February 28, 1927. The opinion of the Court was delivered by This is an appeal from an order in the case of Johnson, receiver of Cross Anchor Bank, against Adams and others, by his Honor Judge Dennis, dated December 10, 1926, refusing the petition of James E. Peurifoy, receiver of the American Bank Trust Company, appointed in the case ofRice v. City of Columbia, for an order "cancelling, withdrawing, and revoking" an order made by his Honor, Judge Dennis, in the Johnson Case, dated November 23, 1926, enjoining actions for the enforcement of stockholders' liability except in the Johnson Case.
In brief, the controversy is whether the liability of the stockholders of the American Bank Trust Company shall be enforced for the benefit of depositors in the present case, for convenience referred to as the Johnson Case, or by the receiver of that company appointed in the Rice Case.
On July 1, 1926, an action was instituted in the Court of Common Pleas for Richland County, entitled John I.Rice et al., Plaintiffs, against City of Columbia et al., Defendants, for the purpose of setting aside certain preferences alleged to have been given by the American Bank Trust Company when it was insolvent, and an order of injunction was issued restraining the disposition of the alleged preferences. This order was signed by his Honor, Judge Townsend.
On July 2, 1926, a further order was signed by the same Circuit Judge, enjoining all suits connected with the subject-matter of the complaint, except in the Rice action.
Soon thereafter the city of Columbia, a defendant in the Rice action, filed a petition in that action, asking the Court *Page 413 to appoint a receiver of the bank and for an order making the bank and Bradley, State Bank Examiner, who had been appointed receiver under Section 3985, Civ. Code 1922, parties to the action.
On July 19, 1926, an order was signed by his Honor Judge Townsend, appointing James E. Peurifoy receiver of the bank, displacing Bradley. By that order all creditors of the bank were enjoined from maintaining independent actions, and were required to prove their claims in the Rice action.
On September 7, 1926, his Honor, Judge Dennis, signed an order requiring all creditors, depositors, and claimants of and against the bank of present their demands to the receiver on or before November 15, 1926, and that notice thereof be published. The notice was published and many claims were presented.
On November 6, 1926, upon the application of James E. Peurifoy, receiver, and James S. Farr, a depositor who claimed to represent the depositors as a class, his Honor, Judge Townsend, signed an order appointing James E. Peurifoy receiver of the stockholders' liability to the depositors, under the Constitution, Art. 9, § 18, and Section 3998, Vol. 3, Code 1922, and authorizing him to proceed to make and collect the assessments provided by law against the stockholders.
Under the first order of his Honor, Judge Townsend, appointing Mr. Peurifoy receiver of the bank, he qualified by giving bond, entered upon the discharge of his duties and has since been so acting. It does not appear that he similarly qualified as receiver of the stockholders' liability, under the order of November 6, 1926.
On November 23, 1926, the present action was instituted in the Court of Common Pleas for Richland County by Harvey W. Johnson, as receiver of the Cross Anchor Bank, which was a depositor in the American Bank Trust Company, on behalf of himself and all other depositors of that *Page 414 bank, against the stockholders of that bank, alleging its insolvency, and praying judgment upon the statutory liability
At the time of the commencement of this action, the plaintiff obtained from his Honor, Judge Dennis, an order restraining all depositors of the American Bank Trust Company from bringing any further independent proceeding. This order was ex parte without notice to Mr. Peurifoy, who had been appointed receiver of such liability under the order of his Honor, Judge Townsend, of November 6, 1926.
On November 26, 1926, Mr. Peurifoy, as receiver of the American Bank Trust Company, not as receiver of the stockholders' liability under the order of November 6, 1926, filed in the Johnson Case, a petition, setting out substantially as above stated the proceedings which had been had, and asking that the order of his Honor, Judge Dennis, dated November 23, 1926, in the Johnson Case, enjoining the prosecution of claims of depositors against stockholders except in that action, be annulled, and that further proceedings in the Johnson Case be restrained.
