Section 3560 of the Code of 1907 (Section 16 of the state banking act of October 2, 1903) is as follows: “Whenever the treasurer finds that a bank or corporation chartered by the laws of this state and doing a banking business, is not in a solvent condition, he shall immediately report the condition of the bank to the Governor, and the Governor shall direct the Attorney General to institute proceedings in a court having jurisdiction in the county where the bank or parent bank is located, to put the bank in the hands of some competent person, who shall give bond in an amount to be fixed by the judge for the faithful discharge of his duties, and said person so appointed shall immediately take charge of the business of said bank, collecting its assets and paying off its liabilities under the law and rules of such court.”
Proceeding in accordance with this statute, the Attorney General filed his bill in the Jefferson chancery court against the Guarantee Bank & Trust Company, alleging that the State Treasurer had certified to the Governor that the respondent bank was not in a solvent condition, and praying for the appointment of some competent person as receiver to immediately take charge of the business and property of said bank, to collect its assets, and hold them subject to the orders of the court. *44The court thereupon appointed the appellee, E. D. Smith, as such receiver, who took charge of the bank, and proceeded to collect its assets. The receiver soon afterwards filed his report showing that the bank was hopelessly insolvent, and on November 8, 1910, the court ordered that all creditors should file their claims against the bank on or before January 10, 1911; and on December 17, 1910, further ordered that the receiver should allow set-offs only in those cases where debtors held or owned certificates of deposits of said bank, general or interest-bearing, at the time of the commencement of the receivership. On January 10, 1911, the appellant, John B. Oates, filed in the court his sworn petition, showing that he was indebted to said insolvent bank in the sum of $1,404 by his promissory note of July 2, 1910, due and payable on July 2,1911, to which was attached certain collaterial securities the property of petitioner; that this note‘was among the assets of said bank, and in .the possession of said receiver; that, before the institution of this cause, said hank for value received had issued an interest-bearing certificate of deposit in the sum of $1,750 to the Interstate Eire Insurance Company, payable on July 2, 1911; and that petitioner had become the owner and purchaser of said certificate by indorsement, and for a valuable consideration. The prayer of the petition was in substance and effect that this certificate of deposit should be allowed as a set-off against petitioner’s said debt to the bank, that his said note be canceled and his collateral returned to him, and that any balance found due on the certificate be allowed to him as a claim against the bank. The receiver demurred to the petition on various grounds, among others, that it did not show that the certificate of deposit was transferred to petitioner before the appointment of the receiver. The demurrer was *45sustained by the chancellor, and, petitioner declining to amend, a decree was entered dismissing the petition. The controlling question raised by the appeal is, therefore, whether a claim acquired by the debtor of an insolvent banking corporation in the hands of a receiver, after the appointment of the receiver, is available as a set-off against his debt previously existing.
The effect of section 3560 of the Code is to create a statutory receivership, subject, of course, to the general principles which govern that branch of equity law, and subject specifically to section 3509 of the Code, which provides that “the assets of insolvent corporations constitute a trust fund for the payment of the creditors of such corporations, which may be marshaled and administered in courts of equity in this state.” These two statutes are, of course, parts of a single system, and cooperate in the clearly defined purpose of the Legislature to promptly sequester the assets of insolvent state banks, to the end that such assets may be impartially administered in favor of all the creditors.
Upon thé filing of a bill of complaint, appropriate in form and substance, a court of equity is authorized to appoint a receiver for the purposes stated, and the decree of appointment operates ipso factor as a potential adjudication of insolvency, fixing the status of corporate assets, and qualifying the rights of corporate creditors. Whether, for our present purposes, this status relates back to the filing of the bill, or to the State Treasurer’s report of insolvency, or to the date of actual insolvency, we need not consider. S'ee the various rulings collected in case note to Stone v. Dodge (Mich.) 21 L. R. A. 280.
In ordinary cases of receivership, it is very generally held that the appointment of the receiver does not vest in him any title to the property involved, but only the *46right and duty of possession. — Sullivan Timber Co. v. Black, 159 Ala. 587, 48 South. 870; Talladega Merc. Co. v. Jenifer Iron Co., 102 Ala. 259, 14 South. 743; South Gramite Co. v. Wadsworth, 115 Ala. 570, 22 South. 157; I-ligli on Receivers, § 5; 23 Am. & Eng. Ency. Law, 1042.
