This action was brought by the receiver of a national bank under
Rev.Stat. § 5151, providing that shareholders of every such
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 amount of their stock
therein at the par value thereof, in addition to the amount
invested in such shares.
Assuming that the defendant became a shareholder in a national
bank in consequence of fraudulent representations of the bank's
officers, two questions are presented for determination: 1, whether
such representations, relied upon by defendant, constituted a
defense in this action, brought by the receiver only for the
purpose of enforcing the individual liability imposed by §
5151, Rev.Stat., upon shareholders of national banking
associations, which question is answered in the negative, and 2,
can the defendant, because of frauds of the bank whereby he was
induced to become a purchaser of its stock, have a judgment against
the receiver, on a counterclaim for money paid by him for stock, to
be satisfied out of the bank's assets and funds in his control and
possession, which question is also answered in the negative.
The present action is at law, its object being to enforce a
liability created by statute for the benefit of creditors who have
demands against the bank of which the plaintiff is receiver. If the
defendant was entitled, under the facts stated, to a rescission of
his contract of purchase, and to a cancellation of his stock
certificate, and consequently to be relieved from responsibility as
a shareholder of the bank, he could obtain such relief only by a
suit in equity to which the bank and the receiver were parties.
Whether a decree based upon the facts set forth in the answer,
even if established in a suit in equity, would be consistent with
sound principle, or with the statute regulating the affairs of
national banks and securing the rights of creditors, is a question
upon which this Court does not express an opinion.
The purchase of this stock by the bank under the circumstances
was
ultra vires, but that did not render the purchase
void.
The case is stated in the opinion of the Court.
MR. JUSTICE HARLAN delivered the opinion of the Court.
This action was brought by the receiver of the Missouri National
Bank of Kansas City, Missouri, under section 5151 of the Revised
Statutes, providing that 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 amount of their stock
therein at the par value thereof, in addition to the amount
invested in such shares.
The case was determined in the circuit court upon demurrer to
the answer and cross-petition of the defendant Lantry, and the
action of the court in sustaining the demurrer and giving judgment
for the plaintiff was affirmed in the circuit court of appeals,
Judge Thayer delivering the opinion of the court. 97 F. 865. Judge
Sanborn dissented for the reasons set forth in his dissenting
opinion in
Scott v. Latimer, 89 F. 843, 857-862, which was
the case recently decided by this Court under the title of
Scott v. Deweese, 181 U. S. 202.
The petition set forth the appointment by the Comptroller of the
Currency on the 3d day of December, 1896, of the plaintiff Wallace
as receiver of the bank. It alleged that, at the time of the bank's
failure, the defendant was the owner and holder of two hundred
shares of its stock of the par value of $100 each; that, on the
30th of July, 1897, it appearing to the satisfaction of the
Comptroller that it was necessary to enforce the individual
liability of stockholders, as prescribed by sections 5151 and 5234
of the Revised Statutes of the United States, that officer made an
assessment upon shareholders for $250,000, to be paid by them
ratably on or before the 30th of August, 1897, and that he had made
demand upon stockholders for
Page 182 U. S. 538
$100 upon each share of capital stock held and owned by them
respectively at the time of the failure of the bank.
The defendant made two separate defenses. In setting out the
first defense, he denied that he was then or had ever been the
owner of the two hundred shares of the stock referred to in the
petition otherwise than as set forth by him.
The case made by the answer of the defendant was substantially
as follows:
A short time prior to April 18th, 1896, D. V. Rieger, president
of the bank, and who had been such from its organization, solicited
the defendant and one Calvin Hood to purchase some shares of the
stock of the bank and become stockholders. He persistently urged
upon them that it was the desire of the bank to have them own its
stock and their names connected with it, as they were men of means
and had a large business acquaintance in the State of Kansas, and
their connection with the bank would be of benefit to it by
attracting and securing a large amount of Kansas business otherwise
not obtainable.
In the preliminary negotiations for the purchase of the stock,
Rieger represented that the bank was in a sound, healthy financial
condition, free from debts, earning large profits and paying
dividends, and that he was ready and willing to submit to them a
detailed statement showing its financial condition.
In consequence of his statements, the defendant and Hood called
upon Rieger at the banking house of the bank with a view of
investigating its condition.
