1. The constitutional rights of a depositor of an insolvent
state bank, which is in the hands of a liquidating official under
direction of a state court, are
held not violated by the
adoption, under a later statute, of a plan consented to by
three-fourths of the depositors and approved by the liquidating
official and the court whereby, instead of bringing about
liquidation and distribution of the assets through the officer as
provided by the general law, the bank was reopened in a reorganized
form with new shareholders and took the place of the officer for
the purpose of gathering and guarding the assets and discharging
the liabilities. P.
295 U. S.
70.
2. The statute is not given an unconstitutional application
because, by the plan approved and decreed under it, some of the
assets of the old bank are risked in the business of the new one,
this being done to improve the chances of collection for the
benefit of existing creditors, and provision being made to insure
that the equivalent of such assets shall be repaid the creditors or
be deposited in a fund held by the new bank for their benefit,
before any profits of its business shall inure to its shareholders.
P.
295 U. S.
71.
3. To make such a reorganization possible, some of the
shareholders of the old bank contributed capital to the new one in
return for its shares, upon which they became personally liable,
and were released from personal liability on their old shares.
Held that the release did not infringe constitutional
rights of nonassenting creditors, since it was a necessary incident
to the plan for the protection of all, and was but an exercise of
the power of the liquidating officer, with approval of the court,
to compromise claims of uncertain collectibility and value upon
terms beneficial to his trust. P.
295 U. S.
72.
4. Mere error in judgment in the compromising of claims of an
insolvent bank by state officials in charge of its liquidation is
not an unconstitutional taking of the property rights or impairment
of the contract rights of nonassenting creditors. P.
295 U. S.
73.
5. It is not an unconstitutional discrimination against
depositors of an insolvent bank to pay in full the claims of other
banks which
Page 295 U. S. 65
are fully secured by collateral, or to discharge in full other
deposit accounts which are so small that it will be more economical
to pay them than to incur bookkeeping expenses incidental to
calculation of dividends. P.
295 U. S.
74.
6. One who has appeared generally and been fully heard upon the
merit cannot complain of insufficiency of notice to others. P.
295 U. S.
74.
172 Miss. 342, 155 So. 331, affirmed.
Appeal from the affirmance of a decree of the Court of Chancery
in Mississippi which ordered the reopening of a closed bank under a
plan approved and presented to it by the Superintendent of Banks.
The appellants were two of the depositors who did not assent, but
whose objections were overruled.
MR. JUSTICE CARDOZO delivered the opinion of the Court.
A statute of Mississippi, adopted in 1932, permits the reopening
of closed banks upon terms proposed by three-fourths of the
creditors in number or in value if the plan is approved by the
Superintendent of banks and confirmed by the Court of Chancery. A
bank has been reopened in accordance with this statute. The
question is whether contractual rights have been impaired or rights
of property annulled in contravention of the provisions of the
Constitution of the United States.
The People's Bank & Trust Company of Tupelo, Miss., closed
its doors on December 24, 1930. In accordance with the statutes
then in force (Code 1930, § 3817), the Superintendent of banks
took charge of the business and proceeded to liquidate it, his
action being
Page 295 U. S. 66
subject at all times to the supervision of the Court of
Chancery. The bank owed about $200,000 for public moneys on
deposit. These were preferred claims under the laws of Mississippi,
and were paid in full. It owed for bills payable and rediscounts
$457,500, amply secured by collateral. These also were paid in
full, the security being unaffected by liquidation or insolvency.
Out of the remaining assets, so far as they would serve, the
liquidator would have to pay the general deposits (about
$1,450,000) as well as any other debts. There was also available
for the protection of depositors the personal liability of the
shareholders to the extent of the par value of their shares, a
liability which, under the statute, was to be
"enforced in a suit at law or in equity by any such bank in
process of liquidation, or by the Superintendent of banks, or other
officer succeeding to the legal rights of said bank."
Mississippi Code, § 3815. The share capital of the bank was
$200,000, and the personal liability of the shareholders would have
added a like amount to the assets if all the shareholders had paid
in full.
In the fall of 1932, after about two years of liquidation by the
Superintendent of banks, a movement was started by a large number
of depositors to set the bank upon its feet. For help in that
endeavor, they had recourse to methods made available by a statute
adopted in May, 1932, which is quoted in the margin.
* Laws
Mississippi
Page 295 U. S. 67
1932, c. 251, Mississippi Code Supp. 1933, § 3817-1. The
substance of the statute is that the Court of Chancery shall have
power to reopen a closed
Page 295 U. S. 68
bank in accordance with a plan proposed by at least
three-fourths of the creditors and recommended by the
Superintendent, if the court is satisfied that the plan is feasible
and just. Upon the approval of such a plan, assenting and
nonassenting creditors shall be required to accept payment in
accordance with its terms. The Superintendent shall have no power
to diminish to the prejudice of creditors any assets that otherwise
would be available for payment. Liquidation by the bank itself,
though in a reorganized form, is to be substituted for liquidation
at the hands of a statutory receiver.
