1. The presumption of liability of a stockholder of a national
bank begotten by the presence of the name on the stock register may
be rebutted if the jury finds the fact to be that a
bona
fide sale of the stock had been made and every duty had been
performed which the law imposed in order to secure a transfer on
the registry of the bank. The mere reduction of the reserve of a
national bank below the legal limit does not affect with a legal
presumption of bad faith, all transactions made with or concerning
the bank during the period whilst the reserve is impaired.
2. The power of a stockholder to transfer stock in a national
bank, like other personal property, is not limited by the mere fact
that, at the time of the transfer the bank, which was a going
concern, was insolvent in the sense that its assets, if liquidated,
would not discharge its liabilities, unless it be shown that the
seller was aware of the facts and had sold the stock in order to
avoid the impending double liability.
3. Nor is such a
bona fide sale void if the person to
whom the stock is sold is, owing to his insolvency, unable to
respond to the double liability, if the fact of such insolvency was
at the time of the sale, unknown to the seller.
When the Chestnut Street National Bank of Philadelphia
Page 188 U. S. 43
suspended payment and its doors were closed, there stood on the
stock register ten shares in the name of the defendant in error. A
call having been made by the Comptroller for the sum of the double
liability, this suit was commenced to recover the amount. The
defense was: first that, prior to the suspension of the bank, the
defendant had, in good faith, sold the stock standing in her name
for a full market price, which had been paid her; second, that in
consummation of such sale, she had, by her agent, delivered to the
proper officer of the bank in its banking house at the place where
transfers were made, the stock certificate, with an adequate power
of attorney to make the transfer, and requested that the stock be
transferred; third, that the officer of the bank said that the
transfer would be made as requested, and the defendant was ignorant
of the fact that the officer had failed to discharge his duty;
fourth, that, as the defendant had done everything which the law
required her to do to secure the transfer, she had ceased to be a
stockholder, and was not responsible.
In submitting the case to the jury, the court instructed first
that the presence of the name of the defendant on the stock
register created a presumption of liability. This, however, the
jury was informed, was not conclusive, but might be rebutted. Such
rebuttal, the court charged, would result if it was proved that the
defendant had made a
bona fide sale of her stock, and had,
at the proper time and place, handed to the proper officer of the
bank a power to transfer the same, although the officer of the bank
had neglected to fulfill his duty in the premises. Second, after
charging fully and accurately as to the proof essential to show a
bona fide sale of stock in a national bank, the court
having, during the trial, applied a like rule in passing on the
admissibility of evidence, instructed the jury if the evidence
established that a sale of such character had been made while the
bank was a going concern, the defendant would not be liable
because, unknown to her, the bank was, at the time of the sale, in
fact insolvent. And the same principle was applied to the unknown
insolvency of the person to whom the stock was sold. There was
verdict and judgment for the defendant, which was affirmed by the
circuit court of
Page 188 U. S. 44
appeals; thereupon this writ of error was prosecuted.
MR. JUSTICE WHITE, after making the foregoing statement,
delivered the opinion of the Court.
In the argument at bar, all but three of the grounds of error
specified in the circuit court of appeals and assigned on the
allowance of this writ were expressly waived. In stating the case,
we have therefore called attention only to the facts and
proceedings essential to an elucidation of the three questions now
pressed, and hence, disregarding the grounds of error which are
obsolete, we come to consider the real issues.
1. Treating the facts as foreclosed by the verdict, the circuit
court of appeals held that the trial court rightly instructed that
the presumption of liability begotten by the presence of the name
on the stock register would be rebutted if the jury found the fact
to be that a
bona fide sale of the stock had been made,
and that the defendant had performed every duty which the law
imposed on her in order to secure a transfer on the registry of the
bank. The correctness of this ruling is not open to controversy.
Matteson v. Dent, 176 U. S. 521;
Whitney v. Butler, 118 U. S. 655.
But, it is urged, the court erroneously assumed the
bona
fides of the sale to have been concluded by the verdict, since
the trial court mistakenly refused to instruct the jury that the
sale of the stock, though in every other respect lawful, could not
be so treated by the jury if, as a matter of fact, it was found
that, at the time of the sale, to the knowledge of the defendant,
the reserve of the bank was below the limit fixed by law. Rev.Stat.
