Lion Bonding & Surety Co. v. Austin
Lion Bonding & Surety Co. v. Austin
Opinion of the Court
This'suit was filed by Charles O. Austin, commissioner of insurance and banking, against G. N. Campbell and the appellant, Lion Bonding & Surety Company. *543 The appeal is from the judgment in favor of the commissioner for the sum of $5,000.
The record shows the following facts: On and prior to February IS, 1916, the People’s .State Bank. & Trust Company, incorporated under the laws of Texas, was doing- a general banking business at Longview, Gregg county, Tex. G. N. Campbell was its cashier; and on the date above mentioned he executed a fidelity bond in the sum of $5,000, with the (appellant as surety. A few months thereafter the bank became insolvent by reason of the misappropriation of a large amount of its funds by the cashier and another prarty. In this suit Campbell made default, and has not appealed from the judgment rendered against him.
Among the defenses pleaded by the appellant is a counterclaim a little in excess of the amount sued for, which is urged as an offset agajhst the plaintiff’s demand. It appears that during the year 1916, and while the People’s State Bank & Trust Company was apparently solvent, it was selected by Gregg county as the legal depository of its funds, for which the bank was to pay the county 4 per cent, per annum on daily balances. The appellant became the surety of the bank on the bond executed to secure those deposits. In August, 1916, the hank became insolvent, and its affairs were taken over by the commissioner of insurance and banking under the provisions of the state banking laws. Among the depositors who then held claims against the insolvent bank was Gregg county. Its claim, amounting to something more than $60,000, was classified in March, 1917, as an ordinary debt entitled to no preference. In November, 1916, Gregg county filed a suit against the People’s State Bank & Trust Company and the appellant, upon the bond that had been given to secure the county deposits. Some time later the county dismissed as to the bank, and prosecuted the suit to a judgment against the appellant. That judgment recited that upon a payment by the appellant it should be sub-rogated to all the .rights held by Gregg county against the funds of the People’s State Bank & Trust Company then being administered by the commissioner of insurance and banking. Some time thereafter the appellant satisfied the judgment by paying something over $5,000. It now pleads that payment as the basis of a legal and equitable counterclaim which should offset the demand here sued on. The refusal of the court to allow that counterclaim is the error assigned in this appeal.
It is contended that, having paid the debt of its principal due to Gregg county, the appellant became subrogated to all the legal rights which Gregg county, as a creditor, could assert in the distribution of the assets of the insolvent bank. It is argued that Gregg county, being a subdivision of the state, does not occupy the attitude of a common creditor, but may claim a priority which belongs inherently to the state as the sovereign when participating in the distribution of an insolvent estate. This argument is based, not upon any statutory provision, but upon a rule of the common law as interpreted by ⅛⅜ courts. Reference is made to numerous decisions rendered by the courts of other states which apparently sustain the view that the state, by virtue of its sovereignty, is entitled to claim a preference right in the distribution of the assets of an insolvent estate. But in none of those cases has it been held that this sovereign remedy belongs to the counties. While the common law was long ago adopted in this state, it has been so frequently modified, either expressly or by implication, that it becomes our duty to consult appropriate legislative provisions and ascertain to what extent the common law has been superseded. In 1905 the Legislature enacted a law which authorized the counties to select county depositories. See article 2440 et seq., Rev. Oiv. St. The purpose of that act was to enable counties to derive a revenue from their accumulated funds by loaning them to banks and individuals doing a banking business. It prescribes with much precision the character of security which a county should take in order to -insure protection against the insolvency of the depository selected. Article 2451 empowered the commissioners’ court of a county, when it deemed the county funds unsafe, to require additional security of its depository; and when this was not furnished the county funds might be withdrawn and committed to another depository. These precautions appear to be the extent to which the counties were authorized to go in protecting themselves against loss. Nowhere is it provided in that act that in tire event a depositor became insolvent a county should have a superior right in the distribution of its assets. There was also enacted in 1905 a state banking law which, with its subsequent amendments, appears to have been intended as a complete system for the creation, operation, and dissolution of state banks. That law is contained in title 14 of our present Revised Civil Statutes. In 1909 what is known as the “Bams Deposit Guaranty Law” was enacted, and is now incorporated in chapter 5 of title 14. In this chapter are to be found numerous provisions relating to the collection, preservation, and distribution of the assets of insolvent state banks and trust companies. Article 453 authorizes the commissioner of insurance and banking to take charge of and wind up the affairs of an insolvent state bank or trust comp?any. Article 454 prohibits the creation by the bank of any form of preference among its creditors after the commissioner has taken charge of its affairs. Article 456 empowers the com *544 missioner, upon taking charge of the hank’s affairs, to collect outstanding debts due the bank and to perform such other acts necessary to conserve the bank’s assets, and directs him to proceed to liquidate the affairs of the bank or trust company in accordance with the provisions or law. Article 486, after providing for an immediate payment to the state’s guaranty, fund from the available assets of the insolvent bank, contains the following:
“Provided, that deposits upon which interest is being paid, or contracted to be paid, directly or indirectly by said bank, its officers <jr stockholders, to the depositors and deposits otherwise secured, shall not be insured under tfhis chapter, but shall only receive the pro rata amount which may be realized from the assets, resources and collections of and from such banks and „trust companies, its stockholders or directors.” ‘
Article 487 gives the state a first lien on the assets of the insolvent bank or trust company for the benefit of the depositors’ guaranty fund, and concludes with this provision:
“Provided, however, that any deposits on which said bank was paying interest and any other deposits or debts not insured under this chapter, and which are entitled to share in the assets, shall share in the dividends and proceeds of such assets and collections pro rata or as may be provided by law.”
Article 551 makes it unlawful for a state bank or trust company to make a voluntary assignment of its affairs. Such institutions, upon finding themselves in a failing condition, must place their affairs in the hands of the commissioner of insurance and banking. The remainder of this article seems designed to prohibit any form of creating a preference among the creditors of an insolvent bank or trust company.
The judgment of the district court will be affirmed.
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Reference
- Full Case Name
- LION BONDING & SURETY CO. v. AUSTIN, Commissioner of Insurance and Banking
- Cited By
- 9 cases
- Status
- Published