1. An objection to a state statute upon the ground that it
places on a stockholder an obligation to pay assessments not
imposed by the statutes in force when he acquired his stock invokes
the due process clause of the Fourteenth Amendment, rather than the
contract clause of the Constitution. P.
285 U. S.
474.
2. A party making this objection based on the Fourteenth
Amendment must show that the statutes existing when his contract
was made did not impose the obligation laid by the later statute,
and if this is doubtful upon the face of the statutes and for want
of an authoritative construction by the state court, the objection
will not be entertained. P.
285 U. S.
475.
3. When the statutes in force when a stockholder of a bank
acquired his stock make him liable to pay assessments to restore
impairments of the bank's capital, the obligation may be enforced,
in the absence of an exclusive statutory remedy, by a common law
action of debt or its modern equivalent. P.
285 U.S. 476.
Page 285 U. S. 468
4. The mere fact that the statutes defining the stockholder's
liability to pay create a special remedy for collecting the
assessments by sale of his shares does not imply that this is to be
exclusive (the statute not so declaring) and that the more plenary
remedy by common law action is withheld. P.
285 U. S.
477.
5. The enactment of a statute specifically authorizing suit
against stockholders for deficiencies after sale of their stock to
pay assessments cannot be taken as a legislative determination
that, under the earlier statutes, no common law remedy for the
collection of assessments existed. P.
285 U. S.
479.
6. Mere variations of the remedy, or the creation of new ones,
even though more onerous, for the enforcement of preexisting
obligation to pay assessments in full, are unobjectionable.
Id.
212 Iowa 196, 236 N.W. 10, affirmed.
Appeal from a judgment affirming a recovery by the bank in its
suit against stockholders to collect assessments.
Page 285 U. S. 470
MR. JUSTICE STONE delivered the opinion of the Court.
Appellee, an Iowa banking corporation, brought suit in the
courts of that state to enforce the personal liability of
appellant, its stockholder, for an assessment made under the Iowa
statutes, which provide for the restoration of any impairment of
capital of a bank by assessment
pro rata of the
stockholders. The case comes here on appeal, Jud.Code § 237,
from a judgment of the Iowa Supreme Court sustaining the assessment
and upholding the statute, which is assailed as infringing the
contract and due process clauses of the Federal Constitution. 236
N.W. 10.
On different dates between 1891 and 1917, appellant acquired
twenty-six shares of the capital stock of the appellee. Appellee,
originally incorporated in 1891, was reincorporated in 1911,
appellant acquiring a like number of shares in the new corporation.
At that time, the liability to assessment of the stockholders in
the bank was controlled by §§ 1878, 1879, and 1880 of the
1897 Iowa Code, now appearing as §§ 9246-9248, 9249, 9250
of the 1927 Iowa Code. These sections authorize the superintendent
of banks to require any impairment of capital of a state bank to be
restored by an assessment upon its stockholders, as directed by an
appropriate order of the superintendent "fixing the amount of the
assessment." Section 9247 imposes on the directors a duty to cause
the deficiency in capital thus determined to be made good "by a
ratable
Page 285 U. S. 471
assessment upon the stockholders for the amount of stock held by
them," and requires the proper officers of the bank to give written
notice of the assessment, addressed to the several stockholders,
which "shall state the entire sum to be raised, and the amount due
from the addressed stockholder." Section 9248 provides:
"Should any stockholder neglect or refuse to pay his assessment
within ninety days from the date of mailing notice thereof, the
board of directors shall cause a sufficient amount of the capital
stock held by such stockholder to be sold at public auction to make
good the deficiency, after giving ten days' notice thereof by
personal service or by posting the same in the bank, and publishing
it in some newspaper of the county in which the bank is located,
which notice shall recite the assessment made, the amount due
thereunder from the stockholder, and the time and place of sale;
proof of all which may be made in the manner provided in the
preceding section."