5191. To sustain this contention it is argued that, by operation of
law, when the reserve of a national bank falls below the maximum
provided in the statute, every transfer of stock made by a
person
Page 188 U. S. 45
having knowledge of the fact creates a legal presumption of bad
faith, and therefore, in the event of the future suspension of the
bank, avoids the transaction. But the statute creates no
presumption of inability to continue business as a consequence of
the reduction of the reserve below the legal requirement. On the
contrary, the statute expressly contemplates the continuance of
business by a bank although its reserve may have fallen below the
standard, since it merely forbids the making by a bank of certain
enumerated transactions during the period when the reserve is
impaired. Whether the provisions just referred to are mandatory or
directory we are not called upon to determine, but certainly in
either event they clearly refute the construction of the statute
which would be necessary in order to sustain the proposition. True,
the law confers authority on the Comptroller, in his discretion, to
require a bank, whose reserve has fallen below the legal limit, to
restore the reserve within thirty days, and moreover gives power to
the Comptroller, with the approval of the Secretary of the
Treasury, to appoint a receiver when a bank fails to comply, after
the thirty days, with the demand made. These provisions, however,
but add cogency to the view that it cannot be implied that the mere
reduction of the reserve below the legal limit, as a matter of law,
suspends the business of the bank, or, what would be tantamount
thereto, affects with a legal presumption of bad faith all
transactions made with or concerning the bank during the period
while the reserve is impaired.
2. The proposition which arises under this head is that it was
erroneously ruled that the insolvency of the bank when the sale of
stock was made was irrelevant unless the fact of insolvency was
known to the seller and the sale was made to avoid impending
liability -- that is, in contemplation of insolvency. It is
undisputed that, at the date when the stock was sold, the doors of
the bank were open and it had not failed in business. Hence, the
proposition is this: although a national bank has not suspended
payment, all sales of its stock, whatever may be the good faith
with which they are made, are void if it develops that, at the date
of the sale, the assets of the bank, if they had
Page 188 U. S. 46
been then realized on, would have been insufficient to pay its
debts. The proposition is supported by what is assumed to be the
essential nature of the double liability of a stockholder in a
national bank and the time when such liability, by operation of
law, becomes irrevocably fixed. Passing for a moment an analysis of
the premises upon which the argument proceeds, let us determine the
result to which it necessarily leads. Proceeding to do so, it
becomes clear that the effect of maintaining the argument would be
to virtually prevent the exercise of the power to transfer stock
"like other personal property," which the statute gives in express
terms. Rev.Stat. 5139. That such would be the result if the
validity of every sale of stock depended not upon the good faith of
the seller, but upon the condition of the bank as subsequently
developed, is, we think, obvious. Certainly, it cannot in reason be
said that the power would exist to sell stock like any other
personal property if, before the power could be exercised, the
seller must examine the affairs of the bank, marshal its assets and
liabilities in order to form an accurate judgment as to the precise
condition of the bank. But it has long since been pointed out,
First Nat. Bank v.
Lanier, 11 Wall. 377, that --
"The power to transfer their stock is one of the most valuable
franchises conferred by Congress on banking associations. Without
this power, it can readily be seen the value of the stock would be
greatly lessened, and, obviously, whatever contributes to make the
shares of stock a safe mode of investment and easily convertible
tends to enhance their value. It is not less the interest of the
shareholder than the public that the certificate representing his
stock should be in a form to secure public confidence, for without
this, he could not negotiate it to any advantage."
"It is in obedience to this requirement that stock certificates
of all kinds have been construed in a way to invite the confidence
of businessmen so that they have become the basis of commercial
transactions in all the large cities of the country and are sold in
open market the same as other securities. Although neither in form
nor character negotiable paper, they approximate to it as nearly as
practicable. "
Page 188 U. S. 47
And in the same case (p.
78 U. S. 376),
attention was called to the fact that the purpose of Congress in
making the certificates transferable had been clearly manifested by
the repeal, in adopting the National Banking Act of 1864, of §
36 of the act of 1863, which subjected any transfer of stock in a
national bank to debts due to the bank by the seller of the stock.