Resorting to that statute, about 80% of the creditors signed a
"freezing of deposits agreement" prescribing a time and method for
the payment of the debts. The bank, when reorganized, was to have a
capital of $55,000 and a surplus of $45,000, a total capital and
surplus of $100,000. Shareholders of the old bank, having shares of
the par value of $110,000, were to contribute the new capital
($55,000, or 50% of their old holdings) in cash or its equivalent.
In consideration of this payment, they were to be released from any
other liability on the old shares, though the statutory liability
would attach automatically to the new ones if the reorganized bank
were to go under. Shareholders not contributing to capital
(representing $90,000 of the old shares) were to remain personally
liable as if no plan had been adopted. Of the claims against the
old bank as distinguished from those against the shareholders, 25%
were to be assumed by the reopened bank; 75% were to be a charge
upon certain assets which were
Page 295 U. S. 69
to be placed in a pool and made to realize what they could.
Assets having an estimated value in excess of the liabilities
assumed were to be turned over to the reopened bank to enable it to
make good its promise. This was the primary source of payment,
though the covenant of assumption was to be back of it. Out of the
assets so delivered, deposits of $5 or less, amounting in all to
$3,649.87, were to be paid in full. All other claims then
outstanding for deposits or other debts were to be ratably
satisfied up to the limit of 25%, 5% at once, and the remaining 20%
in 5% installments as the assets turned over to the reopened bank
were converted into cash, the process of conversion being subject
to the supervision of the court. Proceeds of collection in excess
of the 25% were not to be retained, but were to be paid into the
pool. Certain other assets having an estimated value of $45,000
were turned over to the reopened bank for surplus or reserve. This
amount was to be repaid out of the net earnings at the rate of
$7,500 a year by additions to the pool. No dividends were to be
declared upon the shares of the reopened bank till all the
liabilities assumed by it had been satisfied completely. The assets
deposited in the pool were to be administered by the bank as a
trust for the benefit of creditors. Many other details would have
to be stated to exhibit the plan fully. For an understanding of the
objections, the outline given will suffice.
The Superintendent of banks filed a petition in the Court of
Chancery approving the plan and recommending its adoption. Notice
of hearing was served by publication upon the 5,000 creditors
affected, as well as personally upon some of them selected by the
court as representing the interests of all. Only a few creditors
opposed the granting of the petition. Some of these withdrew their
objections at the close of the hearing, with the result that the
number of opponents was reduced to six. After
Page 295 U. S. 70
full consideration, the court, on May 15, 1933, entered a decree
overruling the objections and reopening the bank in accordance with
the plan. Two of the objecting creditors appealed to the Supreme
Court of the state, invoking the protection of Article I, §
10, and the Fourteenth Amendment, of the Federal Constitution. The
decree was affirmed, one judge dissenting.
Dunn v. Love,
155 So. 331. The case is here upon appeal. Judicial Code, §
237, 28 U.S.C. § 344.
If we look to the surface of the statute and no farther, there
is not even colorable basis for the argument that the Constitution
is infringed. All that the statute does upon its face is to change
the method of liquidation. The assets of the business are to be
devoted without impairment or diversion to the payment of the
debts. As to this, the statute is explicit. Act of 1932, c. 251,
§ 3. In the discretion of the Court of Chancery, a reopened
bank is to take the place of the state Superintendent for the
purpose of gathering in the assets and discharging liabilities. The
substitution may not be made unless the court is satisfied that the
reopened bank is solvent and able to satisfy the debts to be
assumed. Payment of the creditors is still the end to be attained,
and resumption of business a means, and nothing more. If debts are
thereby swollen or assets made to shrink, the outcome is an
unlooked-for incident of a method of administration conceived to be
more efficient than present sale and distribution. The Constitution
of the United States does not confer upon the depositors a vested
right to liquidation at the hands of a state official.
Gibbes
v. Zimmerman, 290 U. S. 326,
290 U. S.
332.
The argument will not hold that the necessary operation of the
statute is to subject dissenting creditors, who may be as many as
one-fourth, to the will or the whim of the assenting three-fourths.
The creditors favoring reorganization, though they be 99%, have no
power under the statute to impose their will on a minority.
Page 295 U. S. 71
They may advise and recommend, but they are powerless to coerce.