After appellant had acquired his stock, a new section was added
by the Act of March 13, 1925, c. 181, Iowa Laws 1925, now §
9248-a(1) of the 1927 Iowa Code, reading as follows:
"Should the proceeds of a sale under the preceding section of
all the stock of any stockholder be insufficient to satisfy his
entire assessment liability, he shall be personally liable for the
deficiency, which may be collected by suit brought in the name of
the bank against such stockholder."
Following the adoption of this later section, the superintendent
of banks determined that appellee's capital had been impaired 100
percent, and directed an assessment accordingly. Acting under
§ 9248, appellee's directors sold appellant's stock for $1 a
share, and the present suit was brought to recover the
deficiency.
In answer to the objection that the Act of 1925 subjected
appellant to an unconstitutional burden, appellee
Page 285 U. S. 472
relies on the statutes antedating appellant's acquisition of his
stock as imposing on him personal liability to pay the assessment,
without the aid of the quoted provision of the later Act. It also
argues that, even if there was no such liability under the earlier
statutes, the adoption of the Act of 1925 was but an exercise of
the power reserved to the legislature by § 12, Art. 8 of the
Iowa Constitution, and by § 1619 of the 1897 Iowa Code (§
1090, Iowa Code of 1873), providing that
"the articles of incorporation, bylaws, rules, and regulations
of corporations hereafter organized . . . shall at all times be
subject to legislative control, and may be at any time, altered,
abridged, or set aside by law. . . ."
It is insisted that the power thus reserved embraces not only a
legislative withdrawal of any grant of immunity to the stockholders
of the bank from liability for its debts, but extends to the
imposition on them of a new and continuing liability to pay any
assessment levied for the restoration of capital of the bank.
The Supreme Court of Iowa found it unnecessary to pass upon
these contentions. Expressly disclaiming any purpose to decide
either of them, it assumed, for purposes of decision, that, under
the earlier statutes, the deficiency after sale of the stock could
not be collected from the stockholder. It then proceeded to point
out that, from the beginning, the authorized assessments were not
upon the stock of the bank, but upon the stockholders personally,
and said, 212 Iowa 196, 201-202, 236 N.W. 10, 12:
"According to the original statute, the stockholder was
personally and primarily liable for the assessment, and § 9248
and its predecessors had to do only with the remedy, and nothing
else. Then, assuming that the only remedy originally made for the
collection of the assessment was to confiscate the stockholder's
stock, nevertheless, so far as the remedy was sufficient, the
stockholder was personally liable for the assessment. This
burden
Page 285 U. S. 473
was cast upon the stockholder himself, even though the only
remedy to enforce the obligation was by the sale of the stock.
Consequently, appellant's obligation in the premises had not been
increased. He was always obligated to pay the assessment. Of
course, if he did not pay, the only remedy under the statute was to
sell his stock; yet the obligation to pay was there just the same.
Now, under the new legislation, the stockholder's liability has not
been increased, but rather the remedy for enforcing that obligation
has been changed. Were the remedy a part of appellant's contract, a
change thereof would amount to an impairment.
Barnitz v.
Beverly, 163 U. S. 118;
Conley v.
Barton, 260 U. S. 677."
"Obviously, in the case at bar, however, we are not confronted
with a case where the remedy became a part of the contractual
obligation. There is not a syllable in the statutory contract which
in any way indicates that the remedy is a part of the agreement. It
was not said by the legislature that there could be no other or
different remedy. Hence, it was perfectly proper for the lawmaking
body to adopt § 9248-a(1) of the 1927 Code, because such
amendatory legislation pertained to the remedy only. The purpose of
this legislative enactment was to afford a more appropriate remedy
for an obligation already existing against appellant. Ever since
becoming a stockholder of the appellee bank, he was obligated to
pay any legal assessment made for the purpose of repairing the
capital stock. This new legislation simply recognized that
obligation and afforded a more complete remedy to enforce the same.
No new obligation was created by the amendment, but rather the old
was recognized and a better way to enforce it provided."
