DocketNumber: No. 46771
Judges: Jones, Littleton, Madden, Whaley, Whitaker
Filed Date: 12/2/1946
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
delivered the opinion of the court:
The Government has demurred to the plaintiff’s petition. The petitioner alleges that he is the Receiver of Detroit Bankers Company and that this is a “Receiver’s and stockholders’ suit” to compel an accounting and repayment of upwards of $3,500,000 which the Secretary of the Treasury and the Comptroller of the Currency and the Receiver of the First National Bank-Detroit illegally and secretly abstracted from the assets and trust estate of said bank, while the bank was in receivership in the process of liquidation, and used and paid out for attorneys’ fees, contrary to the pertinent Acts of Congress; and for a similar accounting and repayment of $1,251,000 similarly abstracted and spent by the same persons for salaries and for the hire of clerks and other employees in the office of the Comptroller of the Currency in Washington, D. C. Most of the further facts alleged in the petition are substantially the same as those recited in our decision in the case of Lucking and Davis v. United States, 102 C. Cls. 233, and will not be repeated here.
The petitioner alleges that Detroit Bankers Company, of which he is Receiver, is the owner and holder of all the shares of the capital stock of the First National Bank-Detroit.
In the Lucking case, supra, we held that neither Lucking, as a former depositor in the First National, who had been repaid in full as a depositor, nor he and his coplaintiff, as shareholders in Detroit Bankers Company, could maintain class suits to remedy the wrongs alleged in the petition. We held that the claims, if enforceable, belonged to the First National Bank-Detroit, or its receiver; that if a stockholder’s suit was necessary, Detroit Bankers Company was the sole stockholder, and that no showing had been made that it or its receiver had refused to sue.
. The present suit is by the Receiver of the Detroit Bankers Company, which, the petition alleges, is the sole stockholder of First National Bank-Detroit. The Government,
We cannot, in view of this official court record, not contradicted by the plaintiff, and of which we take judicial notice, accept the plaintiff’s statement in his petition that his principal, Detroit Bankers Company, owns the stock of First National. But unless we accept that statement, the only possible ground for his suit is lacking, and the demurrer must be sustained.
The Government, in further support of its demurrer, asserts that even if the plaintiff were a stockholder in First National Bank-Detroit, he would have no right to sue because neither he nor any other stockholder, as such, could benefit from any recovery. It points to the allegation in the plaintiff’s petition that “the closed bank’s stockholders have paid double (statutory) liability assessments of over $19,000,000 to the Bank Receiver”, i. e., the Receiver of First National Bank-Detroit. In fact it was not the First National’s stockholders, but the stockholders of Detroit Bank
The Government’s demurrer is sustained and the petition is dismissed.
It is so ordered.