But this question is of no importance in the present case, for the trust fund theory of the statute, as well as tlie equitable rights of the receiver, just as effectually hold and protect the assets of the bank for the purposes in view as if the legal title were vested in the receiver. In a similar case, hoAvever, the Supreme Court of Massachusetts has held that such a receiver “is to be regarded as a quasi assignee, and as being vested with the legal title to the assets of the bank.” — Howarth v. Lombard, 175 Mass. 570, 579, 56 N. E. 888, 891, 49 L. R. A. 301. And this ruling seems to meet Avith the approval of Mr. High. — High on Receivers (4th Ed.) § 317c. It is universally conceded that the changed status Avro-ught by insolvency, or by the appointment of the receiver, does not impair then existing rights of set-off in favor of debtors. See note to St. Paul Trust Co. v. Leck (Minn.) 47 Am. St. Rep. 585; Scott v. Armstrong, 146 U. S. 499, 13 Sup. Ct. 148, 36 L. Ed. 1059; 34 Cyc. 194.
But it is held Avith equal unanimity-that such debtors are not entitled to have set off against their debts claims which they have acquired subsequent to such insolvency, of which they have notice, or subsequent to the appointment of the receiver. — Stone v. Dodge, 96 Mich. 514, 56 N. W. 75, 21 L. R. A. 280, and note; Scott v. Armstrong, 146 U. S. 499, 13 Sup. Ct. 148, 36 L. Ed. 1059; Nix v. Ellis, 118 Ga. 345, 45 S. E. 404, 98 Am. St. Rep. 111; St. Paul Trust Co. v. Leck, 57 Minn. 87 58 N. W. 826, 47 Am. St. Rep. note, pages 582-586-588; Davis v. Ind. Mfg. Co., 114 N. C. 321, 19 S. E. 371, 23 L. R. A. 322; In re Hamilton, 26 Or. 579, 38 Pac. 1088; *47In re Van Allen, 37 Barb. (N. Y.) 225; Smith v. Mosby, 9 Heisk. (Tenn.) 501; Varn Dyck v. McQuade, 85 N. Y. 617; Clarke v. Hawkins, 5 R. I. 219; Jackson v. Lahee, 114 Ill. 300, 2 N. E. 172; High on Beceivers (4th Ed.) § 247; 23 Am. & Eng. Ency. Law, 1094; 34 Cyc. 198. The reason in each case is elementary: (1) The receiver succeeds to the assets as they are, and subject to every specific right and equity which existed against the insolvent; and, where a set-off: exists, the debtor equitably owes only the balance over and above the amount of his counterclaim, and this is the debt that passes to the receiver; and (2) the impartial distribution of the assets, which constitute a trust fund in equity, without any preference of one creditor at the expense of others, would be palpably defeated. After insolvency is established, a creditor’s claim, so far as the assets are concerned, gives him no more than the right to file his claim seasonably and to share ratably in their distribution. And when he assigns his claim to another, after such insolvency is established, the assignee acquires no other nor higher right than had his assignor.
Our statute of set-offs (section 5858, Code 1907) provides that “mutual debts * * * subsisting between the parties at the commencement of the suit, etc., may be set off one against the other.” This means a debt to and a claim against the same legal personality, each of which must equally afford the obligee a right of action against the obligor. — St. L. & T. R. Packet Co. v. McPeters, 124 Ala. 451, 27 South. 518. This language of the statute in no way impugns the principles above laid down, even if it were conceded that a court of equity must apply it in all requests and in all cases as must courts of law. Manifestly the test just above stated is fatal to the petitioner’s asserted right of set-off, for mutuality is essentially lacking, and his general right *48of action upon his claim acquired by assignment is qualified by the pre-established rights of the receiver and of the other creditors.
Appellant’s theory, and his argument in support of it, have taken no account of the force and effect of section 3509 of the Code, which re-establishes the once discarded trust fund theory in regard to the assets of insolvent corporations; and this alone would differentiate such cases from insolvent estates of deceased persons administered by personal representatives. But, even with respect to these latter, it seems to be settled law that claims acquired by debtors by assignment after the decedent’s death cannot be set off against the estate in an action by the personal representative. Note to St. Paul, etc., Trust Co. v. Leck, 47 Am. St. Rep. 588. Nor do the Alabama cases cited by appellant hold to the contrary. In fact, in Palmer, Adm’r, v. Steiner, 68 Ala. 400, the right of set-off in such cases is expressly limited to demands against the decedent “held and OAvned at the time of his death.”
The decree of the chancery court is affirmed.
Affirmed.
All the Justices concur, except Doavdell, C. J., not sitting.