1. A judgment of a state court against an insolvent association
for a sum of money is final, although accompanied by provisions
requiring the debtor to turn over all of its property to a receiver
for liquidation of its business and payment of the debt. P.
300 U. S.
197.
2. Under the Federal Farm Loan Act, a national farm loan
association cannot be required to retire, and repay the par value
of, shares subscribed for and pledged with it by a member in
connection with the procurement of a loan from a federal land bank,
while the bank refuses to retire, and make repayment for, the
corresponding shares of bank stock subscribed for by the
association in that connection and pledged with the bank. P.
300 U. S.
198.
3. A shareholder of a farm loan association, subject by statute
to an extra personal liability for its debts, is not entitled to
have his shares retired and his subscription payment repaid when
the association is insolvent and corresponding subscriptions to the
stock of the federal land bank that made the loan have not been
cancelled and refunded. P.
300 U. S. 201.
4. A receivership for the purpose of satisfying a judgment falls
with the judgment. P.
300 U. S.
202.
5. A national farm loan association is an instrumentality of the
Federal Government; the time and manner of its liquidation are
governed by the federal statute, and jurisdiction does not reside
in the tribunals of a State to wind up the business of this
governmental agency either by a receivership or otherwise. P.
300 U. S.
202.
54 Oh.App. 334 reversed.
Certiorari, 299 U.S. 533, to review the affirmance of a decree
against the National Farm Loan Association for the par value of
certain of its shares, accompanied by provisions for placing the
Association in the hands of a receiver for the liquidation of its
business.
Page 300 U. S. 195
MR. JUSTICE CARDOZO delivered the opinion of the Court.
The controversy in this case makes it necessary to determine the
remedies available to a shareholder in an insolvent farm loan
association upon the refusal of a demand for the retirement of his
shares.
Respondent is the owner of a farm in Knox county, Ohio. His
vendors were members of the Knox National Farm Loan Association, a
cooperative membership corporation chartered under federal law.
Federal Farm Loan Act, July 17, 1916, c. 245, § 7, 39 Stat.
365, 12 U.S.C. § 711. Through that association, they procured
a loan from the Federal Land Bank of Louisville, giving a mortgage
as security. Part of the proceeds of the loan (
i.e., 5
percent thereof) they used for the purchase of stock in the
cooperative association, there being a requirement of the statute
that
"any person desiring to borrow on farm land mortgage through a
national farm loan association shall make application for
membership and shall subscribe for shares of stock in such farm
loan association to an amount equal to 5 percentum of the face of
the desired loan, said subscription to be paid in cash upon the
granting of the loan."
Federal Farm Loan Act, § 8, 12 U.S.C. § 733;
cf. § 9, 12 U.S.C. 745. The statutory plan has
already been expounded in opinions of this Court.
Smith v.
Kansas City Title & Trust Co., 255 U.
S. 180,
255 U. S.
2037;
Federal Land Bank v. Gaines, 290 U.
S. 247;
Federal Land Bank v. Priddy,
295 U. S. 229.
Upon the purchase of the farm by respondent in October, 1927, he
assumed the payment of the mortgage debt, succeeding at the same
time to the interests of his vendors in the stock of the
association and to the attendant liabilities. The shares were of
the par value of $265. They had been pledged with the association,
in accordance with the requirements of the statute (§ 8, 12
U.S.C. § 733) as security for the loan. The association, on
its part, had subscribed for an equal amount of the shares of the
federal land bank, the lender of the
Page 300 U. S. 196
money, leaving the shares so subscribed for as a pledge for the
security of the lender. This too was a procedure called for by the
statute. Section 7, 12 U.S.C. § 721. From time to time
thereafter, there were payments on account, with the result that
the loan had been reduced by March, 1933, to $2,122.46, at which
time respondent made an effort to clear the farm of the mortgage
and to put an end also to his liability as shareholder. To that
end, he paid the association $1,857.46 to be transmitted to the
bank, insisting that the deficiency ($265) be satisfied through the
retirement of the shares. The bank accepted the payment as one upon
account, but refused to discharge the mortgage without payment of
the balance. At that time, by concession, the association was
insolvent. Its capital was impaired; it was indebted to the bank
upon other mortgage loans, being liable as indorser or otherwise
when it borrows for a member (
Federal Land Bank v. Gaines,
supra); it had no moneys in its treasury wherewith the shares
could be retired.
