Niles v. Olszak
Niles v. Olszak
Opinion of the Court
The only question presented by this record is, can a stockholder in a savings and loan association, organized under the statutes of this state, when the company becomes insolvent,
The courts below held that he could not do so, notwithstanding the general terms of our statute on the subject of set-off. They adopted and applied the doctrine, that the capital stock of a corporation, constitutes a trust fund for the benefit of the creditors of the company, and that a subscriber to its stock cannot, in a suit brought to collect his subscription, set up a counterclaim or set-off. This doctrine is stated in 3 Thompson on Corporations (1 ed.), Section 3787, thus:
“The first reason generally given for the rule denying the right of set-off after a corporation has become insolvent, is the theoretical reason which often operates to deny the right of set-off in courts of law, which is, that there can be no set-off unless the debts are mutual and in the same right. Briefly explained, the meaning is, that when the assets have been impressed with the quality of a trust fund for the equal benefit of all the creditors, their custodian, whether the corporation, its directors, a receiver, assignee, or other liquidator, holds them, not in the right of the corporation against which the set-off is claimed, but in the right of the creditors. * * * Such a debt, as we have seen, is deemed in equity a part of the capital stock of the company, and is a trust fund to be devoted to the payment of all its creditors; and hence, whilst the company, as long as. it continues
This view of the law has been approved and followed by many authorities in this country, among which are 1 Cook on Corporations (6 ed.), Section 193; Sawyer v. Hoag, 17 Wall., 610; Welch v. Sargent, 127 Cal., 72; Killen v. Barnes, 106 Wis., 546; Richardson v. Merritt, 74 Minn., 354; Efird v. Piedmont, etc., Co., 55 S. Car., 78; Wilkinson v. Bertock, 111 Ga., 187; Shickle v. Watts, 94 Mo., 410.
The trust fund theory as to the capital stock and assets of corporations, seems to have had its origin in the ingenuity of Judge Story, who announced it in Wood v. Dummer, 3 Mason (U. S.), 308, although in that case the doctrine was not carried to the extent, to which later cases have gone, in denying to the stockholder a set-off, in cases to enforce his liability as a stockholder, or for unpaid stock. In that case, an incorporated bank divided three-fourths of its capital stock before the expiration of its charter, among the stockholders, without providing funds which ultimately were sufficient to pay its outstanding bank notes. It was held that the capital stock was a trust fund for the payment of the bank notes and might be followed into the hands of the stockhold
The rule in question here, was announced by the supreme court of the United States, in Sawyer v. Hoag, 17 Wall., 610. Sawyer was liable for $4,250.00 on stock subscription to an insurance company. The company became insolvent, and Sawyer bought for a small sum, a certificate of an adjusted loss claim of $5,000.00 against the company, which he sought to have set off against his unpaid stock after the company was adjudged bankrupt. The court held he was not entitled to the set off; that the subscription for stock was a trust fund for the creditors which could not be appropriated by the debtor to the exclusive payment of his claim. And the court say that such transaction “should be subject to a rigid scrutiny, and if found to be infected with anything unfair towards such third person, calculated to injure him, or designed intentionally and inequitably to screen the stockholder from loss at the expense of the general creditor, it should be disregarded, or annulled, so far as it may inequitably affect him.”
As already stated, these decisions were followed, in many other cases until the doctrine as stated above, was widely accepted. However, in a more recent case in the supreme court of the United States, Clark v. Bever, 139 U. S., 96, there was a modification of the rigid rule that the stockholder must, under all circumstances, pay the full face value of the stock, and that the stock at its face value, is a trust fund for the benefit of the creditors, which the stockholder may be compelled to
A similar conclusion was arrived at in Fogg v. Blair, 139 U. S., 118, the extent to which the court went being that unpaid subscriptions to the stock of a corporation, constitute a trust fund for the benefit of its creditors which may not be given away or disposed of zvithout consideration, or fraudulently, to the prejudice of such creditors.
There have been a number of holdings, in cases which involved the right of the stockholder to a set-off, where his liability for unpaid subscriptions or his statutory liability as a stockholder was being enforced, in which the set-off was allowed.
In Cahill v. Big Gun Assn., supra, which was a suit to enforce the statutory liability of a stockholder, the court, in its opinion, cites a number of cases in support of its view.
