260 N.W. 290
No. 30,295.Supreme Court of Minnesota.
April 12, 1935.
Bank and banking — insolvency — acceptance of deposits — criminal liability — commissioner of banks.
1. The provisions of 2 Mason Minn. St. 1927, § 10407, do not apply to the commissioner of banks.
Same — same — same — civil liability — commissioner of banks.
2. Under 2 Mason Minn. St. 1927, § 7688, the commissioner of banks is endowed with discretion as to whether or not he will take possession of a bank, and his determination under that section is quasi judicial. He is not, under the circumstances alleged in the complaint herein, personally liable to a depositor who may have deposited money in a bank while it was insolvent.
Action — misjoinder.
3. Where demurrers are interposed to a complaint on the ground of misjoinder of causes, if no cause of action is stated in the matter asserted to constitute wrongful joinder, there is no misjoinder of causes.
Action in the district court for Ramsey county by a depositor in the Daytons Bluff State Bank against the officers and directors of the bank for receiving deposits while the bank was alleged to be insolvent. Joined as defendants were John N. Peyton, commissioner of banks while the deposits were received, and Elmer A. Benson, his successor. Defendants other than Benson, who answered, demurred to the complaint. The demurrers were sustained, Carlton F. McNally, Judge, and plaintiff appealed from the order. Affirmed as to defendant Peyton; reversed as to defendants other than Peyton and Benson.
Edgerton, Dohs, Mueller Edgerton, for appellant.
Oppenheimer, Dickson, Hodgson, Brown Donnelly, for respondents John N. Peyton, W.K. Miller, R.C. Stoeckmann, and R.L. Lindeke.
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George W. Peterson and Joseph F. Cowern, for respondent P.O. Skoglund and L.W. Baumeister.
Morphy, Bradford, Cummins Cummins, for respondents Dr. F.J. Plondke, H.C. Swanson, P.L. Memmer, and. W.W. Dunn.
Thomas E. Latimer, for respondent Elmer A. Benson.
LORING, JUSTICE.
This is a suit against the officers and directors of the Daytons Bluff State Bank for receiving deposits while they are alleged to have had reason to know the bank was insolvent, contrary to the provisions of 2 Mason Minn. St. 1927, § 10407. Joined with the officers and directors as defendants were John N. Peyton, who was commissioner of banks while the deposits were received, and Elmer A. Benson, a later commissioner of banks, who, it is alleged, refused to permit the examination of certain reports with reference to the Daytons Bluff State Bank. The defendant Benson answered, but it is conceded that no cause of action against him is stated in the complaint, and we find none. The case will therefore be considered as if he were no longer a party, and the other defendants will be referred to hereinafter as the defendants in the action.
All defendants demurred to the complaint on the ground that several causes of action are therein improperly united and on the further ground that the facts stated do not constitute a cause of action. On its face the complaint purports to be divided into three causes of action, the third containing the matter relative to Benson. The second is but a restatement of the charges contained in the first, coupled with an allegation “that by reason of the foregoing facts” the defendants, including Peyton, wilfully connived and confederated together to receive deposits in the bank alleged to have been insolvent, and that the conduct of the defendant Peyton was wilful and malicious.
The trial court sustained Peyton’s demurrer on both grounds and sustained the demurrers of the other defendants on the ground that separate causes of action were improperly joined. It is the contention of the plaintiff that in reality but one cause of action is alleged against all of the defendants, including Peyton, and that he,
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as well as the officers and directors, is liable to the plaintiff under the provisions of § 10407. Obviously if, as Peyton contends, there is no cause of action stated against him, there is no improper joinder of causes. Howe v. Coates, 90 Minn. 508, 97 N.W. 129. Obviously, too, the trial court was correct regarding the complaint as stating a cause of action under § 10407 against the officers and directors. Consequently, we are confronted first with the question as to whether a cause of action is stated against Peyton. If there be none, then the order sustaining his demurrer must be affirmed and the order sustaining the demurrers by the other defendants must be reversed.
[2] Section 10407 makes it a felony for the officers, directors, stockholders, cashiers, tellers, managers, members, messengers, clerks, persons, parties, or agents of any financial institution to accept or receive deposits therein when they have reason to know that the institution is unsafe or insolvent. Every person who, with knowledge of the unsafe or insolvent condition of the institution, permits or connives at the acceptance of deposits is likewise guilty of a felony.