During such preliminary negotiations, Rieger continued to act as
president of and for the bank, and all statements made by him
during the negotiations were made in his capacity as president of
the bank, with its knowledge, consent, and authority.
The defendant and Hood informed Rieger that they had been
induced by him to investigate the condition of the bank with a view
of purchasing some of its shares, and they called on him for a full
and complete history and detailed account of its business and
financial condition. He at once promised to submit to them a
faithful statement and history of the bank from its organization,
and agreed to submit such statement to
Page 182 U. S. 539
any expert bank examiner they might select, if they desired him
to do so.
The defendant, together with Hood, then entered upon such
investigation which covered a period of several weeks, Rieger
representing at the time that the bank was originally organized
with a capital stock of $500,000, all of which had been actually
paid for by the subscribers thereto, and the money deposited as
required by law; that sometime in July, 1893, on account of the
extreme stringency in money matters and panics, the bank suspended,
but upon full investigation by the Comptroller of the Currency, and
a full report of the national bank examiner submitted to that
officer, it was permitted to resume business; that the Comptroller
required the bank to reduce its capital stock to the extent of
$250,000, to cover any loss it might have sustained previous to
that time, and that this left outstanding the sum of $250,000 of
the capital stock, all of which had been actually issued and paid
for by the shareholders of the bank at that time.
Rieger submitted to the defendant a report by the Comptroller in
support of his statements, which was in words and figures as
follows:
"This bank [referring to the Missouri National Bank of Kansas
City] suspended on the 17th inst. because of a run on the part of
its depositors. There was nothing in its condition to warrant this
run or occasion suspicion as to its solvency. It seems to have been
prudently managed, and its resources are unusually free from items
of questionable value, there being no bad debts. The bank is
solvent, and should be permitted to resume."
He also submitted to defendant a bulletin issued by the
Comptroller, dated July 28th, 1893, which was in words as
follows:
"The Missouri National Bank of Kansas City, Missouri, having
complied with the conditions imposed by the Comptroller of the
Currency, and its capital stock being unimpaired, has this day been
permitted to reopen its doors for business. The bank opens with
plenty of money on hand, and is wholly solvent and safe."
He represented to the defendant that the statements contained in
the above report and bulletin were absolutely true and
Page 182 U. S. 540
correct, and that the bank had been frequently examined after it
resumed business in July, 1893, by bank examiners and experts, who
uniformly and truthfully reported the bank in good, healthy, and
prosperous condition, and entirely free from bad loans or unsecured
paper; that all the paper held by the bank was fresh, clean paper
and well secured, and that the interest on its securities had been
promptly paid, and there was not among its assets a single item or
piece of paper that had not been secured or kept alive as provided
by the banking laws of the United States. A list of the securities
and assets of the bank was submitted to the defendant by Rieger, he
stating that each and every item on the list was worth its face
value and was fully secured, and that the bank was and had been
since its organization doing a large and profitable business,
accumulating a large surplus, and paying an annual dividend of six
percent to the stockholders.
After defendant received the above statements from Rieger, he
secured the services of two expert bank examiners, to whom Rieger
made the same statements and representations about the assets and
condition of the bank, thereby inducing them to believe such
statements to be true and to so report to the defendant. Relying
upon such representations, defendant agreed with Rieger, as
president, to purchase certain shares of its capital stock, which
the latter represented was the property of the bank, and which he
represented had been theretofore acquired in a lawful way, and paid
cash therefor, receiving from him
"a certificate of stock dated the 18th day of April, 1896, and
numbered 611, and purporting to be issued by the bank and under its
seal as of that date, and that this certificate represented the two
hundred shares of stock which the defendant supposed he was
purchasing, being the same stock mentioned and described in
plaintiff's petition, for this defendant never at any time nor upon
any occasion purchased or attempted to purchase any other stock of
said bank for himself, and never at any time received for himself
any certificate of stock purporting to be a certificate for stock
of said bank other than the said certificate numbered 611."
The bank received the money so paid by the defendant for the
stock -- namely, the sum of $20,000 -- and the same was for the use
and benefit of the bank.