In that case the following language used in Pierce v. Topeka Commercial Security Co., 60 Kans., 164, is quoted with approval:
“It is strongly contended that the claims .of a stockholder against the corporation do not constitute a legal set-off, because of a want of mutuality between the parties to the action. A claim of the stockholders is not a set-off in its technical sense, but it is an equitable defense which he is entitled to make. When he becomes a bona ñde creditor of the corporation he is clothed with the same equity as contract creditors.”
Although there is a distinction between a proceeding to collect unpaid subscriptions for stock, and one to enforce the statutory liability of a stockholder, they are both for the purpose of creating a fund for the protection and benefit of the creditors of the company. The suit to enforce the statutory liability, may be brought by creditors onlv after the insolvency of the corporation, and for the purpose of creating a fund to be applied to the payment of the debts of the company after
It must be noted that the set-off claimed in this case is a deposit in a loan and savings association, against indebtedness for the unpaid part of subscriptions to the stock of such association. It is not a case in which there is any element of fraud. The stock was not issued under the pretense of being or purporting to be, fully paid, when in fact it was not paid for. There was no contrivance to release the debt for the stock, and substitute a loan therefor. It is not a case in which a corpo
There is no claim that it ever pretended that any more than 50 per cent, of each subscription had been paid in, or that anyone ever gave credit, on the faith that all of its stock had been paid in full.
Section 3799, Revised Statutes, provides that the board of directors may prescribe the terms, on which deposits shall be received and paid out and the manner of conducting the business, and that such rules and regulations, shall be obligatory on the depositors. Every depositor and every creditor doing business with such banking company, is presumed to do so with knowledge of the laws relating to it. It is common knowledge that many of the subscribers to the stock of such savings associations, make their deposits therein, with the intention and understanding that such deposits
And at page 159: “As we have, seen, the funds on general deposit in a bank, are the property of
Section 11321 General Code, on the subject of counterclaim and set-off, is definite and comprehensive: “When cross-demands have existed between persons under such circumstances that if one had brought an action against the other a counterclaim or set-off could have been set up, neither can be deprived of the benefit thereof by assignment by the other, nor by his death. The two demands must be deemed compensated so far as they equal each other.”
The set-off provided for in that section, available against a party, is equally available against his assignee for the benefit of creditors.
In Hade v. McVay, Allison & Co., 31 Ohio St., page 231, in which it was claimed that a set-off could not be made as against a receiver of a national bank, the court, at page 238, say: “The receiver holds to the bank and its creditors the relation, substantially, of a statutory assignee. A right of set-off, perfect and available against the bank at the time of his appointment as receiver, is not affected by the bank’s insolvency. He succeeds only to the rights of the bank existing at the time it goes into liquidation.”
The same rule was enforced in Second Natl. Bank v. Hemingray, 34 Ohio St., 381.
In announcing a similar holding in Barbour v. The Bank, 50 Ohio St., page 101, the court say: “The argument, that by allowing the judgments to be set-off, the fund for the benefit of the creditors of the shoe company will be thereby diminished, resulting in an inequality of distribution among the creditors, does not commend itself to us. Upon equitable grounds we may apply the language of the vice-chancellor, in the matter of the Receivers of the Globe Ins. Co., 2 Edw. Ch., 625: ‘A set-off in such case is not a means of paying one debt in preference to other debts which the bankrupt or insolvent owes; for, to the extent of the demands set off or compensated, there was no debt — from the moment they were contracted, they extinguished each other. Hence, the operation of the set-off is, not to pay, but to ascertain a debt made up of the difference between the amounts of respective debits and credits.’ ”
The case of Gates, Admr., v. Tippecanoe Stone Co., 57 Ohio St., page 60, relied on by the defendant in error, we do not think assists in the solution of the question made here. In that case
As was said by the court in Clark v. Bever, 139 U. S., 96, supra: “When the interest of creditors require, those who hold shares of stock in a corporation, purporting to be, but which are shown not to have been, paid for to the extent of their face value, should be held liable to pay for such shares unless it appears that they acquired the stock under circumstances that did not give creditors and other stockholders just ground for complaint.”
It is clear that under the Ohio statutes these depositors could have set off their deposits against any debt due to the bank, created in the usual course of business. In view of the nature of this association, the manner of its creation and operation, the relation its stockholders and depositors sustain to it, the freedom from every element of fraud in the case, the fact that creditors and depositors alike dealt with it, charged with knowledge of the statutory provisions relating to it, we
The judgments of the courts below will be reversed and the cause remanded, with instructions to allow the set-off shown in the report of the assignee.
Judgment reversed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.