Trustees of Miners' Bank v. Thomas
Trustees of Miners' Bank v. Thomas
Opinion of the Court
Opinion by
The “Miners’ Bank of Dubuque” was incorporated by the territorial legislature, and had been transacting business as a bank for several years, when on the 21st day of Hay, 1845, the legislative assembly passed an act repealing the charter, and authorizing “the judge of the third judicial district to appoint two trustees, who were to have full power to settle the affairs of the bank, to sell and convey the personal and real estate thereof, and to collect and pay the debts of the same. To sue for and recover the debts and property of the said bank, by the name of the trustees of said bank, and to divide among the stockholders, the money or other property that remained after the payment of the debts and necessary expenses.”
The trustees on receiving their appointment were to take possession of the property and effects of the bank, &e.
The act provides for the trustees to give security, and to report their doings to the judge, and for a final settlement of the affairs of the hank, with the judge of said district. In August, 1845, the judge appointed Benjamin Rupert and John G. Shields trustees, under the act aforesaid, who immediately demanded from the officers of the bank the assets thereof. The cashier of the Bank, under tbe direction of tbe directors, declined delivering the property to the demandants. Subsequent to their refusal, the district attorney, James Grant, on his own relation, and by leave
The case now under consideration, is a suit brought by Thomas, the appellee, principally for professional services, against the bank, in the quo wajrranto case. The pleadings and instructions given and refused by the court below, assume and decide that Rupert and Shields had power and authority to employ counsel at the expense of the owners.and stockholders of the hank, to try a suit brought by the state, on the relation of the district attor: ney, against the bank, to take from them a franchise that they claimed.
If, after the appointment of the trustees, they found that the bank refused to surrender its assets, and this trust was about to fail for a want of the property and funds to administer upon, they should — as they probably did— report that fact to the proper government officers. It then became the duty of the government to enforce the law by subjecting the bank to its requisitions. The franchise claimed by the owners of the bank, was a part of the prerogative of the government, and the trustees had no individual interest in having it declared forfeited, and it would be a reproach upon the legislature to suppose that they had authorized or appointed trustees to carry on a proceeding of this character. The first section of the “ act relating to informations in the nature of quo warranto,” &c., Itev. Stat. 504, authorizes the “ Governor, or the legislative assembly, to direct the district attorney to file an information in the nature of a quo warranto f against any association of persons who shall act as a corporation, within the territory, without being lawfully incorporated ; also, the district attorney to file such information on his own motion. Thus it will be seen that there was no legal necessity or plausibility of right in these trustees interfering in the matter; much less had they the power to squander the property of their cestui que use, in carrying on litigation which they themselves were resisting. The legislative act repealing the charter of the bank, and authorizing the judge of the the third judicial district to appoint trustees, making all the proceedings cx ]>a.rtc, is the exercise of power that approaches the very verge of constitutional limits, and certainly the courts will not extend the powers conferred by that act by implication.
The instructions of the court below are clearly errone'ous. The judgment will therefore be reversed; and inasmuch as there are some items in the account of the appellee that may be a proper charge, as legitimate expen
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.