To maintain the proposition, then, would compel us to give an
interpretation to the statute which would destroy one of its
essential features under the guise of giving effect to another
provision of the same statute -- in other words, to destroy the law
under the pretext of enforcing it. But the controlling principle is
that, when reasonably possible, a statute should be so interpreted
as to harmonize all its requirements by giving effect to the
whole.
Moreover, when other parts of the statute are brought into view,
the
reductio and absurdum to which the proposition leads
is additionally shown. Thus, it is provided, Rev.Stat. sec. 5242,
that --
"All transfers of the notes, bonds, bills of exchange, or other
evidences of debt owing to any national banking association, or all
deposits to its credit, all assignments of mortgages, sureties on
real estate, or of judgments or decrees in its favor, all deposits
of money, bullion, or other valuable thing for its use, or for the
use of any of its shareholders or creditors, and all payments of
money to either, made after the commission of an act of insolvency,
or in contemplation thereof, made with a view to prevent the
application of its assets in the manner prescribed by this chapter,
or with a view to the preference of one creditor to another except
in payment of its circulating notes, shall be utterly null and
void. . . ."
This, by a negative affirmative, establishes the validity of all
contracts, otherwise lawful, made by the bank concerning its assets
before its failure, albeit at the time such contracts were made the
bank was insolvent, unless the contracts come within the
restrictions which the section imposes -- that is, those entered
into after the commission of an act of insolvency or in
contemplation thereof, or made with a view to prevent the
application of the assets of the bank in the manner prescribed by
law, or with the purpose of giving a preference to one creditor
over another. If the
Page 188 U. S. 48
proposition were sustained, it would thus come to pass that the
power of stockholders to freely transfer their stock like any other
personal property would be burdened with a restriction arising from
the unknown insolvency of the bank, while such limitation would not
apply to any other contract concerning the property or affairs of
the bank. This would be to hold that the statute had conferred the
lesser freedom of contract where it was its avowed purpose to give
the greater. It would besides require us to say that a limitation
resulting from unknown insolvency was made effective upon a
stockholder in transferring his stock when such restriction was not
made operative on the bank and its officers when they entered into
contracts. But this would cause the unknown insolvency to restrict
the power of the person less likely to be aware of its existence,
and to cause it not to be controlling where knowledge was most apt
to obtain. Taking into view the whole act -- the provision
conferring the power to transfer stock, the one already referred
to, which avoids contracts made in contemplation of insolvency, the
authority conferred upon the Comptroller to constantly test the
condition of a national bank, the right given him to suspend the
business of such bank when the exigencies of its situation require
it, and the double liability imposed on the registered stockholders
-- we think it results that the power to transfer stock, like other
personal property, is not limited by the mere fact that, at the
time of the transfer, the bank, which was a going concern, was
insolvent in the sense that its assets, if liquidated, would not
discharge its liabilities, unless it be shown that the seller was
aware of the fact, and had sold his stock to avoid the double
liability which was impending.
Let us come, however, to consider the matter in the light of
authority. It is clear that the assertion that the power to
transfer the stock was limited by the unknown insolvency of the
bank rests not upon any express provision of the statute, but is
deduced from mere implications which it is deemed must be drawn
from the statute as a whole. But the settled rule hitherto
enunciated by this Court, in accord with the rule obtaining in the
English courts is that, where an express power is given to transfer
stock, such power may not be rendered
Page 188 U. S. 49
nugatory by implication. This general principle, however, is by
the decisions of this Court subjected to a limitation which does
not prevail in England -- that is, that the exercise of the power
to transfer stock in a national bank is controlled by the rules of
good faith applicable to other contracts. The qualification just
stated gives no support to the proposition that, where a sale of
stock in a national bank is made in good faith, nevertheless the
consequences of the sale are avoided if subsequently it develops
that the bank was insolvent at the time of the transfer, in the
sense that its assets were then unequal to the discharge of its
liabilities, when such fact was unknown to the seller of the stock
at the time of the sale. Without undertaking to refer to the
numerous cases in which the subject has been variously considered
since the adoption of the National Banking Act in 1863, we advert
to some of the leading authorities.