Page 182 U. S. 541
The defendant continued to be the holder of such certificate of
stock, without the knowledge or the means of knowing that the bank
was insolvent, until on or about the second day of December, 1896.
From the time of its delivery to him, the bank was apparently doing
a very large and prosperous business, having a daily average of
about $1,500,000 deposits, and apparently, on an average, in good
bills receivable, about $1,300,000. But owing to the vast number of
books and the complicated system of bookkeeping kept by the bank,
and the artful manner in which its insolvency was and had been
secreted by its officers, no one except the officers having
knowledge of its condition could or would have supposed from any
investigation made within any reasonable limit of time that the
bank was insolvent, or that any bills receivable were fictitious,
fraudulent, or dead paper, or that any of the representations made
by the president of the bank were false and untrue, or that it was
the purchaser of a large amount of its own stock.
On or about December 2, 1896, there were rumors of the
insolvency of the bank. Immediately after learning of such rumors,
the defendant began to make the most diligent efforts to ascertain
the cause thereof and to ascertain its actual condition. During
such investigation, which was only a day prior to the bank's
suspension, its president, cashier, and other officers persistently
insisted that it was in a good, healthy financial condition, and
was perfectly solvent, as they had represented it to be. But the
defendant was unable to ascertain at that time any information
showing the real and actual condition of the bank beyond the
representations of its officers.
On the 3d of December, 1896, the receiver of the bank appointed
by the Comptroller of the Currency took the actual and exclusive
control and possession of the bank and its assets, books, papers,
and records, and excluded everyone, including the officers of the
bank and the defendant, from the right or opportunity of making any
inspection of such books, records, papers, or assets. Although
repeatedly requested to give to the defendant and his associates an
opportunity of making a careful and complete investigation of the
affairs and condition of the bank after the same had passed into
the possession of the plaintiff as
Page 182 U. S. 542
such receiver, the latter persistently refused and denied such
request, and after the bank was placed in the hands of the
receiver, the defendant called upon him and demanded access to the
books, papers, and documents of the bank, there being no other
source from which he could ascertain the real history of the bank
and its business transactions or its real condition. He frequently
called upon the receiver and asked him for information as to its
real history and actual conditions, but the only information he
could get from that officer was that the bank was solvent, and
under his management would pay all of its debts, liabilities, and
obligations without making any assessment or call upon the
stockholders. The receiver continued to make the statement that the
bank was in a solvent condition up to the time the order of
assessment was issued by the Comptroller as alleged in the
petition. By reason of the statements and representations made by
the receiver, the defendant was led to believe, and did believe,
that the bank was solvent and would pay all its obligations, and
that its embarrassments were due to the complication of business
matters, and would only be temporary.
The defendant also alleged in his answer that, on or about
September 1, 1897, upon repeated requests, the Comptroller gave to
defendant and his associate Hood permission to inspect the assets,
books, and records of the bank, and to secure all information
possible as to its actual condition, and also permission to see the
reports of the examinations made under the direction of the
Comptroller and the receiver, and that thereupon, for the first
time after the appointment of the receiver, the defendant was
permitted to and did make a careful and thorough examination into
the actual condition and affairs of the bank; that, as a result of
that investigation, defendant for the first time ascertained the
actual condition of the bank and its affairs, and for the first
time learned that the representations made by Rieger about its
condition were knowingly false, fraudulent, and untrue, and were
made by him as president of the bank with full knowledge of the
bank and the directors and the managers thereof that they were
false, fraudulent, and untrue, and for the purpose of inducing the
defendant and Hood to invest in the capital stock of the bank.