On December 10, 1926, his Honor, Judge Dennis, filed an order refusing to annul the order of November 23, 1926, and directing:
"That the plaintiffs (in the Johnson Case) be, and they are, permitted to proceed in this action against the stockholders of the American Bank Trust Company, not affected by the orders already issued by me, so that this action will proceed against the stockholders of the parent bank at Columbia, S.C. * * * and the motion of the receiver to restrain the further prosecution of this action is refused. * * *"
His Honor, the Circuit Judge, gave as his reasons:
"It seems to me that it would be an exceedingly good law if the receiver could proceed in this matter against the stockholders, as it would bring all of the litigation into one *Page 415 case, and would, to my mind, cut down expense and be helpful in the administration of justice. However, I do not think, under the law of our State, that the receiver has the authority, and I do not think, under the order in this case, that the receiver was given such exclusive authority as to prevent the prosecution of this action by the depositors."
From this order, the receiver, James E. Peurifoy, has appealed upon three exceptions, which will be reported. They raise practically the single question, stated above as the main controversy, whether the liability of the stockholders of the American Bank Trust Company shall be enforced for the benefit of depositors, in the present case, the JohnsonCase, or by the receiver of that bank under the order of November 6, 1926.
It is questionable whether, in the absence of an order permitting Mr. Peurifoy as receiver to intervene in the JohnsonCase, he has a locus standi for the purpose of making any motion by petition or otherwise, in that case; but, as the matter is one of great importance to the speedy administration of the affairs connected with the insolvent bank, that obstacle will be disregarded.
The matter has been fully considered in the case ofFord v. Sauls, now in process of decision, and it is there concluded that the liability of stockholders to depositors, under the Constitution and statute, is not an asset of the bank, but is the basis of an individual, personal, joint right in the depositors, with which the corporation or its receiver or its board of liquidating trustees have absolutely nothing to do.
It follows that his Honor, Judge Townsend, was without jurisdiction to sign the order of November 6, 1926, appointing Mr. Peurifoy receiver of the stockholders' liability to depositors, a matter which appears upon the face of the proceedings and may be so declared, even sua motu by this Court, as was done in the case of State v. Bank of Clio, 129 S.C. 109; 123 S.E., 773. *Page 416 The fact that the application was jointly presented by the receiver and a depositor cannot cure the want of jurisdiction.
That case is quite in point: There a creditor of the failed bank by note filed a petition in the proceeding in which the Court had appointed a receiver of the bank, for leave to surrender his note and take in substitution a certificate of deposit which he had surrendered at a prior time for the note, to be restored to his original position as a depositor, so that he might recover upon the stockholders' statutory liability to depositors. The application was made to his Honor, Judge Dennis, who ruled against the petitioner uponthe merits of his contention, holding that he had made abona fide exchange, and was bound by it. This Court reversed the order of his Honor, Judge Dennis, not upon the ground that he had erroneously decided the merits of the controversy, but upon the ground that he had not jurisdiction to entertain the petition for the reason:
"That this controversy does not in any wise concern the receiver of the bank. * * * That is a matter with which the receiver is not at all concerned; it is entirely separate and distinct from the administration of the estate in his hands."
"Court was without jurisdiction to authorize a receiver to maintain actions on behalf of creditors of an insolvent bank against stockholders on their statutory liability * * * such right of action existing alone in the creditors." Corwinv. Settergren, 70 Mont., 535; 226 P., 522.
A matter worthy of consideration is this: Mr. Peurifoy was not vested with the duty as receiver of the bank of collecting the stock assessments; he was appointed receiver of the stockholders' liability, a separate and distinct receivership. He did not qualify as such receiver, and has given no bond. The stock assessments will amount to $250.000, for which he alone would be personally responsible. If what is practically impossible, at least most remotely probable, there should be a failure upon his part to respond to *Page 417 his obligations as such receiver, it would appear to be an impregnable position of the surety company, upon his bond as receiver of the bank, that it was not liable therefor.
The judgment of this Court is that the order appealed from be affirmed.
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE WATTS, and MESSRS. JUSTICES BLEASE and STABLER and MR. ACTING ASSOCIATE JUSTICE PURDY, concur.