statement. This action, based on section 2760, Revised Statutes 1889, was brought by plaintiff as a depositor against the.defendants as officers of the Citizen’s Bank of Jamesport to recover the amount of deposits made by him between March 15 and July 13, 1893, when the bank was known to defendants to be insolvent or in failing circumstances. The judgment in the circuit court was for plaintiff.
The statute referred to is as follows: “No president, director, manager, cashier or other officer or agent of any bank or banking institution organized and doing business under the provisions of this article, or of any law of this state, shall receive or assent to the reception of deposits, or create or assent to the creation of any debts by such bank or banking institution, after he shall have knowledge of the fact that it is insolveht or in failing circumstances.' Every person violating the provisions of this section shall be indi*515vidiially responsible for snob deposits so received and all such debts so contracted: Provided, any director who may have paid more than his share of the liabilities mentioned in this section may have the proper remedy at law against such other persons as shall not have paid their full share of such liabilities; and provided, further, that in ease of the insolvency of one or more of such officers, agents or managers, the same shall be paid, for the time being, by those who are solvent, in equal proportions.”
The points against the judgment, necessary to notice, as made by defendants, are as follows:
1. That the liability, imposed by the last clause of section 27, 'article 12, of the constitution, and made operative by the act of May 15, 1877 (Laws,of Mo. 1877, p, 33, R. S. 1889, sec. 2760), is not penal or to^ recover a forfeiture, but only intended to create a civil liability and afford a remedy to enforce it.
2. That an action at law will not lie, and the only remedy is by a bill in equity against the defendants for the benefit of all the creditors and depositors alike.
3. That inasmuch as the plaintiff’s assignors had these same debts allowed by the assignee of the bank, their demands were thereby merged into judgments, and that plaintiff’s assignors having elected to pursue their remedy against the bank, can not now, either by themselves or by an assignee, pursue their remedy against these defendants.
4. H section 2760, Revised Statutes 1889, is penal it should be strictly construed, and that only officers, agents, managers and directors of banks, who are at the time in active control and management of the bank, are liable, and then only such officer, etc., as in fact received the deposit, or is present at the time and assents thereto, with knowledge at the time of the reception of such deposit that the bank is insolvent or in a failing condition, and that the proof *516must show these facts affirmatively before liability can-be created.
5. That the statute only applies to an officer, etc., who is in the active management of said bank at the time the dejtosit is received and not to one occupying a subordinate position, such as bookkeeper or assistant cashier, nor to an •officer or director who is not at the time in the active management of the bank, unless it be shown affirmatively that ■at the time of the reception of such deposit such officer knew of and assented to the reception thereof, and that the clause of section 2761, Revised Statutes 1889, making the fact that the bank is insolvent or in failing circumstances ■at the time the deposit is received prima facie evidence of such knowledge, has no application to them.
6. ’That in no .event is an officer, etc., not in the active management of a bank, liable, although through negligence he fails to inform himself of its true condition.
Banks and bankdeposhf: Ha? bility of officer: statute-, penalty. We concede to defendants’ position that if the statute is not penal, this action at law can not be sustained, for the reason that the remedy would be in equity. But if penal, the action must be at law on a direct individual liability as equity is not the .forum for the enforcement of penalties and forfeitures. There are statutes in many of the' states which are designed to make the creditors of corporations more secure. The question whether these statutes made a penal liability has been frequently before the courts.
As early as 1839, a case arose in Massachusetts on a statute reading as follows, “if any loss or deficiency of the capital stock in any bank shall arise from the official mismanagement of the directors, the' stockholders at the time of such mismanagement shall, in their individual capacity, be liable to pay the same.” The court said: “The evils and inconveniences of attempting to enforce this section by suits *517at common law, would be incalculable; and such remedy would be inadequate, vexatious and mischievous. The only proper means of giving effect to this provision is by a process in equity; and this, of all cases which can arise, seems to call most loudly for a chancery jurisdiction. To a bill in equity all persons, however numerous, might be made parties; and all the relative and conflicting claims of the many creditors and stockholders settled and their proportionate rights to recover and liabilities to contribute, adjusted in a single suit.” Harris v. Dorchester Parish, 23 Pick. 112. Same rule is announced in Crease v. Babcock, 10 Met. 525; Bank v. Stevenson, 5 Allen 398; Bank v. Stevenson, 10 Gray 232.