In
National Bank v. Case, 99 U.
S. 629, the proof concerning the insolvency of the bank
was thus stated in the opinion of the Court:
"The Crescent City National Bank of New Orleans was organized
under the National Banking Law in 1871. On the 13th of February,
1873, its London correspondents failed, and the bank lost heavily
by the failure -- nearly the entire amount of its capital. This
loss was almost immediately known in the community where the
institution was located, and necessarily affected its credit. On
the 4th of March, 1873, payment of checks drawn upon it by its
depositors was suspended, and on the 17th of the same month, its
circulating notes went to protest."
As a result of the failure of the bank, its doors were closed
and suit was brought by the receiver to recover from the Germania
the sum of its double liability on 103 shares of stock which had
previously stood in the name of the Germania on the stock register
of the Crescent bank. The stock in question had been acquired and
registered in the name of the Germania on the 10th day of March,
1873, and the Germania had, on the same day, caused it to be
transferred on the register from its own name to that of Waldo, one
of its clerks. The Court, in enforcing the liability, said:
Page 188 U. S. 50
"While it is true that shareholders of the stock of a
corporation generally have a right to transfer their shares, and
thus disconnect themselves from the corporation and from any
responsibility on account of it, it is equally true that there are
some limits to this right. A transfer for the mere purpose of
avoiding his liability to the company or its creditors is
fraudulent and void, and he remains still liable. The English
cases, it is admitted, give effect to such transfers if they are
made (as it is called) 'out and out' -- that is, completely, so as
to divest the transferrer of all interest in the stock. But even in
them it is held that, if the transfer is merely colorable, or, as
sometimes coarsely denominated, a sham -- if, in fact the
transferee is a mere tool or nominee of the transferrer, so that,
as between themselves there has been no real transfer,"
"but, in the event of the company becoming prosperous, the
transferrer would become interested in the profits -- the transfer
will be held for naught, and the transferrer will be put upon the
list of contributories."
"
Williams' Case, L.R. 9 Eq. 225, note, where the
transfer was, as in the present case, made to a clerk of the
transferrer without consideration;
Payne's Case, L.R. 9
Eq. 223;
Ex Parte Kintrea, L.R. 5 Ch. 95.
See
also Lindley on Partnership, 2d ed. p. 1352;
Chinnock's
Case, 1 Johns. (Eng.) c. 714;
Hyam's Case, 1 De G. F.
& J. 75;
Budd's Case, 3 De G. F. & J. 297. The
American doctrine is even more stringent. Mr. Thompson states it
thus, and he is supported by the adjudicated cases:"
"A transfer of shares in a failing corporation, made by the
transferrer, with the purpose of escaping his liability as a
shareholder, to a person who, from any cause, is incapable of
responding in respect to such liability, is void as to the
creditors of the company and as to other shareholders, although, as
between the transferrer and the transferee, it was out and
out."
It was decided, however, that it was not necessary to apply the
more stringent American rule, since it was found that the transfer
under consideration was not real, but was fraudulent and collusive.
As, from the undisputed facts stated by the court in its opinion,
the bank became insolvent, in the sense that its assets were
unequal to pay its debts, in February, 1873,
Page 188 U. S. 51
nearly a month before the alleged sale was made, it follows that
everything said in the opinion of the court as to the fraudulent
and collusive nature of the transfer was wholly unnecessary if mere
insolvency avoided the sale and affixed the liability. But it
clearly appears from the reasoning of the court that the
investigation of the question of fraud and collusion was essential
because it was deemed that insolvency alone did not avoid the
transfer. The ruling therefore was directly adverse to the
construction of the law now relied upon.
Bowden v. Johnson, 107 U. S. 251,
also involved whether a stockholder in a national bank was liable
despite a transfer made by him of his stock. It was asserted that
he was -- first, because he had made the sale with knowledge of the
approaching failure of the bank and to avoid the double liability
which was impending, and second because the sale had been
collusively made to a person who was known by the seller to be
insolvent and unable to respond to the double liability. The
undoubted fact was, although the bank had not suspended, that, at
the time of the transfer, it was insolvent in the sense that its
assets were not equal to the discharge of its liabilities. In
considering whether the stockholder was liable, the Court said:
"As such shareholder, he became subject to the individual
liability prescribed by the statute. This liability attached to him
until, without fraud as against the creditors of the bank, for
whose protection the liability was imposed, he should relieve
himself from it. He could do so by a
bona fide transfer of
the stock."
