Kyle v. Ewing
Kyle v. Ewing
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the court.
This action was brought upon a note made by Kyle and others on the 6th of May, 1870, payable to S. Watson, trustee of the Bank of Tennessee, for $8,000, in the notes of the bank “old issue.” There was judgment for the plaintiffs, and- the defendants have prosecuted a writ of error. The' action was.
The action was commenced on the 15th of February, 1877. The defendants pleaded in abatement “that the charter of the Bank of Tennessee expired by limitation on the 1st of January, 1868, and the corporation was thereby dissolved, and the action was not brought within five years thereafter in accordance with sec. 1493 of the Code.” The plea was held bad upon demurrer. Subsequently the defendants filed a demurrer to the declaration, in which they assign as one cause that the charter of the bank expired op the 1st of January, 1868, and there was no such corporation in existence at the time the note was made, or at any time since, and consequently no such corporation in existence when the action was brought. On argument, the demurrer was overruled.
The first error assigned is the action of the court upon the question made by the plea in abatement and demurrer.
By the provisions of sec. 1493 of the Code, the Bank of Tennessee continued to exist for five years from the expiration of the charter, for the purpose of prosecuting and defending suits, settling its business, disposing of its property and dividing its capital stock, but not for the purpose of continuing the corporate
The dissolution of a corporation does not nrevent a court of equity from collecting and administering its assets; but the rule, that at law no action can be maintained by or against a corporation after it has evaded to exist, except upon express legislative authority, has never been changed hi this Htaie. White v. Campbells 5 Hum., 38; Hopkins v. Whiteside, 3 Head, 32; State and Watson, Trustee, v. Bank of Tennessee, 5 Baxt., 101.
This, however, is an action upon a contract., with "Watson trustee, of date 6th of ''May, 1870, and it is difficult to see why an action could not have been maintained in his name alone in his lifetime, or in the name of his representative o'e successor after his death, without the use of the corporate name of the bank. The note was not payable to the bank, or to the president and directors of the bank, nor -was the corporation a parly to the contract. We may, for this argument, assume that Watson as trustee, under an assignment previously made, was owner, as trustee.
It is true, that in this case it is averred that the bank had ceased to exist before the action was brought, but even then the unnecessary use of the name of the defunct corporation as nominal plaintiff might well be rejected as surplusage. Enly v. Nowlin, 1 Baxt., 163; see, also, Ingraham v. Terry, 11 Hum., 572. But, as already intimated, this action is upon a note payable, not to the bank, but to Watson, trustee, and, as we have said, why an action may not have been maintained in bis name, or that of his representative or successor, to enforce contracts made with him, with
2d. The defendants pleaded the provisions of an act of the Legislature of the 24th of March, 1875, The substance of this act is, that on all notes or other evidences of debt in the hands of Samuel Watson, trustee, the original consideration whereof was money loaned by said bank to be used in the construction of any railroad, and the railroad has been sold for the State’s lien, and no fund realized to pay the note, the State releases all claim it may have to a pro rata payment of said note in favor of the makers thereof, and Watson and his successor in office are directed to take no steps to collect any interest the State may have in said debts.
It is averred that the original consideration was money loaned in aid of a railroad, that the road has been sold and no funds realized, but it is not averred that the State is entitled to any part of said note, and’we may almost judicially know it is not. Manifestly, the Legislature has no power to release debts due to the trustee which, under the trust, it is his
There is no reversible error in the record, and the judgment will be affirmed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.