DocketNumber: No. 39958.
Judges: Evans, Albert, Faville, De Grape Kindig
Filed Date: 11/21/1929
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
The defendant is the superintendent of banking, and as such is the receiver of the Farmers State Bank of Lake Mills, which went into receivership on December 25, 1927. The plaintiff was one of its stockholders, holding 15 shares of stock. On 1. HOMESTEAD: March 28, 1928, the defendant-receiver obtained nature, a judgment against this plaintiff, predicated acquisition, upon his double liability as stockholder, under and extent: Section 9251, Code, 1927. An execution having antecedent been issued under the judgment, and returned debts: nulla bona, the defendant was proceeding to levy double upon the plaintiff's homestead. The plaintiff liability took by inheritance from his father, C.B. bank stock. Smith, both the bank stock and the real property now claimed as a homestead. His father, C.D. Smith, died intestate in October, 1925. In a mutual division of the estate among the heirs, he took for his share the real estate in *Page 101 question and the 15 shares of bank stock. The shares of stock were transferred to him by the other heirs, and the transfer was entered upon the books of the corporation on March 17, 1926. Quitclaim deeds of the real estate from the other heirs were delivered to him on May 11, 1927. On June 20, 1927, he moved his family upon the real estate, and occupied the same from that date as a homestead.
The question presented for our consideration is whether the debt upon which the judgment was entered, was contracted prior to the acquisition of the homestead. The contention of the appellee is that the liability of the stockholder prior to the insolvency of the bank was wholly contingent, and that the same did not become a debt until such insolvency. A distinction is urged, as between the terms "debt" and "liability," and especially between the terms "debt" and a "contingent liability."
The judgment already entered has adjudicated the liability of the plaintiff as a debtor. The question is, When did the debt originate? As a mere matter of definition, we have frequently recognized the fact that the term "debt" is 2. WORDS AND indefinite and variable in its meaning, and that PHRASES: the meaning to be attached thereto in a given "debt." case is largely dependent on its context. In other words, the term "debt," as used in the homestead statute, may vary in its meaning from that given to it in other contexts.
Although the double liability of a stockholder, in a sense, originates in the statute, we have held, nevertheless, that such statutory liability attaches only through the voluntary act of the stockholder in purchasing his stock, and that the liability is a contractual one. The contract of subscription to the stock becomes a contract of assumption of double liability, as provided by statute. Such was our holding in Elson v. Wright,
"These cases [cited] all hold that the double liability of the stockholders under constitutional and statutory provisions is acontractual liability. * * * ``The stockholder contracts with reference to these requirements when he takes his stock, and is *Page 102 as much bound by them as if they were incorporated in a written agreement bearing his signature.'"
In Hirning v. Hamlin,
"The state * * * regulating banking corporations, might undoubtedly annex to the privileges granted such terms and conditions as it saw fit, and by the act of taking stock, the stockholder impliedly assented to them. Such terms and conditions thereby became obligatory upon the stockholder, contractual in their nature * * * [citations]. His provisional liability to creditors was just as obligatory as his original liability to payfor his stock."
In Baird v. Cole,
"The superadded liability of a stockholder created by the statute is, under the laws of North Dakota, as well as the laws of this state, contractual in character."
These pronouncements have much support from other jurisdictions, including the Supreme Court of the United States. In Richmond v. Irons,
"Under that act the individual liability of the stockholders is an essential element in the contract by which the stockholders became members of the corporation. It is voluntarily entered into by subscribing for and accepting shares of stock. Its obligationbecomes a part of every contract, debt and engagement of the bankitself, as much so as if they were made directly by thestockholder, instead of by the corporation. There is nothing inthe statute to indicate that the obligation arising upon theseundertakings and promises should not have the same force andeffect, and be as binding in all respects, as any other contractsof the individual stockholder."
And in Bernheimer v. Converse,
"It may be regarded as settled that, upon acquiring stock, the stockholder incurred an obligation arising from the constitutional provision, contractual in its nature, and as such,capable of being enforced * * *. The obligation of this contract binds the stockholder to pay to the creditors of the corporation an amount sufficient to pay the debts of the corporation which its *Page 103 assets will not pay, up to an amount equal to the stock held by each shareholder. That is his contract * * *. Any statute which took away the benefit of such contract or obligation would be void as to the creditor; and any attempt to increase the obligation beyond that incurred by the stockholder would fall within the prohibition of the Constitution [against impairing the obligation of contracts]."
In view of our own precedents, we must hold that the liability incurred by the stockholder was contractual, and that it originated as a part of the contract of purchase of the stock.
It appears also that we have, in one instance, defined the word "debt," as used in a homestead context. Merchants Nat. Bank v.Eyre,
"It is not necessary for us to hold here that, as a general proposition, a surety is to be deemed a debtor. We are only required to say, and this is our holding, that he sustains that relation within the meaning of the homestead statute."
Having held, therefore, that the obligation of a stockholder to a superadded liability is in the nature of a suretyship, and is contractual, and having held that the liability of a surety is a debt, within the meaning of the homestead statute, we see no way of escape from saying that the debt evidenced by this judgment in the case at bar originated in March, 1926, with the purchase *Page 104 of the stock, and therefore before the acquisition of the homestead.
The appellee places special reliance upon Anderson v. Kyle,
We are not unmindful of the rule that requires us to construe the homestead statute liberally. But we must construe the statute, nevertheless, and the construction must be fair and rational, and not arbitrary. It is our conclusion, therefore, that the judgment debt was contracted prior to the acquisition of the homestead, and that the property is, therefore, subject thereto.
The decree below is, accordingly, — Reversed.
ALBERT, C.J., and FAVILLE, De GRAFF, and KINDIG, JJ., concur.