Court Opinion

ID: 3497043
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-05 22:04:42.150318+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T14:15:33.426576
License: Public Domain

This is an action in assumpsit, brought in September, 1936, by the receiver of a State bank against the administratorsde bonis non cum testamento annexo, of the estate of Frederick D. Smith, deceased, for a claimed unpaid assessment levied on the stock of the bank under the authority of 3 Comp. Laws 1929, § 11945. The propriety of this procedure was established in ReGraham's Estate, 276 Mich. 321.
During his lifetime, Mr. Smith was the owner of 55 shares of the capital stock of the Peoples Savings Bank of Coopersville, and his estate subsequently acquired five additional shares, the 60 shares having a total par value of $6,000.
The bank suspended business on April 2, 1932, and a custodian was appointed. A petition for its reorganization was filed October 11, 1932, pursuant to the provisions of Act No. 8, Pub. Acts 1932 (1st Ex. Sess.). After notice to stockholders and a hearing on the petition, the circuit court for the county of Ottawa entered a reorganization order on December 6, 1932, approving the plan and the attached depositors' agreement, and ordering a 100 per cent. stock assessment in conformity thereto. The depositors' agreement, signed by Mrs. F.D. Smith on June 4, 1932, she then acting as executrix of her husband's will, contained four additional paragraphs not mentioned in the court's order, one of these provided that "100 per cent. of my deposits in said bank shall be accepted as payment upon my liability for assessment as a stockholder in said bank, any provision, agreement or condition contained in this instrument to the contrary notwithstanding." *Page 590 
The record is silent as to whether this additional matter in the Smith agreement was subsequently approved by the circuit court, but this question is not raised by either party.
The Smith estate had funds on deposit at the bank amounting to $4,836, so that it was only required to pay the sum of $1,164, in order to secure a receipt from the bank's custodian "in full payment and satisfaction" of the $6,000 assessment on its stock. Mrs. Smith died on December 9, 1934. Paragraph 16 of the executed depositors' agreement reads:
"It is also understood and agreed that this agreement on my part is void unless signed by depositors representing 85 per cent. in amount of the legal deposits of said Peoples Savings Bank, or such percentage of said deposits as may be determined by the Michigan legislature during special session convened on March 29, 1932, not including deposits specifically exempted under paragraph 14 of this agreement, and unless this bank isreorganized under the direction of the banking department of
the State of Michigan."
The words we have italicized are of importance because the reorganization of the bank was never completed. On December 4, 1933, the directors of the bank, having decided that reorganization was inadvisable in view of the bank's condition as of November 24, 1933, asked the banking commissioner to appoint or petition for the appointment of a receiver to take charge of its affairs. This was done and, on May 8, 1934, the commissioner, with the approval of the governor, ordered a 100 per cent. assessment and directed the plaintiff receiver to enforce the statutory liability of the stockholders.
Plaintiff's bill of particulars claims an unpaid balance of the $6,000 assessment, amounting to *Page 591 
$4,836, less two depositors' dividends totaling $722, plus accrued interest of $499.78, or a net total of $4,613.78. The estate says that the circuit court order of December 6, 1932, was res judicata and that the custodian's receipt of January 20, 1933, was a full and complete discharge of the statutory stockholders' liability so far as the Smith estate was concerned.
The cause was submitted to the trial court, sitting without a jury. The court held that the second assessment made by the commissioner is "in accord with the spirit of the law," and, therefore, valid, and entered a judgment against defendants in the sum of $4,711.44.
It is unnecessary to enter into a lengthy discussion of the statute pertaining to the liability of stockholders, 3 Comp. Laws 1929, § 11945, or of the decisions cited by appellants, such as Fors v. Thoman, 267 Mich. 148; Lansing Drop Forge Co.
v. American State Savings Bank, 273 Mich. 124
(104 A.L.R. 1199); Attorney General v. Union Guardian Trust Co.,273 Mich. 554; In re Burger's Estate, 276 Mich. 485; and Emeryv. Shinn, 278 Mich. 246, although we have considered their applicability to the facts involved.
The real and controlling proposition is that the depositors' agreement and the proceedings predicated thereon must be deemed nugatory under the statute (Act No. 8, Pub. Acts 1932 [1st Ex. Sess.]) and any payments made pursuant to such agreement were ineffectual to discharge the stockholders' liability under section 11945, because the reorganization of the bank was not actually consummated.
Whatever moneys the estate paid under the court's order have been credited upon its assessment and appellants have also received credit for the dividends paid by the receiver to the bank's depositors. *Page 592 
The judgment is affirmed, with costs to appellee.
NORTH, BUTZEL, SHARPE, POTTER, and CHANDLER, JJ., concurred with BUSHNELL, J.