In Illinois the statute reads: “If the indebtedness of any stock corporation exceed the amount of its capital stock, the directors and officers of such corporation assenting thereto shall be personally and individually liable for such •excess to the creditors of such corporation.” The supreme court of that state, in construing this statute, said: “The right of appellant to recover in the action instituted by him is based upon the hypothesis that where a corporation subject to the provisions of this section incurs an indebtedness in excess of the amount of its capital stock, the individual creditor acquires a right of action for such excess against so many of the directors or officers of the company as assented thereto, and that this right of action may be enforced in a court of law. We are unable to concur in this view of the matter. Such a construction would, manifestly, lead in most cases to great difficulties and hardships. In all cases, where the corporation is insolvent, to allow the individual creditor to collect the whole amount of his claim against the corporation from a solvent officer of the company to the •exclusion of other creditors whose claims are equally meritorious, would certainly be the grossest inequality and manifestly unjust.” Low v. Buchanan, 94 Ill. 76. This con*518struetion of the statute of that state was subsequently approved and adopted in Harper v. Union Mfg. Co., 100 Ill.225; Rounds v. McCormack, 114 Ill. 252; Woolverton v. Taylor, 132 Ill. 197; Queenan v. Palmer, 117 Ill. 619. The latter was a banking corporation case and involved the construction of a statute making the stockholders “individually responsible to make good losses to depositors or others.” It was held that the liability of the stockholders was a common fund for the benefit of all the depositors to be administered in equity.
A like rule has been frequently announced by the supreme court of the United States in construing a similar-statute. Hornor v. Henning, 93 U. S. 228; Stone v. Chisolm, 113 U. S. 302; Terry v. Little, 101 U. S. 216; Pollard v. Bailey, 20 Wall 520. In the case first cited, Justice Miller said: “We are of opinion that the fair and reasonable construction of the act is, that the trustees who assent"to an increase of the indebtedness of the corporation beyond its capital stock are to be held guilty of a violation of their trust; that congress-intended, that, so far as this excess of indebtedness over capital stock was necessary, they should make good the debts of the creditors who had been the sufferers by their breach of trust; that this liability constitutes a fund for the benefit of all the creditors who are entitled to share in it, in proportion to the amount of their debts, so far as may be necessary to pay these debts.
“The remedy for this violation of duty as trustees is in its nature appropriate to a court of chancery. The powers and instrumentalities of that court enable it to ascertain the excess of the indebtedness over the capital stock, the amount of this which each trustee may have assented to, and the extent to which the funds of the’ corporation may lie resorted to for the payment of the debts; also, the number and names of the creditors, the amount of their several *519debts, to determine tbe stun to be recovered of tbe trustees, and apportion among the creditors, in a manner which the trial by jury and the rigid rules of common law proceedings render impossible.
“This course avoids the injustice of many suits against defendants for the same liability, and the-greater injustice of permitting one creditor to absorb all, or a very unequal portion, of the sum for which the trustees are liable; and it adjusts the rights of all concerned on the equitable principles which lie at the foundation of the statute.”