We find it unnecessary to answer the question implicit in this
disposition of the case -- whether an obligation can be said to
exist apart from a remedy to enforce it -- whether, within the
meaning of the contract clause, any personal
Page 285 U. S. 474
obligation of a stockholder in the nature of a contract to
restore his
pro rata share of any impairment of the
corporate capital can be said to exist independently of some means
or remedy for enforcing it in addition to the sale of his
stock.
Nor are we called on to discuss here the suggestion that, even
though the sale of the stock was the only means of collecting
assessments, the contract and due process clauses do not guarantee
appellant against the selection and the application to him of any
other remedy reasonably adapted to carrying out the policy and
purpose plainly declared by the earlier statute, to require
complete restoration of any impairment of corporate capital by
assessment of the stockholders.
See Henley v. Myers,
215 U. S. 373;
League v. Texas, 184 U. S. 156,
184 U. S. 158;
Graham & Foster v. Goodcell, 282 U.
S. 409,
282 U. S. 426;
Milliken v. United States, 283 U. S.
15,
283 U. S. 20
et seq.; People v. Adams State Bank, 272 Ill. 277, 111
N.E. 989;
Irvine v. Elliott, 203 F. 82, 96-97. For we
conclude that appellant does not sustain the burden which rests on
him of establishing that the later statute is unconstitutional
because imposing a liability to which he was not subject under the
earlier one.
In strictness, appellant presents no question of impairment of
the obligation of contract, for it is not insisted that either
party has been deprived by legislative action of any right or
remedy secured by the statute in force when appellant acquired his
stock. His objection is not directed to any such impairment of
right or obligation. It is rather that the Act of 1925 imposed on
him a personal obligation where none existed before, and that its
imposition, by fiat of the law, after he had bought his stock,
operates to deprive him of property without due process of law.
See League v. Texas, supra, pp.
184 U. S. 158,
184 U. S. 161.
This contention is, of course, without support if the liability to
pay the full assessment declared by the earlier statute
Page 285 U. S. 475
was then enforceable by any appropriate form of remedy.
See
Pinney v. Nelson, 183 U. S. 144,
183 U. S. 147;
Whitman v. Oxford National Bank, 176 U.
S. 559;
Thomas v. Matthiessen, 232 U.
S. 221.
The Supreme Court of Iowa has given no authoritative answer to
the question whether, before the Act of 1925, there was any remedy
other than sale of the stock by which an assessment might be
recovered from a stockholder. In the present case, it did not
decide the question, contenting itself with the observation that
"the only remedy under the statute was to sell his stock." In two
earlier cases, arising long after appellant acquired his stock, it
had expressed the view that the only remedy for enforcing the
payment of assessments was by sale of the shareholder's stock.
See Leach v. Arthur Savings Bank, 203 Iowa, 1052, 1057,
213 N.W. 772;
Andrew v. People's State Bank, 211 Iowa,
649, 234 N.W. 542, 546. But in neither was this statement necessary
to the decision, nor did it have any bearing on the question
actually decided. Both followed the passage of the Act of 1925. In
no other cited case has the question been considered.
Where legislation is assailed as impairing the obligation of
contract, this Court, in defining the scope of the constitutional
immunity, will determine for itself what the contract is for whose
protection the immunity is invoked.
See Appleby v. New
York, 271 U. S. 364,
271 U. S.
379-380. In the circumstances of this case also, where
the alleged infringement of the Fourteenth Amendment turns on the
asserted nonexistence of a contractual obligation to do that which
the challenged statute exacts, appellant must satisfy this Court
that he was not so bound. For here, the nature and extent of his
obligation depend upon the construction of a local statute which
the highest court of the state has indicated by its latest decision
is still open for determination.
See
Brunswick Terminal
Co. v.
Page 285 U. S. 476
National Bank of Baltimore, 192 U.
S. 386,
192 U. S. 392
et seq.; cf. Broad River Power Co. v. South Carolina,
281 U. S. 537,
281 U. S.
540.