Page 182 U. S. 543
That at no time after its organization in 1891 was the bank
solvent or able to meet its debts; that no part of its original
capital stock was ever actually paid for, as required by the
banking laws, nor was any part of the reduced capital stock of
$250,000 ever paid for; that the stock had in many instances been
issued to irresponsible parties and worthless notes taken therefor;
that, at the time the bank was represented by Rieger to be in good,
sound financial condition, it had on hand and included as part of
its good assets fraudulent, fictitious, and worthless paper greatly
in excess of its capital stock; that there was at the time,
fraudulently concealed and covered up in paper represented to be
good, $50,000 of Rieger's personal indebtedness, absolutely
worthless, and that the bank never from its organization earned a
dividend, but had paid out on dividends over $70,000 in order to
conceal and cover up its actual condition; that Rieger, when he
made the above representations, knew the stock to be absolutely
worthless, and that the capital stock had never been properly
issued or paid for; that a large portion of the stock was claimed
to be owned by the bank, and that the bank had on hand notes and
papers that were fraudulent, fictitious, and worthless in a greater
amount than its entire capital stock, and that, with full knowledge
of its absolutely insolvent condition, he represented the bank to
be in good condition in order to induce defendant to purchase the
two hundred shares of the capital stock and defraud him of the
$20,000; that, at the time of such purchase, the defendant believed
the statements made to him to be absolutely true in every
particular, and was governed by them in such belief; but that such
stock was not at any time of any value whatever;
That, by reason of the facts above stated and set forth, no
consideration was ever received by the defendant from the bank for
the payment of the $20,000 at the time of the purchase of said
stock;
That, immediately after the investigation permitted by the
Comptroller, and on or about the 27th of October, 1897, he called
at the banking house of the bank, where its affairs were being
adjusted by the receiver, but, finding only the receiver in
possession and custody of the bank, its assets, books, records,
Page 182 U. S. 544
and affairs, and being unable to find any officer of the bank,
he tendered to the receiver said certificate of stock numbered 611,
above referred to, for cancellation, notifying and informing him
that, because of the fraud and deceit that had been practiced upon
him, he disaffirmed the contract of purchase or pretended purchase
of stock, and demanded that the receiver receive the certificate,
cancel it, and repay to the defendant the sum of $20,000 paid by
him as above stated, or such proportionate part thereof as he would
be entitled to receive as a creditor of the bank for that amount;
but such tender and demand the receiver refused to accept or accede
to, and,
That from the time the bank went into the hands of the receiver
until the filing of the answer, there had not been any officer of
the bank living or residing in Missouri upon whom any service of
summons or other process could be had in any suit that might have
been commenced against the bank in Missouri save and except only
the receiver as representing the bank, and that, since December 3,
1896, the bank had no usual place of business whatever in Missouri
where process could be left or served upon any person conducting
the bank's business save and except as process might be served upon
the plaintiff as such receiver.
For a second and further defense, the defendant alleged that,
prior to and during the negotiations with him and Hood, the
president, cashier, and other officers of the bank, knowing well
its insolvency, purchased, or pretended to purchase, from
stockholders, or alleged stockholders, with the funds of the bank,
shares of its outstanding capital stock in order to prevent
exposure by the stockholders owning such shares of its actual
condition and the threatened throwing of such shares on the market
at prices that would advertise the bank's insolvency; that, in
order to prevent an open and apparent violation of law, as well as
to deceive the public and the Comptroller of the Currency and his
associates and employees, the officers of the bank engaged in this
transaction and in transactions of buying or attempting to buy such
shares of its own stock so outstanding, would cause the
certificates of stock purchased or pretended to be purchased from
the parties holding the same to be endorsed
Page 182 U. S. 545
by those to whom the certificates were issued, either in blank
or in the names of the president, cashier, or some one of the
clerks or other parties connected with the bank, and would then
procure a delivery of such indorsed certificate, paying for the
same with money belonging to the bank, or by surrendering notes
held by it against such parties for such stock, or by payment of
money and surrender of notes; that then, to account for the funds
so used, the parties to whom the certificates would be assigned or
whom the bank pretended were the owners of them would make a
promissory note or notes to the bank for the amount of money used
in the purchase of such stock, such note or notes being payable to
the bank and unsecured except as the certificates of stock were
issued to secure the same; that all stock purchased or attempted to
be purchased by the officers of the bank was paid for out of its
funds and notes taken from its officers, agents, and servants to
the bank to represent the funds so used;