Their recommendation will be ineffective unless approved by the
Superintendent. Even if approved by him, it will be ineffective
unless the court, after a hearing, shall find it to be wise and
just. Upon such a hearing, every objection to the plan in point of
law or policy may be submitted and considered. The decree, when
made by the chancellor, will represent his own unfettered judgment.
The judicial power has not been delegated to nonjudicial agencies
or to persons or factions interested in the event. Like statutes
have been upheld by the courts of other states.
Dorman v.
Dell, 245 Ky. 34, 52 S.W.2d 892;
Milner v. Gibson,
249 Ky. 594, 61 S.W.2d 273;
Nagel v. Ghingher, 166 Md.
231, 171 A. 65;
McConville v. Fort Pierce Bank & Trust
Co., 101 Fla. 727, 135 So. 392;
Smith v. Texley, 55
S.D.190, 225 N.W. 307;
Hoff v. First State Bank of Watson,
174 Minn. 36, 218 N.W. 238;
Paul v. Farmers' & Merchants'
State Bank, 187 Minn. 411, 245 N.W. 832.
The act of 1932 being valid on the surface, the question remains
whether it has been so applied or interpreted in the adoption of
this plan as to bring out defects that were lurking underneath.
Dahnke-Walker Milling Co. v. Bondurant, 257 U.
S. 282,
257 U. S. 289;
Merchants' National Bank v. Richmond, 256 U.
S. 635,
256 U. S. 637;
Kansas City So. Ry. Co. v. Road Improvement District No.
6, 256 U. S. 658,
256 U. S.
659.
The argument is made that some of the assets of the old bank are
placed at the risk of the business of the new one. All this was
done for the protection of existing creditors. The finding is that
collections are made more promptly and readily by a going concern
than by one in liquidation.
Cf. Christensen v. Merchants' &
Marine Bank of Pascagoula, 168 Miss. 43, 57, 150 So. 375. For
illustration, a live bank is much more efficient than a closed one
in selling parcels of real estate or in carrying them while unsold
at profitable rentals. Adequate precautions
Page 295 U. S. 72
are embodied in the plan to assure the enjoyment of these
benefits by the creditors, and not by others. It is one of the
terms of the decree that none of the profits of the business may be
used for the new shareholders until every dollar's worth of assets
turned over by the Superintendent has been paid to the creditors or
delivered to the pool. The court may intervene upon a showing of
unreasonable delay. There is no need to consider whether any of
these safeguards might have been omitted without invalidating the
plan. We take the record as we find it.
The argument is made that a cause of action upon contract has
been destroyed or given away to the prejudice of depositors, in
that shareholders have been released from their personal liability
in return for a contribution of capital to the regenerated
business. This is said to constitute a denial of due process or an
impairment of contract within the doctrine of
Ettor v.
Tacoma, 228 U. S. 148, and
Coombes v. Getz, 285 U. S. 434. The
answer is much the same as to the argument last considered. The
effect of the release has been to make it possible for the bank to
be reopened, with the result to the creditors of economics and
other benefits that would otherwise be lost. During about two years
and a half of liquidation, there had been collected from the whole
body of the shareholders, representing 2,000 shares, a small
percentage only of the total liability. The Superintendent
expressed the belief that it might be possible in the course of
many years and with great expense and labor to bring collections
from these sources to a total of $75,000. Through the method called
for by the plan, capital in the sum of $55,000 became available at
once as additional security for the obligations assumed by the
reorganized business. This capital was supplied by the holders of
1,100 shares, whose maximum liability was $110,000. The liability
of
Page 295 U. S. 73
the other shareholders ($90,000 at the maximum) continued
unimpaired, for whatever it was worth. The chancellor found from
the evidence that, in all probability, the moneys thus obtained as
contributions to capital could not have been collected by judgment
and execution, and that the depositors would be the gainers by the
substituted form of payment. He reached that conclusion after a
trial in the county of the vicinage with his finger on the pulse of
neighborhood conditions. On appeal to the Supreme Court, his
findings were confirmed.
Cf. Smith v. Texley, supra at p.
195.
In such circumstances, it is idle to speak of the release of
liability as a gift or a sacrifice of valuable assets. The release
was none of that, but a compromise of a liability of uncertain
value upon terms beneficial to the creditors. So the trier of the
facts has found. The title to the extinguished cause of action was
not in the depositors, but in the Superintendent or the bank. If
there had been no plan to reorganize, the Superintendent, like a
receiver, might have compromised the cause of action and released
it with the approval of the court. His authority was no less
because the release was incidental to a project to rehabilitate a
business for the good of all concerned. The jurisdiction of the
Court of Chancery to give approval to a settlement by a receiver or
other officer did not have its genesis in the act of 1932 or in the
procedure there prescribed. It existed in like measure when the
liquidation of this bank was begun in 1930, and for many years
before. Depositors were chargeable with notice of that power, and
became subject to its exercise in making their deposits.