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Section 10407 was originally L. 1895, c. 219, and has been construed by this court to establish a civil liability on the part of its violators to those suffering damages by the making of such deposits. Baxter v. Coughlin, 70 Minn. 1, 72 N.W. 797; Frederick v. McRae, 157 Minn. 366, 196 N.W. 270. The section cited was an elaboration of § 467 of the old penal code which made the receipt of such deposits a misdemeanor.
We are of the opinion that the word “person” as it was inserted in the statute during its evolution into its present form means someone connected with the financial institution or charged in some way with the performance of its functions. The phrase “of any bank” occurring after the first use of “person” so indicates. This is a criminal statute, and civil liability should not be imposed upon anyone not clearly within its terms. Moreover, § 10407 was enacted prior to § 7688, which gives the commissioner the power of direct action in taking possession. We are clearly of the opinion that the provisions of § 10407 do not apply to the commissioner.
[3] 2 Mason Minn. St. 1927, § 7688, authorized the public examiner, now succeeded by the commissioner of banks, to take possession of the property and business of a bank when he found it in an unsound and unsafe condition or when it had violated its charter or
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conducted its business in an unsafe or unauthorized manner, or had impaired its capital stock, refused to submit its books, suspended payment of its obligations, or when its officers had refused to be examined on oath touching its concerns. The statute, after enumerating the grounds upon which public examiners might act, provided:
“The public examiner may forthwith take possession of the property and business of such bank and retain such possession until such bank shall resume business or its affairs be finally liquidated as herein provided.”
The provision authorizing public examiners to take possession without other proceedings came into the law in 1909 (L. 1909, c. 179). Prior to that time he might take possession and ask a competent court for a receiver, and at a still earlier stage he reported the condition of the bank to the governor, who, if he thought it advisable, referred the matter to the attorney general for appropriate action.
It is contended by the plaintiff that the word “may” as it appears in § 7688 must be construed as “must” and that the commissioner of banks performs a ministerial duty in taking possession of a bank under the provisions of § 7688. We do not so construe the section. See Harriet State Bank v. Samels, 164 Minn. 265, 204 N.W. 938; Main v. Schroeder, 171 Minn. 329, 214 N.W. 664; American State Bank v. Jones, 184 Minn. 498, 239 N.W. 144,
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78 A.L.R. 770, where we characterized the discretion of the commissioner under § 7688 as quasi judicial. In First State B. T. Co. v. First Nat. Bank, 193 Minn. 414, 418, 258 N.W. 593, 595, we announced an opinion that § 7688 endowed the commissioner with a wide discretion. We regard his duties under that section in determining what shall be done as quasi
judicial in character, and therefore the rule of nonliability of officers so acting is applicable to his conduct thereunder. So we come squarely to the question of whether the allegation of malice and connivance incorporated into the so-called second cause of action based upon the facts alleged in the first subdivision of the complaint are sufficient to state a cause of action against Peyton though manifestly the first subdivision does not state a case against him.
The first subdivision charges that Peyton knew that the bank was insolvent, having examined it twice, and that the reports of his examiners and those of its officers showed that it was insolvent, and that, notwithstanding such reports and his knowledge of its insolvency, he permitted it to remain open and receive deposits. From the allegations contained in the first subdivision, which go into great detail, there can be spelled out against Peyton no charge of malice or corruption, and we do not think the conclusions averred in the second subdivision, based as they are on the facts set out in the first, do anything more than allege conclusions wholly unjustified by the particular facts upon which they are based. Lovell v. Marshall, 162 Minn. 18, 202 N.W. 64; Carlson v. Presbyterian Board of Relief, 67 Minn. 436, 70 N.W. 3; 5 Dunnell, Minn. Dig. (2 ed. Supp. 1932) § 7722. It therefore becomes unnecessary for us to determine whether malice or corrupt motives impose a civil liability upon an officer acting quasi judicially. Such a liability has been seriously questioned. Mechem, Public Officers, § 640, p. 427, citing Bradley v. Fisher, 13 Wall. 335, 20 L. ed. 646. In no case cited to us here has this court established the rule of liability, and we refrain from expressing our views as uncalled for by the record.
The order sustaining the Peyton demurrer is affirmed; that sustaining the demurrers of the other defendants is reversed.
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