That each and every one of the persons engaged in this
transaction and who executed any or all of the notes referred to
was at the time and ever since had been absolutely and hopelessly
insolvent, to the full knowledge of every officer of the bank
engaged in these transactions; that such pretended or attempted
purchase of shares of stock was made by the bank directly with the
owners or holders thereof and with the people in whose names the
stock stood, to the knowledge of each one of the persons owning or
holding the stock or in whose name it stood, and that none of the
transactions concerning the negotiations for the pretended purchase
of stock was made to or with the owners, holders, or the persons in
whose names it stood by any employees in whose names the
certificates were taken or to whom the certificates were delivered
in blank, except in the case of the president and cashier, who in
such negotiations and pretended purchases were, to the knowledge of
those with whom they dealt, acting for and on account and in the
name of the bank;
That in some instances, and perhaps all, the certificates of
stock surrendered to the bank were cancelled, and new certificates
issued to irresponsible persons, who were to hold the
Page 182 U. S. 546
same for the use and benefit of the bank; that, owing to the
fact that the entire history of these transactions, so far as it
appeared in writing, was and is contained in the books, records,
and papers of the bank in the sole custody of the receiver, the
defendant was unable to give a more detailed statement and history
of the transactions, or to state from whom all the purchases were
made, or to whom certificates were assigned, or by whom held, or to
whom they might have been transferred;
That none of said stock was taken or purchased or procured by
the bank to prevent any losses or loss upon debts previously
contracted in good faith or purchased in any way authorized by law,
but the same was purchased by the bank with its funds for the
purpose of preventing the stock from being sold in open market, and
to prevent any investigation being made as to the actual condition
of the bank by the parties owning the same; that none of the
parties to whom new certificates of stock were issued have paid
anything for it, nor did they pay or cause to be paid the notes
executed to the bank, nor did they intend to pay the notes when
they were executed, because they were executed with the fraudulent
purpose of concealing the stock purchased by the bank;
That, at the time of the negotiations for the purchase of said
stock, and at the purchase thereof, the bank had purchased with its
funds, in the manner set forth, about $80,000 of the $250,000 of
the reduced capital stock of the bank;
That, during said negotiations with the president and other
officers of the bank by the defendant and Hood, and at the time of
the purchase of said stock, the president and other officers of the
bank represented to them that all of its capital stock had been
subscribed for and issued to actual purchasers in good faith, and
was then held and owned by such parties as stockholders of the
bank, except an amount of the capital stock which the bank then had
on hand which had been taken in by it to prevent a loss on
indebtedness previously contracted in good faith, and had been so
taken without violating the banking laws of the United States; that
defendant, believing those statements, purchased of the bank two
hundred shares of its capital stock
Page 182 U. S. 547
of the par value of $20,000, which sum he paid therefor, and a
certificate was issued to him by the bank; and,
That, at the time of the purchase or attempted purchase by him
of said stock for which the certificate was issued, the president
and other officers of the bank, in order to have its books show
correctly the amount of the outstanding stock, caused some or all
of the parties who held certificates of stock in their names that
had been purchased for and on account of the bank to surrender to
the bank enough of such certificates for cancellation so that the
certificate issued to the defendant could be issued therefor and in
the place thereof, and immediately upon the surrender of such
certificates to the officers of the bank, and without the knowledge
of the defendant, the certificates were cancelled by the bank to an
amount sufficient to enable it to issue the certificate so received
by defendant, and that the parties who held said stock never at any
time received the purchase money paid by the defendant for it, but
the same was retained and kept by the bank. Wherefore defendant
demanded that the action be dismissed.
The defendant also filed a cross-petition and counterclaim,
incorporating therein by reference all the allegations of his first
and second defense. He alleged that, by reason of the facts stated
and the fraud and deceit practiced upon him by the bank and its
officers, he had been damaged in the sum of $20,000, with interest
from April 18, 1896. He further alleged that he had presented such
claim to the receiver for allowance as a claim against the bank,
and that the same had been rejected and refused by the receiver. He
therefore prayed judgment against the bank for the above sum, with
interest, and asked that the same be paid ratably by the receiver
out of the assets and funds of the bank in his control and
possession.
We have given a full statement of the averments of the
defendant's pleadings because, in an attempt to condense them,
something might be omitted that was deemed by the plaintiff in
error essential to his case, and because the questions presented
for consideration may be regarded as important.