Having thus held that there could be no liability if the sale of
stock had been made in good faith, and hence excluding the power to
avoid the transfer merely because of the insolvency of the bank at
the time when the sale was made, the Court proceeded to examine the
question of good faith, and to reenunciate the principle which had
been previously stated in
National Bank v. Case,supra..
The Court said (p.
107 U. S.
261):
"But where the transferrer, possessed of information showing
that there is good ground to apprehend the failure of the bank,
colludes and combines, as in this case, with an irresponsible
Page 188 U. S. 52
transferee, with the design of substituting the latter in his
place and of thus leaving no one with any ability to respond for
the individual liability imposed by the statute, in respect of the
shares of stock transferred, the transaction will be decreed to be
a fraud on the creditors, and he will be held to the same liability
to the creditors as before the transfer."
Answering the contention that, even admitting the sale to have
been made with knowledge of impending failure, to avoid the
liability to arise therefrom, it could not be avoided because the
sale was intended between the parties to be real, or, to use the
expression referred to in
National Bank v. Case, was an
out and out sale, the Court, in declining to follow the English
cases and in adhering to the broader doctrine adverted to in
National Bank v. Case, said:
"But it was held by this Court in
National Bank v.
Case, 99 U. S. 628, that a transfer on
the books of the bank is not, in all cases, enough to extinguish
liability. The Court in that case defined, as one limit of the
right to transfer, that the transfer must be out and out, or one
really transferring the ownership as between the parties to it. But
there is nothing in the statute excluding, as another limit, that
the transfer must not be to a person known to be irresponsible, and
collusively made, with the intent of escaping liability and
defeating the rights given by the statute to creditors."
In
Whitney v. Butler, 118 U. S. 655, the
facts were these: a stockholder in the Pacific National Bank of
Boston sold his stock on the 8th of November, 1881. Ten days
thereafter, on November the 18th, the bank suspended payment and
closed its doors. Beyond doubt, the bank was insolvent on the 8th
of November when the stock was sold, since the Comptroller
certified, on the 16th of December, 1881, that the result of his
investigation disclosed that "the entire capital stock," amounting
to $961,300, had been lost.
See statement of facts,
Delano v. Butler, 118 U. S. 638,
which statement was also a part of the record in
Whitney v.
Butler. The defense of the stockholder, against whom the
double liability was sought to be enforced, was that, having sold
his stock and performed every duty required of him to secure a
transfer, he was no longer liable, although his name remained upon
the register. The Court,
Page 188 U. S. 53
after expressly stating (p.
118 U. S. 658)
the good faith of the defendant, because he had no reason whatever
"to believe that the bank was insolvent, or was about to become
so," and treating the sale as valid for that reason, proceeded to
hold that the stockholder was not liable, because he had done
everything in his power to secure the transfer, and hence his name
remained on the register by the neglect of the officers of the
bank. It requires no comment to demonstrate that that case was
wrongly decided if the contention now made is sustainable.
In
Stuart v. Hayden, 169 U. S. 2, the
facts were these: Stuart was an owner of shares in the Capital
National Bank of Lincoln, Nebraska. He was a director of the bank
and a member of its finance committee. On the 22d day of December,
1892, in consequence of contracts made by Stuart with Gruetter
& Joers, Stuart delivered to them his certificates of stock,
with the power to transfer, and a few days afterwards the stock was
transferred. On the 6th of February, 1893, the bank failed. That
the bank was insolvent at the date of the sale appears on the face
of the opinion, for the Court said:
"The bank closed its doors within less than three weeks after
the stock was transferred on its books to Gruetter & Joers, its
total assets being about $900,000, and total liabilities
$1,463,013.17. Its bills receivable on hand were $519, 600, of
which $58,576.82 were good, $141,393.27 were doubtful, and
$319,611.90 were worthless. Its bills receivable not on hand
amounted to $141,000, of which only $10,000 were worth
anything."
