundred shares of the stock of the Indianapolis National Bank,
doing business at Indianapolis, Indiana, and after such purchase
appeared upon the books of the latter bank as the owner and holder
of the shares so purchased. The bank at Indianapolis suspended and
was put into the hands of a receiver. The question presented was
whether,
Page 181 U. S. 217
in respect of the stock standing in its name, the bank in New
Hampshire could be held as a shareholder in the other bank under
section 5151. This Court, following the decisions in prior cases,
including
California Bank v. Kennedy, 167 U.
S. 362,
167 U. S. 367,
held that a national bank had no power or authority to invest its
surplus funds in the stock of another national bank. It was also
adjudged that, in the case of such a purchase, the purchasing bank
could plead its want of power, and thereby protect itself against
the liability imposed upon shareholders by section 5151. The court
said:
"If the previous reasoning be sound, whereby the conclusion was
reached that, by reason of the limitations and provisions of the
national banking statutes, it is not competent for an association
organized thereunder to take upon itself, for investment, ownership
of such stock, no intention can be reasonably imputed to Congress
to subject the stockholders and creditors thereof, for whose
protection those limitations and provisions were designed, to the
same liability by reason of a void act on the part of the officers
of the bank, as would have resulted from a lawful act. It is argued
on behalf of the receiver that the object of the statute was to
afford a speedy and effective remedy to the creditors of a failed
bank, and that this object would be defeated in a great many cases
if the Comptroller were obliged to inquire into the validity of all
the contracts by which the registered shareholders acquired their
respective shares. The force of this objection is not apparent. It
is doubtless within the scope of the Comptroller's duty, when
informed by the reports of the bank that such an investment has
been made, to direct that it be at once disposed of, but the
Comptroller's act in ordering an assessment, while conclusive as to
the necessity for making it, involves no judgment by him as to the
judicial rights of parties to be affected. While he, of course,
assumes that there are stockholders to respond to his order, it is
not his function to inquire or determine what, if any, stockholders
are exempted."
The difference between that case and the present one is
apparent. In the case before us, there was no want of power in the
defendant to subscribe for stock in the bank at Sedalia
Page 181 U. S. 218
and to assume the position of a shareholder. An individual may
become a shareholder in a national bank by his own voluntary act.
He can, if he choose, so act as to be estopped from saying that he
is not a shareholder and liable as such for the contracts, debts,
and engagements of the bank. But a national bank is without
authority to use its funds for the purchase of the stock of another
national bank merely for purposes of investment, and therefore, as
held in the
Hawkins case, it could not under such
circumstances become a shareholder within the meaning of section
5151. Of the powers of a national bank under the statutes providing
for their creation, everyone must take notice. Whether a national
bank may not be deemed a shareholder within the meaning of section
5151 if it holds shares of another bank as security for previous
indebtedness is a question suggested in former cases, but not
decided, and upon which, in this case, no opinion need by
expressed.
The judgment is
Affirmed.