The courts took up the controversy. Respondent joined the bank
and the association as defendants in a suit in the court of common
pleas of Knox county, Ohio. He prayed for judgment against the bank
that the mortgage be held to have been cancelled and extinguished
and for judgment against the association that the shares of stock
be paid off and retired, and that the business of the association
be wound up and liquidated. For answer, the bank and the
association took the ground that the partial payment made was
insufficient to discharge the mortgage; that there could be no
retirement of the shares while the association was insolvent; that
the state court was without jurisdiction to liquidate the business
of the association, an instrumentality of the federal government,
and that jurisdiction in that behalf resided in the federal
government exclusively.
Two decrees were rendered by the court of common pleas. The
first, filed October 7, 1935, provides that the
Page 300 U. S. 197
mortgage lien shall be cancelled by the bank upon tender by the
plaintiff of $265 in addition to the payment previously made, the
tender to be kept good by payment into court. The second, filed
November 18, 1935, directs the farm loan association to retire the
respondent's shares, and gives him judgment against the association
for the par value thereof. It appearing that the association was
unable to pay the judgment by reason of insolvency, a receiver was
appointed to take possession of the assets and liquidate the
business, the association of its officers being required forthwith,
upon the demand of the receiver, to surrender any property in their
possession or under their control. From the decree of November 18,
the defendants prosecuted an appeal to the Ohio Court of Appeals,
which affirmed with an opinion. A petition for review by the
Supreme Court of the state was submitted and denied. We granted
certiorari to set at rest far-reaching questions as to the meaning
and administration of an important act of Congress.
At the outset, a doubt as to our jurisdiction calls for scrutiny
and judgment. The case being here after a decision of a state
court, jurisdiction is not given us unless the decree to be
reviewed is final. Judicial Code § 237, 28 U.S.C. § 344.
Respondent has been adjudged entitled to the payment of a specific
sum of money, but he is also to have a receiver who is to liquidate
a business, the court reserving the right to control the conduct of
its officer and to rescind or modify its order. Does the
appointment of a receiver postpone the stage of finality until his
work is at an end?
The primary purpose of the suit was the recovery of a judgment
for the par value of the shares. Any other relief prayed for or
awarded was tributary to that recovery; it was a form of equitable
execution to make collection possible. When the amount invested in
the stock was adjudged to constitute a debt, whatever followed
in
Page 300 U. S. 198
the decree was auxiliary and modal. The association and its
officers were not directed to account, and to surrender what was
found owing at the close of the accounting. They were directed to
make delivery, and to make delivery at once. We think they were
subjected to a present obligation as immediate and absolute as if
the assets were to be wrested from them by execution directed to
the sheriff.
Winthrop Iron Co. v. Meeker, 109 U.
S. 180,
109 U. S. 183;
St. Louis, I.M. & S. R. Co. v. Southern Express Co.,
108 U. S. 24,
108 U. S. 28-29;
Thomson v.
Dean, 7 Wall. 342;
McGourkey v. Toledo &
Ohio Central Ry. Co., 146 U. S. 536;
Collins v. Miller, 252 U. S. 364,
252 U. S. 371;
Chase v. Driver, 92 F. 780, 785;
City of Des Moines v.
Des Moines Water Co., 230 F. 570, 573;
Victor Talking
Machine Co. v. George, 69 F.2d 871, 879.
Accepting jurisdiction, we are brought to a consideration of the
merits.
A national farm loan association is a cooperative enterprise.
Its members must subscribe for its shares to the extent of 5
percent of the loan to be procured in their behalf. Federal Farm
Loan Act, § 8, 12 U.S.C. § 733. The association, in its
turn, upon the procurement of the loan, subscribes to stock of the
land bank to an equivalent extent. Section 7, 12 U.S.C. § 721.
With few exceptions, the only assets which a farm loan association
has or can have are the shares which it takes in the federal land
bank to counterbalance the shares of its own stock taken by he
borrower, together with dividends distributed by the bank, and
reasonable charges for necessary expenses, not in excess of "1
percentum of the amount of the loan applied for."
Byrne v.