The question presented for decision was whether Stuart continued
liable, despite the transfer made to Gruetter & Joers. The
Court elaborately stated the facts, directed attention to the
finding by the court below that at the time of the sale the bank
was absolutely insolvent, and proceeded to enforce the liability
against Stuart solely because, being a director of the bank and a
member of its finance committee, he had knowledge of the
insolvency, and therefore the sale was in bad faith. Manifestly,
this case also reiterates the doctrine announced in the previous
cases, and excludes the conception that the mere fact of unknown
insolvency avoids the transfer, since every word of the careful
statement in the opinion on the facts showing knowledge
Page 188 U. S. 54
would have been wholly unnecessary if the doctrine now asserted
were well founded.
From what has previously been said, and the cases just referred
to, it is demonstrated that the contention now made is not
supported by the statute, and is foreclosed by the decisions of
this Court. But it is suggested the rule announced in the previous
cases is shown to have been a mistaken one by an observation in the
opinion in
Stuart v. Hayden, 169 U.
S. 2. The passage referred to (p.
169 U. S. 9) is as
follows:
"Whether, the bank being in fact insolvent, the transferrer is
liable to be treated as a shareholder in respect of its existing
contracts, debts, and engagements, if he believed in good faith at
the time of transfer, that the bank was solvent, is a question
which, in the view we take of the present case, need not be
discussed, although he may be so treated, even when acting in good
faith, if the transfer is to one who is financially
irresponsible."
But this remark does not purport to pass upon the question which
it suggests, but simply reserves it. The argument, however, is that
the opinion would not have reserved a question which had been
conclusively foreclosed. The suggestion is based on a misconception
of the sentences relied on. Obviously, the observations in
Stuart v. Hayden cannot, in reason, be construed as
throwing doubt upon the doctrine announced in the opinion in which
the expressions relied on are contained. This would, however, be
the case if the significance now attributed to the language were
sound. The error of the argument arises from the fact that it
affixes to the word "insolvency," as found in the sentences quoted,
the erroneous import hitherto pointed out; that is, an inadequacy
of the assets of a bank to pay its liabilities, instead of giving
to it its true meaning, that of failure and consequent suspension
of business.
3. The proposition under this head is that, as the person to
whom the stock was sold in the case before us was in fact
insolvent, and hence unable to respond to the double liability, the
sale was void, although the fact of such insolvency of the buyer
was unknown to the seller. But this, in its last analysis, merely
again reiterates the proposition which we have previously
disposed
Page 188 U. S. 55
of, since it but insists that the validity of the sale of the
stock is to be tested, not by the good faith of the seller, but
upon the unknown financial condition of the buyer. The rule on this
subject was clearly stated in the passage which has already been
excerpted from
Bowden v. Johnson, 107 U.
S. 251, where, in declining to follow the English rule
upholding a real, or out and out, sale, even if the purpose was to
avoid impending liability, the Court said that
"the transfer must not be to a person known to be irresponsible,
and collusively made, with the intent of escaping liability and
defeating the rights given by the statute to creditors"
-- a principle which has been since expressly reiterated in
Matteson v. Dent, 176 U. S. 521,
176 U. S. 531.
Here, again, support for the proposition is sought to be derived
from the concluding sentence in the passage from the opinion in
Stuart v. Hayden. But, in any event, the observation
relied upon was not essential for the decision of the case of
Stuart v. Hayden, and moreover its meaning is clearly
shown by the context of the opinion, in which the difference
between the American and English rule is pointed out. When this is
borne in mind it will be seen that the expression in
Stuart v.
Hayden referred to but stated that difference, and, being
taken in connection with other clauses of the opinion in that case,
must be understood as implying that a real, or out and out,
transfer would not be adequate to relieve the seller from his
liability as a stockholder if the sale was made by him to escape
his impending liability, and to a person whom he knew, or had
reason to know, was financially irresponsible. As the views
hitherto expressed are conclusive of the meaning of the act of
Congress, we deem it unnecessary to refer to the many cases from
state courts of last resort construing state statutes referred to
in the argument.
Affirmed.