Assuming that the defendant became a shareholder in
consequence
Page 182 U. S. 548
of the fraudulent representations of the bank's officers, as set
forth in the answer and cross-petition or counterclaim, two
principal questions are presented for determination: 1. Whether
such representations, relied upon by the defendant, constituted a
defense in the present action brought by the receiver only for the
purpose of enforcing the individual liability imposed by section
5151 of the Revised Statutes upon the shareholders of national
banking associations. 2. Can the defendant, because of the frauds
of the bank whereby he was induced to become a purchaser of its
stock, have a judgment against the receiver on the counterclaim in
this action for the money paid by him for stock, to be satisfied
out of the bank's assets and funds in his control and
possession?
The present action is beyond question one at law. Its object is
to enforce a liability created by statute for the benefit of
creditors who have demands against the bank of which the plaintiff
is receiver. The defendant stood upon the books of the bank as a
shareholder at the time it was placed in the hands of the receiver,
and he was accorded the privileges appertaining to that position.
He claims exemption from the responsibility attaching to him, under
the statute, as a shareholder, upon the ground that, in consequence
of the frauds practiced upon him, he was entitled to disaffirm, and
that he had upon due notice to the receiver disaffirmed, the
contract under which he purchased the stock in question. He seeks
to have the certificate received by him treated as cancelled.
Clearly such a defense is of an equitable nature, and could not be
recognized and sustained except in some proceeding to which the
bank at least was a party. If the defendant was entitled under the
facts stated to a rescission of his contract of purchase and to a
cancellation of his stock certificate, and consequently to be
relieved from all responsibility as a shareholder of the bank, he
could obtain such a relief only by a suit in equity to which the
bank and the receiver were parties.
The defendant alleges that he tendered to the receiver the
certificate of stock received by him for cancellation, notifying
and informing the latter that, because of the fraud and deceit
practiced upon him by which he was induced to purchase or
Page 182 U. S. 549
attempt to purchase the stock represented by the certificate, he
disaffirmed the contract of purchase or pretended purchase of the
stock and demanded that the receiver receive the certificate and
cancel it and repay the sum of $20,000 paid by him, or such
proportionate part thereof as he would be entitled to receive as a
creditor of the bank for that amount, which tender and demand the
receiver refused to accept or accede to. Such tender was an idle
ceremony and added nothing to the rights of the defendant, for the
receiver had no power to accept or cancel the certificate or to
relieve the defendant from the responsibility attaching to him as
one appearing upon the books of the bank as a shareholder and to
whom had been accorded by the bank the privileges of a shareholder.
His duty was to take charge of the assets of the bank and to
enforce such assessment upon shareholders as was made by the
Comptroller in virtue of the statute.
Nor could the bank, after its suspension and the appointment of
a receiver, have assumed to discharge the defendant from any
liability attaching to him as a shareholder. Upon the failure of
the bank, the rights of creditors attached, and could not be
affected by anything that the bank or its officers might, after
such failure, have done or omitted to do. In
Earle v.
Pennsylvania, 178 U. S. 449,
178 U. S. 455,
we held that when a national bank suspends and is placed in the
hands of a receiver, the entire control and administration of its
assets are committed to the receiver and the Comptroller, subject
to whatever rights of priority, if any, may have been previously
acquired by proceedings lawfully instituted against the bank before
its suspension. So that the only way in which the defendant could
have effectively raised the question of his liability as a
shareholder, arising from frauds committed by the bank or its
officers before its suspension whereby he was induced to become a
shareholder, was by a suit in equity against the bank and the
receiver. Instead of pursuing that course, he sought, by
interposing an equitable defense, to defeat this action at law
brought by the receiver under the statute. That cannot be done,
because, under the constitution, law and equity is recognized, so
that, in actions at law in a circuit
Page 182 U. S. 550
court of the United States, equitable defenses are not
permitted. So, also, "if the defendant," this Court has said, "have
equitable grounds for relief against the plaintiff, he must seek to
enforce them by a separate suit in equity."
Northern Pacific
Railroad v. Paine, 119 U. S. 561,
119 U. S. 563.
See also Bennett v.
Butterworth, 11 How. 669;
Thompson
v. Central Ohio R. Co., 6 Wall. 134;
Scott v.
Neely, 140 U. S. 106;
Scott v. Armstrong, 146 U. S. 499,
146 U. S.
512.
We must not be understood as expressing any opinion upon the
question whether the defendant could have been discharged from
liability as a shareholder if the facts stated in his answer by way
of defense had been established in a separate suit in equity.