Federal Land Bank, 61 N.D. 265, 277, 237 N.W. 797, 802;
cf. § 11 as amended 12 U.S.C. § 761, subd. 3. To
add to the protection of the bank and other creditors, the
shareholders in the association are chargeable under the law as it
stood at the date of these transactions with personal liability up
to a designated maximum.
"Shareholders of every national farm loan association shall be
held individually
Page 300 U. S. 199
responsible, equally and ratably, and not one for another, for
all contracts, debts, and engagements of such association to the
extent of the amount of stock owned by them at the par value
thereof, in addition to the amount paid in and represented by their
shares."
Section 9, 12 U.S.C. § 744. [
Footnote 1] Upon evidence that an association has failed
to meet its obligations, the Farm Credit Administration may declare
it insolvent and appoint a receiver, subject to the proviso that
this shall not be done until the total defaults shall amount to at
least $150,000 in the federal land bank district, unless such
association shall have been in default for a period of two years.
Section 29, 12 U.S.C. § 961. There shall be no voluntary
liquidation without the consent of the supervising federal
authority. Section 29, 12 U.S.C. § 965.
The background has now been indicated against which we must view
the question whether a member of an association who has paid his
loan in full may have his shares retired and recover their par
value when the association is insolvent. In support of such a
recovery, respondent relies upon two sections of the statute. By
§ 7 (12 U.S.C. § 721), an association borrowing from a
land bank "shall subscribe for capital stock of said land bank to
the amount of 5 percentum of such loan," the stock to be held by
the bank as collateral security. By the same section, such stock
(
i.e., the stock of the land bank) shall be "paid off and
retired upon full payment of the mortgage loan." If that is
done,
"the national farm loan association shall pay off at par and
retire the corresponding shares of its stock which were issued when
said land bank stock was issued. [
Footnote 2]
Page 300 U. S. 200
Complimentary to that section is § 8 of the Act (12 U.S.C.
§ 733), which regulates the relation between the association
and its members. Upon applying for a loan, the applicant 'shall
subscribe for shares of stock in such farm loan association to an
amount equal to 5 percentum of the face of the desired loan,' the
subscription, at his election, to be paid out of the proceeds, and
the stock to be held by the association as collateral security.
'Said capital stock shall be paid off at par and retired upon full
payment of said loan.'
Id."
These provisions for retirement, despite their apparent breadth,
are not to be extended to a situation such as the one before us
here, and this for two reasons.
In the first place, § 8 of the statute, as already pointed
out, is complementary to § 7. We are to read the two together.
The association is not to retire its own shares and repay to the
subscriber the amount of his subscription until the land bank has
retired the corresponding shares of bank stock subscribed for by
the association, and has paid back to the association the par value
thereof. Only thus can the association be put in funds wherewith to
make payment to its own subscribers. The record makes it plain,
however, that this indispensable condition has never been
fulfilled. The bank refuses to retire the
Page 300 U. S. 201
shares of bank stock subscribed for by the association upon the
loan to the respondent, or to refund the subscriptions wholly or in
part. The scheme of the statute would be fatally disrupted if the
association could be held when the bank refused to pay.
In the second place, neither the bank nor the association is
under a duty to retire stock when the association is insolvent, and
thus to give to the withdrawing member through the return of his
subscription a preference over others. The statute is misread if
the sentences regulating withdrawal are taken out of the setting of
a cooperative scheme and viewed in isolation. Under the law as it
stood when respondent became a member, the shareholders were
subjected to a personal liability for all the contracts, debts, and
engagements of the association "to the extent of the amount of
stock owned by them at the par value thereof, in addition to the
amount paid in and represented by their shares." Section 9, 12
U.S.C. § 744. The association is already in default in the
payment of its mortgage debts, and already its capital is impaired.
In such circumstances, to return to respondent the amount paid in
and represented by his shares would frustrate the statutory mandate
that the amount so paid in shall constitute a fund for the benefit
of creditors to be supplemented in case of need by personal
liability for as much more as the investment. Indeed, altogether
apart from any pledge of personal liability, the whole structure of
the association is built upon the implication of equal rights and
duties on the part of the cooperating members. To permit a member
to withdraw when the association is insolvent would be to cast upon
his fellow members the responsibility for defaults for which all
should answer ratably in proportion to their interests. To guard
against that inequity, the statute makes it clear that shares in
the association shall not be subject to retirement until the
corresponding subscriptions to the land bank have been
Page 300 U. S. 202
cancelled and refunded. We are not required to determine whether
a member of an association will have rights enforceable against the
bank when the association has been wound up in accordance with the
federal statute.