The meaning of the sections now in question must be ascertained
in the light of the legislative policy of the state. They are a
part of its public laws, dealing with a subject of public concern,
the stability and solvency of state banking institutions.
See
Noble State Bank v. Haskell, 219 U. S. 104,
219 U. S.
111-112;
Bank of Oxford v. Love, 250 U.
S. 603. Those laws confer on the superintendent of banks
full authority to require a bank to restore impairments of its
capital. § 9235, Iowa Code of 1927 (§ 1572, Iowa Code of
1873). He may cause its liquidation if it refuses to comply with
his order or is in an insolvent or unsafe condition, or the
interests of creditors require it to be closed. §§ 9238,
9239, Iowa Code of 1927 (§ 1572, Iowa Code of 1873). The
stockholders are made individually liable to creditors,
§§ 9251, 9252, Iowa Code of 1927 (§ 1882, Iowa Code
of 1897), and any bank, whether its charter has expired or not, may
be dissolved by vote of three-fourths of the stockholders, §
9277, Iowa Code of 1927 (§ 1857, Iowa Code of 1897).
These sections exhibit an unmistakable purpose to maintain the
banks of the state in a solvent condition with capital unimpaired,
which is specifically given effect by §§ 9246-9248 of the
1927 Code. By these sections, the appellant was made aware, when he
acquired his stock, that, in the event of any impairment of capital
of the bank, the superintendent of banks was authorized to "require
an assessment upon the stockholders" and to fix "the amount of the
assessment required;" that the directors of the bank could be
ordered by the superintendent to "cause such a deficiency to be
made good by a ratable assessment upon the stockholders;" that the
officers of the corporation were required to give notice to each
stockholder of "the entire sum to be raised and the
Page 285 U. S. 477
amount due from the addressed stockholder;" and that, after 90
days, allowed for the payment of the assessment, his stock might be
sold upon an advertisement required to "recite the assessment made
and the amount due thereunder from the stockholder." These are
phrases importing legal liability. They define an obligation
imposed by the statute upon the stockholders to pay the assessments
to the bank,
see Whitman v. Oxford National Bank,
176 U. S. 559,
176 U. S. 562,
by which alone the complete restoration of impaired capital, which
is the legislative purpose, could be secured with certainty.
If no specific remedy of any kind had been provided to compel
payment of assessments, there could be little doubt that the effect
of these provisions would have been to create an obligation or
liability,
quasi-contractual in nature, on the part of
stockholders acquiring their stock after the enactment, to pay to
the bank a sum certain -- that is, the assessment when made, for
which the common law affords a remedy in debt or
indebitatus
assumpsit or its modern equivalent.
See Mills v.
Scott, 99 U. S. 25;
Whitman v. Oxford National Bank, 176 U.
S. 559;
Flash v. Conn, 109 U.
S. 371;
Bernheimer v. Converse, 206 U.
S. 516,
206 U. S. 529;
Price v. United States, 269 U. S. 492,
269 U. S. 500;
United States v. Chamberlin, 219 U.
S. 250;
Meredith v. United
States, 13 Pet. 486,
38 U. S. 493;
Pacific Mail Steamship Co. v.
Joliffe, 2 Wall. 450,
69 U. S. 457;
Converse v. Hamilton, 224 U. S. 243,
224 U. S. 253;
Farmers' Loan & Trust Co. v. Funk, 49 Neb. 353, 68
N.W. 520.
See James B. Ames, Lectures on Legal History,
Implied Assumpsit, 149, 161.
In the face of the sweeping language of the statute, the mere
fact that it gave a remedy by sale of the stock cannot be taken as
necessarily precluding resort to the common law remedy, which would
otherwise be available and by which alone the liability declared
could in many cases be successfully enforced. The summary remedy by
a sale would often be a speedy and convenient alternative
Page 285 U. S. 478
method of enforcing the statutory liability to pay assessments.