In last analysis, then, the appellants' grievance, if they have
any, is this, and nothing more -- that there was error of judgment
to their prejudice in the approval of the plan with the compromise
of liability as one of its important
Page 295 U. S. 74
features. They refer us to nothing in the record to give support
to that contention. The testimony as to the probable results of
liquidation without the aid of a reopened bank was not contradicted
or discredited. But the result would not be changed if the record
in that respect were different. Error of judgment in the compromise
of liabilities is not a taking of property or an impairment of
contract in derogation of the restraints of the Constitution of the
United States.
The appellants make the point that, by the Act of 1932, a
preference was accorded to the claims of correspondent banks,
though such a preference did not exist under the statutes in force
when the Superintendent went into possession. A sufficient answer
is that, in this case, the correspondent banks were protected by
collateral security which, apart from the new preference, would
have required them to be paid in full.
The appellants also say that their constitutional rights were
infringed by those provisions of the plan whereby a preference was
granted to the holders of small claims. None of these claims
($3,649.87 in the aggregate) was for more than $5, and many, we
were informed upon the argument, were for only a few cents. The
chancellor found by his decree that it would be more economical to
pay these accounts in full than to incur the bookkeeping expenses
incidental to a calculation of percentages whenever dividends were
paid to others.
Cf. Nagel v. Chingher, supra, 166 Md. 231,
171 A. 65 at 69. The objecting creditors have not been damaged by
that feature of the plan.
Finally, the appellants say that the proceedings in the Court of
Chancery are void for insufficient notice to the depositors and
others. A sufficient answer is that the appellants appeared
generally and were fully heard upon the merits.
The decree should be affirmed, and it is so ordered.
Affirmed.
*
"Section 1. Be it enacted by the Legislature of the State of
Mississippi, That the Superintendent of Banks of the Mississippi be
authorized to reopen any closed bank, with the approval of the
Chancery Court of the county in which the bank is situated, or of
the Chancellor in vacation, when at least three-fourths of the
general depositors and creditors therein, or any number of the
general depositors and creditors therein provided they own at least
three-fourths of the deposits in or claims against such bank, agree
to the reopening thereof and sign what is commonly termed a
'freezing of deposits agreement,' under which they agree to accept
repayment of their deposits and claims over a period of years, for
the full amount thereof or in reduced amounts, with or without
interest, the period over which the deposits and claims are to be
repaid and the rate of payment, together with the interest rate, if
any, to be determined by the Superintendent of Banks, provided the
Superintendent of Banks is convinced that such bank is in solvent
condition and can repay the depositors the amounts of their
deposits in accordance with the terms of the agreement for the
repayment of same. But, before any such bank shall be reopened, the
entire plan for the reopening of same, and all facts in connection
therewith, shall be submitted by the Superintendent of Banks to the
Chancery Court of the county in which the bank is situated, or to
the Chancellor in vacation, by proper petition, duly verified, such
petition to contain a statement of the assets and liabilities of
the bank and such other information as may be necessary to convey
to the court or Chancellor the true facts with reference to the
condition of such bank, and a decree of the court or of the
Chancellor in vacation obtained approving the plan agreed upon for
the reopening of such bank and authorizing the same to be
reopened."
"Sec. 2. When any closed bank has been reopened as herein
provided, the general depositors and creditors thereof who have not
expressly agreed to accept the repayment of their deposits and
claims in accordance with the freezing of deposits plan shall be
bound to accept repayment of their deposits and claims on the same
basis and at the same rate as those general depositors and
creditors who have signed the freezing of deposits agreement, but
this shall not apply to public depositors or to those depositors
and creditors holding preferred claims, or secured claims, nor to
correspondent banks holding bills payable of the closed bank.
Proper provision must be made in the plan for the reopening of such
bank to pay public depositors, depositors and creditors holding
preferred claims and secured claims, and correspondent banks, on
terms acceptable to them, but any arrangement so made shall not
operate prejudicially to the rights of the general depositors and
creditors of the bank."
"Sec. 3. That this Act shall not be construed to give the
Superintendent of Banks the right to diminish the assets of a
closed bank to the prejudice of the depositors and creditors
thereof, and any assets that may be charged out as doubtful or as
losses shall be held by the bank and collected for the benefit of
its depositors and creditors, and all amounts so collected shall be
held by the bank to be paid to them in accordance with the
agreement for the repayment of their deposits and claims."
"Sec. 4. That this act shall be in force from and after its
passage."
"Approved May 18, 1932."