(after stating the facts). I. Act 196, approved May 1,1909, provides for a depository of the public funds of Logan County. Sections 1 and 3 of that act were amended by Act No. 57, approved February 15, 1913, providing for the creation of separate depositories in the northern and southern districts of Logan County, and by changing the time for receiving bids from the July term of the oouuty court, .as provided in the act of 1909, to the January term of the court. The latter part of section 2 of Act No. 57, Acts of 1913, provides that the county court, “shall select from among said bids ;as the depositories of .all the public funds of the county and districts, including’ road .and school funds, that bidder one in each district, offering the highest rate of interest per annum, on said funds of each district. # * Said interest shall be computed upon the daily balances to the credit of said county with said depositories and the same shall be payable to the county treasurer quarterly and shall be immediately placed to .the credit of the common school fund and county general purpose fund of said county and district in equal amounts.” Section 3 repeals all laws in conflict.
But Act No. 196 of the Acts of 1909, except sections 1 and 3, providing for a depository of public funds in Logan County, remains unchanged, and is still in force.
The first part of section 4 of the act of 1909 provides for the making of a bond by the depository for the use and benefit of Logan County. The latter part of section.4 is as follows:
“All stockholders of any such bank, banker or trust company shall be liable for all public funds that such bank, banker or trust company shall fail to pay over on demand to the person entitled to receive the same.”
■Section 6 provides that the bond “shall be conditioned for the due and proper performance of all duties and obligations devolving by law upon.said depository and for the prompt payment upon presentation of all checks drawn upon said depository by the county treasurer of said county, so long as said funds shall be in said depository to the credit of said county .and that all funds of ¡said county shall be faithfully kept by said depository' and accounted for according to law; and for any breach of said bond, the county or any other person injured may maintain an action in the name of the county to the use of said county or person thereby injured.”
(1) The liability of appellants as sureties on the bond and as stockholders arises under the above provisions of Act 196, approved May 1, 1909. The circuit court was correct in holding that the appellants were liable under the provisions of that act. It is therefore unnecessary for us to consider whether Act 57, approved February 15, 1913, repealed section 1990 of Kirby’s Digest, for the liability of appellants in this case is not based upon that section.
II. Section 4 of Special Act No. 196 of the Acts of '1909 makes all stockholders of any such bank, banker or trust company “liable for all public funds that such bank, banker or trust company shall fail to pay over on demand to the person entitled to receive the same.” Section 36 of Act 113, being “An Act for the organization and control of banks,” approved March 3,1913, provides: “The stockholders of every bank doing business in this State shall be held individually responsible, equally and ratably, and not one for another, for all contracts, debts and engagements of such bank to the extent of the amount of their stock therein at the par value thereof, in addition to the amount invested in such stock.”
Does the above section 36 of the banking act repeal section 4 of Special Act No. 196 of the Acts of 1909?
(2) Act 113 of the Acts of 1913 is a general banking law. It does not expressly repeal the provisions of section 4 of Special Act 196 of the Acts of 1909. “A general statute will not be held to repeal a prior special statute where there is no express repeal and no invincible repugnancy between the two statutes.” State v. Southwestern Land & Timber Co., 93 Ark. 621, and cases cited. See, also, Hampton v. Hickey, 88 Ark. 324. In the latter case we held, that ‘ ‘ a later statute which extends and enlarges a right before existing impliedly repeals the law by which the former was created or given.”
There is no invincible repugnancy between the special depository act for Logan County and the general banking act. The general banking law was not intended to cover the subject-matter of the special depository act for Logan County. There are no provisions in the hanking law showing that it was intended as a substitute for this special act. Section 36 of the banking law did not enlarge and extend the liability of stockholders for public funds deposited under the special depository law. On the contrary, the liability of the stockholders under the special depository lact is greater than under the general banking law, for the special act makes the stockholders liable for the public funds without regard to the amount of stock held by each stockholder; whereas the general banking law makes them hable ratably to the extent of the amount of their stock at its par value, plus the -amount invested in such stock. Each of the stockholders, under the special depository law, is liable in every case for the entire amount of the public funds deposited, whereas, under the general banking law each stockholder is hable ratably and only to the extent of his -stock at par value, and, in addition, to the amount invested therein.
In some cases, under the general banking law, an individual stockholder might not be liable for the entire amount of public funds on deposit with the bank named as special depository. But, under the special depository law, each individual stockholder would be individually liable for the whole amount of public funds on deposit.
In section 36 of the general banking law the Legislature did not have in mind the subject-matter of the liability of stockholders under special acts creating -depositories of public funds. The liability of stockholders under the special act creating the depositories for Logan County was fixed as a liability against all the stockholders for the public funds, making each liable for the amount of such funds. In section 36 of the general banking law the Legislature were intending to declare and apportion the general liability of all banks ratably among the stockholders thereof. They did not have in mind the fixing of primary liabilities against the stockholders in banks that were made depositories of public funds.
It follows that the judgment of the -circuit court is correct and it is therefore affirmed.