
    Patrick Coyle vs. Taunton Safe Deposit and Trust Company.
    Bristol.
    October 24, 1910.
    January 6, 1911.
    Present: Hammond, Loring, Braley, & Sheldon, JJ.
    
      Savings Bank, Liability of stockholders, Receivership proceedings. Receiver.
    
    After a receiver of a trust company has been appointed and has collected practically all of its assets and has distributed to the depositors a dividend comprising a part only of the amounts due to them, so that, in order to pay to the depositors the balance due them, it has become necessary to enforce against the stockholders the liability created by R. L. c. 116, § 30, a depositor, although the receivership proceedings still are pending and the company has in its possession nothing which can be attached or taken on execution, may maintain an action at law against the corporation for the sole purpose of laying the foundatian of enforcing under R. L. c. 110, § 60, the liability of the stockholders by recovering a judgment against the corporation, causing a demand to be made on an execution, and the execution to be returned wholly unsatisfied after thirty days.
    Contract for an unpaid balance of a deposit of the plaintiff with the defendant. Writ in the First District Court of Bristol, dated December 11,1909.
    On appeal to the Superior Court the case was heard by Hardy, J., without a jury, upon an agreed statement of facts. On a petition of the board of commissioners of savings banks to the Supreme Judicial Court the defendant was placed in the hands of a receiver on February 29, 1904. Previous to December 14,1909, the receiver in the administration of the defendant’s affairs had collected practically all of its assets and had distributed to the depositors, among them the plaintiff, a dividend of seventy-five per cent, and, in order to pay to the depositors the balance still due them, it became “ necessary to levy an assessment upon the stockholders of the corporation.”
    On December 14, 1909, the plaintiff filed the following petition in the receivership proceedings: “ And now comes Patrick Coyle of Taunton in said Commonwealth and says that he is a creditor of said trust company; that it appears from the receiver’s report that there are not funds enough to pay his claim in full; that his claim is a debt or contract for which the stockholders of said company are liable to be assessed; wherefore he prays that he may be allowed to bring suit against said company that he may reduce his claim to judgment for the purpose of finally establishing said stockholders’ liability.” The petition was allowed and this action was brought. At the time it was brought there were no assets or property in the hands of the defendant. The judge found that the sole purpose of bringing this action was to enforce the liability of stockholders of the defendant.
    George B. Baker, one of the defendant’s stockholders, was allowed to appear and defend the action.
    The trial judge found for the plaintiff; and the defendant alleged exceptions.
    dr. A. iSweetser, for the defendant.
    
      F. S. Sail, receiver, pro se.
    
   Loring, J.

After our decision in Nichols v. Taunton Safe Deposit & Trust Co. 203 Mass. 551, this action was brought against the trust company by one of its creditors to lay the foundation for enforcing under R. L. c. 110, § 60, the personal liability of stockholders created by R. L. c. 116, § 30. The only defense set up here is that before the date of the writ on a petition brought against it under R. L. c. 113, § 6 (which is applicable to trust companies by force of R. L. c. 116, § 37), all the property of the trust company had been put in the hands of a receiver to wind up its affairs and it had been enjoined from the further prosecution of any business. The defendant contends that this defense is good on the authority of what was said by Holmes, J., in Archambeau v. Platt, 173 Mass. 249, 251: “ Apart from the statute, we cannot see how it is possible to justify bringing an action which it is admitted never can result in satisfaction from the defendants.” The defendant also relies on Morse v. Toppan, 3 Gray, 411, 412; Train v. Marshall Paper Co. 180 Mass. 513; Norfolk v. American Steam Gras Co. 108 Mass. 404, 407. But the answer to that is that the amendment to R. L. c. 116, § 30, made by St. 1905, c. 228 (authorizing receivers of insolvent trust companies to enforce the personal liability of stockholders which is here in question), of necessity implies that a judgment can be obtained against a trust com-pony in the hands of a receiver. We do not intimate that the result would not have been the same before the enactment of St. 1905, c. 228.

Exceptions overruled.  