But, while the statutes construed in some of these cases are in some respects similar to our statute, yet it .will be found on an investigation that they are based on the idea of a contractual liability arising from the fact that the membership of the corporation, in connection with the statute respecting such membership, made the obligation substantially contractual. But when the statute imposes a liability on the corporation officer which was not his, as a consequence of his doing a forbidden act, it is a penalty (in a local sense) notwithstanding it may afford a remedy to the party complaining: It would be so held by the supreme court. Guerney v. Moore, 131 Mo. 672; Kritzer v. Woodson, 19 Mo. 327; Cable v. McCune, 26 Mo. 371. And so in New York the corporation officers were required by statute |o make and file an annual report of the affairs of the corporation and if they failed to do so, they were made jointly and severally liable for its debts. This and similar statutes, were held by a number of decisions in that state to impose a penalty. Bank v. Bliss, 35 N. Y. 412; Stokes v. Stickney, 96 N. Y. 323. The same has been held in Minnesota, Illinois and Ohio. Bank v. Mfg. Co., 48 Minn. 349; Lawler v. Burt, 7 Ohio St. 340; Diversy v. Smith, 103 Ill. 378. In the latter case the distinction is made between the contractual and the penal statutes. And so the same distinction is pointed out in Wiles v. Snydam, 64 N. Y. 173 and in Gudsden v. Woodward, 103 N. Y. 242. The latter case was *520an action against the officer for failing to make an annual report. The court said: “The action is not to recover a debt which he owes, but to impose upon him, as a penalty for his default, the payment of the debt of the corporation. * * * The liability sought to be enforced against the defendant does not arise out of any contract obligation, but is imposed by the statute as a penalty for disobedience of its requirement.”
Our statute prohibits receiving deposits, or contracting debts, when the bank is “insolvent or in failing circumstances” and provides that any officer “violating the provisions of this section shall be individually responsible for such deposits so received and all such debts so contracted.” This clearly, though providing a remedy for the creditor and in that respect remedial, inflicts a punishment on the officer for his transgression by making him pay the debt of the corporation, which he did not owe. It will be observed that the statute is but a legislative compliance with the constitution of the state and that the language of each is in the imperative, commanding what shall not be done and prescribing onerous consequences. We are satisfied that the civil liability thus put upon the officers is a penalty. It was tacitly so considered, the question not being raised, in Cummings v. Winn, 89 Mo. 51, and in Speer v. Burlingame, 61 Mo. App. 75. It is a principle of law that one state will not enforce the peqal laws of another, and it is hence proper to remark that we do not mean to say that the statute is penal in such interstate or international sense, so that the liability thereunder could not be enforced in other states, if the offending officer was found in such jurisdiction. Huntington v. Attrill, 146 U. S. 657.
In holding the statute to be penal we are aware of what may be said to be the results which logically follow such construction. Being penal it would be governed by the period prescribed by the statute of limitations as to penalties, unless -otherwise provided. That the right of action and of recovery would accrue to the creditor, if he chose to assert it, even though he could have made-*521the sum due him from the bank if he had so undertaken. That, if a penalty, the injury or damage to the creditor or depositor by the insolvency is of no importance. The only question, after establishing he was a creditor, would be to show that the deposit had been received or the debt contracted when the bank was known to be insolvent or in failing circumstances. The. offense is then complete and the punishment follows. The law, absolutely to put a stop to the betrayal of confiding depositors who are necessarily in ignorance of the condition of a bank, has declared that if the deposit is taken when the bank is in an insolvent condition, that fact makes up the officer’s offense. There is no more qualification, or exception, that the depositor must thereby be damaged, or that he shall lose all, or part of his money, than there is in cases of theft or embezzlement where, by restoration or otherwise, no loss results. So it being a penalty the liability would not survive to the heirs, executors, or administrators of the offending officer. And since there is no right in a wrongdoer to subrogation, he would not be entitled, after paying the penalty for his offense, to be subrogated to the rights' of the creditor against the bank, though by the terms of the statute itself he would have the right of contribution against his fellow offenders. The letter of the statute as to this right of contribution, confines it to a “director;” other officers being, perhaps inadvertently omitted. We thus state consequences which it may be claimed will result from holding the statute to be penal, but do not wish to be understood as so deciding, for the reason that such points are not directly involved in the record.
