Finney v. Bennett
Finney v. Bennett
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the court.
After stating the case he proceeded:
The only question in this case is, whether the bill in-the proceedings mentioned, filed on the 28th day of' April 1866 by Gleorge W. Hall and P. W. Martin, suing “as well for themselves as for all the stockholders, depositors and creditors of the Pittsylvania Savings. Bank, who will come forward and contribute to the costs of the suit,” is what is called a “ creditor’s bill,” or has the same effect? For if it is, or has, it is perfectly certain that the decree for an account, rendered in the suit on the 9th day of J une 1866, operated as a decree in favor of all the creditors of the said savings bank, all of whom might come forward and prove their claims under the said decree, and placed them all on an equality in the distribution and application of the assets of the said bank, except such as at the time of said decree may have had specific liens on the said assets or any part thereof, which liens would, of course, remain in full force, notwithstanding such decree. So that in that view the plaintiff in error, ¥m. A. J. Finney, having obtained the assignments-of the certificates of deposit in the proceedings mentioned after the date of the said decree of the 9th day of June 1866, acquired only the rights to which his assignors were then entitled in regard to the assets of the said bank, which were to a ratable proportion of
The learned judge of the court below, in an able opinion delivered by him, and made a part of one of the decrees rendered in the said chancery suit, maintained this view; and as we entirely concur in that opinion, we adopt it as our own, which makes it unnecessary for us to say much, if anything more, in the case. Besides the cases referred to in that opinion, that of Exchange Bank of Va. &c. v. Knox &c., 19 Gratt. 739, since decided by this court, has an important bearing upon the question; and much of what is said by Judge Christian in that case, in whose opinion the other judges concurred, is strongly confirmatory of the same view; and so are the cases, or many of them, referred to by the counsel for the appellees, among which are the cases cited from 21 Howard 112, and 22 Id. 380. The nature, object and effect of a “creditor’s bill,” and the course of proceeding therein, are set forth in 1 Story’s Eq., sections 547-550; and in Story’s Eq. PL, sections 99-104. See also the cases referred to in the notes to those sections. That this case comes within the same reason, and is subject to the same principle, which apply to an ordinary creditor’s bill, in regard to the distribution of assets among creditors, seems to us to be very clear. Here is a case in which, by a sudden and extraordinary convulsion of war, a bank has been rendered insolvent, and totally unable to prosecute its business. Its stockholders have been deprived of all their property, and the remaining assets of the bank are insufficient to pay its debts, or even fifty per cent.
In regard to the admissibility of the record of the chancery suit aforesaid, as evidence in the case, we are of opinion that there is no error in the ruling of the court below, as mentioned in the bill of exceptions tendered by the defendants. They were in effect parties to that suit, and conclusively bound by it.
Upon the whole, we are of opinion that there is no error in the judgment of the court below, and that it ought to be affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.