Whether a decree based upon the facts set forth in the answer, even
if established in a suit in equity brought against the bank and the
receiver after the appointment of a receiver, would be consistent
with sound principle or with the statute regulating the affairs of
national banks and securing the rights of creditors is a question
upon which we do not express an opinion. We mean at this time only
to adjudge that the facts set forth in the answer present grounds
of relief which cannot be made available by way of defense in this
action at law, and if sufficient to protect the defendant against
the liability attaching to him as a shareholder, must be alleged
proved in a suit in equity to which the bank and the receiver are
made parties.
Some of the observations made in
Scott v. Deweese,
181 U. S. 202, are
quite applicable to the present case. That was an action at law to
enforce the individual liability imposed by section 5151 of the
Revised Statutes. The defendant in that case sought to escape such
liability upon the ground, in part, that he had been induced by
false representations of the bank's officers to accept a
certificate for a certain amount of its increased capital stock. No
suit had been instituted to cancel the certificate or to rescind
the subscription of stock. The Court said:
"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
Page 182 U. S. 551
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."
Whether the defendant in that case could have been relieved from
liability as a shareholder and had his subscription of stock
cancelled if he had in good faith and in due time before the
suspension of the bank instituted proceedings to obtain relief was
not decided.
The defendant, however, contends that the present suit is not
embraced by the rule just announced because, he insists, the
purchase by the bank of its stock -- which he was induced
thereafter by its fraud to purchase from it -- was not simply
voidable, but was absolutely void; consequently, the sale to him of
such stock was void, and he did not, by his purchase and by taking
a certificate of stock, become a shareholder within the meaning of
section 5151.
It is true that the statute declares that no national bank shall
be the purchaser or holder of any of its own shares of capital
stock. Rev.Stat. section 5201. But will a violation of this
provision by the bank relieve from liability one who holds a
certificate of its stock and enjoys the right of a shareholder?
The statute forbids a national bank to lend money upon real
estate as security. Rev.Stat. section 5137. Nevertheless, this
Court has frequently held that the borrower cannot escape liability
for the repayment of the money so borrowed, nor dispute the right
of the bank to enforce the security taken in violation of the
statute; that it was for the government, and not for the borrower,
to complain of the bank's departure from the rule prescribed by
statute.
Scott v. Deweese, 181 U.
S. 202, and authorities there cited.
In
First Nat. Bank v. Stewart, 107 U.
S. 676,
107 U. S. 677,
it appeared that a bank had loaned money on the security of its
shares of stock held by the borrower. The debt not having been
paid,
Page 182 U. S. 552
the bank sold the stock and applied the proceeds to the payment
of an equal amount of the debt. The stockholder then sued the bank
to recover the value of the stock, relying on section 5201 of the
Revised Statutes, forbidding a national bank to make any loan or
discount on the security of the shares of its own capital stock.
The trial court held that, as the statute forbade the bank to
accept its own shares of stock as security for money loaned, the
plaintiff was entitled to recover. The judgment was reversed by
this Court, which held that the statute imposed no penalty, either
on the bank or borrower, if a loan was made in violation of its
provisions, and that, if the prohibition could be urged against the
validity of the transaction by any one except the government, it
could only be done while the security was subsisting in the hands
of the bank.
So in
Scott v. Deweese, above cited, which involved a
construction of section 5205, providing that no increase of a
bank's capital stock shall be valid until the whole amount of such
increase shall have been paid in and until the Comptroller
certifies that the amount of the increase has been duly paid in as
part of the capital of the association, this Court said:
"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. . . . 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 a
shareholder, who became such by paying into the bank the amount
subscribed by him, from the individual liability imposed by section
5151."