_. . election of remedies. The result of our consideration of defendant’s contentions that when plaintiff proved up his claim and had it allowed by the assignee of the insolvent bank, he became thereby estopped to prosecute this action under the statute against the defendant officers — that he thereby made his election of remedies — that the allowance of the claim was a judgment and *522became res ad/judieata, is that the points are not well taken. If one bas two inconsistent remedies and asserts one, be can not maintain the other, since he will be held to have made his election. That was the case in the principal authority cited us by defendants. Fowler v. Bank, 113 N. Y. 450. There, the bank paid a deposit to one not entitled to it, and the rightful owner learning the fact, sued the party to whom the bank had thus wrongfully made the payment, obtained .'judgment, but failing to make the money on account of the party’s insolvency, brought the action against the bank. The court denied his right to maintain the last suit. That when he learned the facts he had one of two remedies: to not recognize the bank’s payment and sue it for the money; or to bring an action against the party for money had and received to and for his use. That in adopting the latter course he ratified and confirmed the action of the bank in making the payment. That the remedies were inconsistent and an election of one renounced the other. The case of Nanson v. Jacob, 93 Mo. 344, was also one of inconsistent remedies. The other cases cited merely establish the proposition that the allowance of a claim before an assignee merges it into a judgment preventing another action on the claim.
But here, we construe the statute in question as giving an additional consistent remedy to that against the bank. While the statutory action is penal so far as the officers are concerned, it is remedial as to the bank’s creditors. While the depositor has two remedies, one against the bank, and one against the officers, they are not vneonsistent, that is, in asserting one he will not stultify himself by asserting the other. Each owe him the money and he may pursue both at the same time. His suit against one is not an abandonment of his claim against the other, nor will his position in one stultify his position in the other. The principle of election, estoppel or res adjudieata therefore fails of application.
*523_______ satísíaction. *522The question of satisfaction, in whole, or in part, comes within the purview of this action; and it involves another phase *523of the construction of the statute under consideration. Though one has different remedies against one or more persons, he can not have more than one satisfaction. This applies to the statute, though it inflicts a penalty, and therefore might be thought not to depend upon anything other than doing the forbidden act. But in reality it does depend upon something else. It depends upon the action of the depositor who may or may not cause the penalty to be enforced. It is, as to him, a remedy, and he may prosecute it or not, as he likes. He may abandon or forgive the whole debt, or, he may collect all, or a part of it from the bank, and thus extinguish, in whole or in part, his claim against the officer. By obtaining satisfaction of his claim, there is no'longer a base for action against the officer.
-:-: knowledge of failing condition of the bank. Coining to the point that the evidence was insufficient to base the verdict upon against C. W. and Sterling Price, we feel constrained to rule against defendants. The statute makes the fact of insolvency of the bank prima facie evidence not only that the officer knew it was insolvent, but that he also assented to receiving the deposit. And so we ruled in Speer v. Burlingame, 61 Mo. App. 75. There was added to this other evidence bearing on the question: the fact that they were officers of the bank; that Sterling was assistant cashier and kept the books; that O. W. was vice-president, and though not participating in the active management, yet, if testimony of some conversations of his is to be believed, he knew enough of the operations of the bank to give him great concern and uneasiness.
—: —; ¡nsoivencv; instrucRon. The instructions in the case are numerous. We can not set them out within reasonable limits. In considering them it must be remembered that they are giving construction to a harsh and unbending statute . _ _ . • intended as a heroic remedy against a great and growing evil. They, taken together, point *524out iu unambiguous language wbat constitutes insolvency, confining sucb condition to an inability to meet tbe ordinazry demands against the bank in tbe usual and ordinary course of business. They declared that an ability to pay in tbe future, or an excess of assets over liabilities, without a present ability to pay debts as they become due in tbe usual course of business, was not solvency.
—.—; duty of sumption^16 ' They declared that it was tbe duty of those officers receiving or assenting to tbe reception of deposits to know tbe financial condition of tbe bank, and that the law presumed they did know it. In our opinion, the instructions are supported by the following eases, criminal cases it is true, but for that reason not less applicable to a civil action in tbe respect here considered. State v. Buck, 120 Mo. 479; State v. Sattley, 131 Mo. 464; State v. Burlingame (s. c. of Mo. not yet reported), 48 S. W. Rep. 72.
After a careful- examination of the- record with the points of objection to tbe judgment we are satisfied that there is no sufficient ground upon which to reverse it, and it is accordingly affirmed.
All concur.