But it is not stated to be exclusive, and its adoption involves no
necessary inconsistency with the continued existence of a common
law remedy for the recovery of the sum certain fixed by the
assessment and declared to be due by the statute. In those
instances, where the impairment is more than 50 percent of the
capital, the remedy by sale would be insufficient to enforce the
liability declared. No reason is suggested why such a remedy
should, by mere implication, be deemed exclusive, or why the
statute should be so construed by inference as to defeat its
obvious purpose or limit or destroy the liability which, in plain
terms, it has created.
It is true that, where a statute creates a liability and
provides a remedy by suit specially adapted to its enforcement,
other less appropriate common law remedies are impliedly excluded.
See Evans v. Nellis, 187 U. S. 271;
Pollard v.
Bailey, 20 Wall. 520,
87 U. S. 527;
Williamson v. American Bank, 115 F. 793;
cf.
Middletown Bank v. Railway Co., 197 U.
S. 394. And in every case, conditions precedent to the
statutory liability must be satisfied before any form of remedy can
be resorted to.
Fourth National Bank v. Francklyn,
120 U. S. 747;
Middletown Bank v. Railway Co., supra; State National Bank v.
Sayward, 91 F. 443. But here, the conditions of liability, the
order of the superintendent of banks, the assessment by the
directors, and the notice fixing the amount of appellant's
obligation have all been performed. Here, the remedy provided is a
summary and only partially effective supplement or alternative to
that which the common law affords for enforcing the obligation to
pay a sum certain, which, when fixed by the prescribed assessment,
is declared to be due and owing. The very fact that the remedy is
on its face inadequate to compel full performance of the obligation
declared is persuasive that it was
Page 285 U. S. 479
not intended to be exclusive of applicable common law remedies,
by which complete performance might be secured.
Administrative remedies for the collection of taxes, if not made
exclusive by statute, do not preclude the recovery of the tax by a
common law action of debt.
Price v. United States,
269 U. S. 492,
269 U. S. 500;
United States v. Chamberlin, 219 U.
S. 250,
219 U. S. 262;
Dollar Savings Bank v. United
States, 19 Wall. 227,
86 U. S.
238-239;
Meredith v. United
States, 13 Pet. 486,
38 U. S. 493;
See Stockwell v. United
States, 13 Wall. 531,
80 U. S. 542.
And, in general, the liability of stockholders to assessment under
local statutes is deemed transitory in nature, enforceable by
common law remedies in states other than that of the corporation,
although special statutory forms of remedy given by the local
statute could not be resorted to elsewhere.
See Whitman v.
Oxford National Bank, 176 U. S. 559;
Hancock National Bank v. Farnum, 176 U.
S. 640;
Hale v. Hardon, 95 F. 747;
Rhodes
v. United States National Bank, 66 F. 512;
Dexter v.
Edmands, 89 F. 467.
The enactment of the statute of 1925, specifically authorizing a
suit for the deficiency after the sale of the stock, served to
remove any possible doubts and rendered certain what may previously
have been thought by some to be uncertain. But it can hardly be
taken to be a legislative determination that, under the earlier
statutes, no common law remedy could be availed of for the
collection of assessments. If not, mere variations of the remedy or
the creation of new ones, even though more onerous, for the
enforcement of a preexisting obligation to pay assessments in full,
are unobjectionable.
See Hill v. Merchants' Mutual Ins.
Co., 134 U. S. 515;
League v. Texas, 184 U. S. 156,
184 U. S. 158;
Henley v. Myers, 215 U. S. 373;
Conley v. Barton, 260 U. S. 677.
In the absence of an authoritative construction by the state
court of the statutes in force when appellant acquired
Page 285 U. S. 480
his stock, we cannot say that he was not personally liable for
his
pro rata share of any impairment of the bank's capital
assessed against him while he remained a stockholder, whether his
stock was sold under § 9248-a(1) or not, or that the later
statute, which provided a remedy for enforcing such liability,
infringed his constitutional rights.
Affirmed.