In view of these decisions, it cannot be held that the purchase
by the bank of its own shares of stock was void. It was, of course,
a matter of which the government, by its officers, could
Page 182 U. S. 553
take cognizance, and it may be that it was a matter of which
stockholders, having an interest in the proper administration of
the affairs of the bank, could complain in a proceeding instituted
by them to restrain the bank from violating the statute. But when
the violation of the statute has occurred, it is not a matter of
which a shareholder can complain in order that he may be relieved
from the liability attaching to him as a shareholder and which the
receiver seeks to enforce under the orders of the Comptroller. In
the present case, Judge Thayer, delivering the opinion of the
circuit court of appeals, well said:
"In considering the second defense which was interposed by the
defendant, it is important to bear in mind that the two hundred
shares of stock which he purchased from the bank was not void
stock, but was stock which, according to the averments of the
answer, had once been issued to other persons, and had been
reacquired by the bank by purchasing it from such other persons to
prevent them from throwing it on the market at ruinous prices. It
is necessary to infer from the averments of the answer that this
stock had once passed the scrutiny of the Comptroller and had been
outstanding and had been held by other persons since the
organization of the bank in the year 1891. The purchase of this
stock by the bank under the circumstances disclosed by the answer
was doubtless
ultra vires, but the purchase in question
did not render the stock void. In purchasing it, the bank made an
unlawful use of its funds for which the officers concerned in the
transaction could have been held responsible, as for any other
unlawful act, if the corporation had sustained damage; but in point
of fact, by the sale of the stock to the defendant, that portion of
its capital which had been dissipated by the purchase was restored
by the resale, and no loss seems to have been incurred. We are at a
loss to understand how this transaction on the part of the bank can
operate to relieve the defendant from his liability as a
stockholder in a suit brought by the receiver to recover a stock
assessment which was levied solely for the benefit of corporate
creditors. The sale of the stock to the defendant after the bank
had purchased the same was not unlawful, since it operated to
restore that part of the capital that had been retired, and to that
extent
Page 182 U. S. 554
repaired the wrong which might otherwise have been done to the
bank's creditors."
97 F. 865, 868.
It only remains to inquire whether, in any view of the case, the
cross-petition or counterclaim can be sustained. We think not. The
receiver sued in this case for the benefit of creditors who, it
must be assumed upon this record, knew nothing of the circumstances
under which the defendant became a shareholder. They trusted the
bank and those who appeared on the list of shareholders required to
be kept by section 5210 of the Revised Statutes, which list, that
section declares, "shall be subject to the inspection of all the
shareholders and creditors of the association." Referring to that
section, this Court, in
Pauly v. State Loan & Trust
Co., 165 U. S. 606,
165 U. S. 621,
said:
"Manifestly one, if not the principal, object of this
requirement was to give creditors of the association, as well as
state authorities, information as to the shareholders upon whom, if
the association becomes insolvent, will rest the individual
liability for its contracts, debts, and engagements."
Pullman v. Upton, 96 U. S. 328,
96 U. S.
330-331;
National Bank v. Case, 99 U. S.
628,
99 U. S.
631.
"It is true that one who does not in fact invest his money in
such shares, but who, although receiving them simply as collateral
security for debts or obligations, holds himself out in the books
of the association as true owner, may be treated as the owner, and
therefore liable to assessments when the association becomes
insolvent and goes into the hands of a receiver. But this is upon
the ground that, by allowing his name to appear upon the stock list
as owner, he represents that he is such owner, and he will not be
permitted, after the bank fails and when an assessment is made, to
assume any other position as against creditors. If, as between
creditors and the person assessed, the latter is not held bound by
that representation, the list of shareholders required to be kept
for the inspection of creditors and others would lose most of its
value."
We perceive no ground whatever upon which the defendant can have
a judgment upon his cross-petition or counterclaim against the
receiver. That officer had nothing to do with the fraudulent
transactions of the bank prior to its suspension. His duty was to
take charge of its assets and have them administered
Page 182 U. S. 555
according to the rights of parties existing at the time of such
suspension. Whether, if the defendant claimed a judgment against
the bank or its officers for the alleged fraud or deceit of the
latter officers, he could participate in the distribution of the
proceeds of the stock assessment until all the contract obligations
of the bank had been met was not decided by the circuit court of
appeals. That question was wisely reserved for decision when it
should arise and become necessary to be decided. It was deemed by
that court only necessary to adjudge that the receiver was entitled
to a judgment against the defendant, and that the latter was not
entitled in this action to a judgment against the receiver on
account of frauds committed by the bank or its officers. In that
view, we concur.
Perceiving no error of law in the record, the judgment below
is
Affirmed.