Cf. § 29, as added by Act March 4,
1923, 12 U.S.C. § 966. No such question is before us. Enough
for present purposes that, in the existing situation, with
insolvency conceded, the shares of the association are not subject
to withdrawal.
The conclusion thus arrived at is in accord with well considered
opinions in North Dakota and Arkansas, where the same question was
involved.
Byrne v. Federal Land Bank, supra; Western Clay
National Farm Loan Assn. v. Lilly, 189 Ark. 1004, 76 S.W.2d
55. It has the support of persuasive analogies in the law of
building and loan associations, which have much in common with farm
loan associations incorporated by act of Congress. The settled rule
is that the shares of building and loan associations are not
subject to retirement when the association is insolvent, and that
any refund made at such a time may be reclaimed by a receiver.
Towle v. American Bldg., Loan & Inv. Society, 61 F.
446;
Sullivan v. Stucky, 86 F. 491, 943;
Coltrane v.
Balke, 113 F. 785;
Aldrich v. Gray, 147 F. 453, 456,
8 Ann.Cas. 832;
Christian's Appeal, 102 Pa. 184;
Colin
v. Wellford, 102 Va. 581, 46 S.E. 780;
cf. Fidelity
Savings & Loan Association v. Burnet, 62 App.D.C. 131, 65
F.2d 477, 479, 481.
In holding that a judgment for the par value of the shares is
inconsistent with the federal statute and impliedly forbidden, we
cut the ground away from the auxiliary receivership, which must
fall with the judgment it was intended to enforce. To this we add,
however, that a national farm loan association is an
instrumentality of the federal government; that the time and manner
of liquidation are governed by the federal statute, and that
jurisdiction does not reside in the tribunals of a state to wind up
the business of this governmental agency
Page 300 U. S. 203
either by a receivership or otherwise. Sections 26, 29, 12
U.S.C. §§ 931, 961;
Federal Land Bank v. Priddy,
supra, pp.
229 U. S. 231,
229 U. S. 234;
Cook County National Bank v. United States, 107 U.
S. 445,
107 U. S. 448;
Easton v. Iowa, 188 U. S. 220,
188 U. S. 233;
Jennings v. U.S.F. & G.
Co., 294 U. S. 216,
294 U. S. 226;
Brusselback v. Chicago Joint Stock Land Bank, 69 F.2d 598;
Partridge v. St. Louis Joint Stock Land Bank, 76 F.2d 237;
Boyd v. Schneider, 131 F. 223, 227.
Whether the respondent may vote upon his stock, after his
mortgage has been paid in full, until the shares have been
redeemed, and whether he has a remedy to compel the Farm Credit
Administration to liquidate the business promptly are questions
that have been considered in the briefs, but that do not call for
answer upon the record now before us.
The decree should be reversed, and the cause remanded to the
Court of Appeals of the Ohio for further proceedings not
inconsistent with this opinion.
Reversed.
[
Footnote 1]
The liability has been changed in respect of contracts, debts or
engagements entered into after June 16, 1933, without affecting
liabilities incurred before that time. Act of June 16, 1933, c. 98,
§ 72, 48 Stat. 271, 12 U.S.C. § 744a.
[
Footnote 2]
The following is the text of the section as embodied in §
721 of the United States Code:
"Whenever any national farm loan association shall desire to
secure for any member a loan on first mortgage from the Federal
land bank of its district it shall subscribe for capital stock of
said land bank to the amount of 5 percentum of such loan, such
subscription to be paid in cash upon the granting of the loan by
said land bank. Such capital stock shall be held by said land bank
as collateral security for the payment of said loan, but said
association shall be paid any dividends accruing and payable on
said capital stock while it is outstanding. Such stock may, in the
discretion of the directors, and with the approval of the Farm
Credit Administration, be paid off at par and retired, and it shall
be so paid off and retired upon full payment of the mortgage loan.
In such case, the national farm loan association shall pay off at
par and retire the corresponding shares of its stock which were
issued when said land bank stock was issued."
12 U.S.C. § 721.