26 Barb. 202 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1857
The defendant is sued as a stockholder of the American Ocean Mail and Inland Company, for a debt due by the company. The only questions raised by the defendant’s points are, 1st. Whether the defendant can be liable as a stockholder, if ten per cent of the capital stock had never been paid in ; 2d. Whether he can be liable, he having once paid to the company (not to a creditor) the amount of his subscription in full, while other stockholders-who have not paid in full are not sued ; and 3d. Whether it was necessary to make all the stockholders parties to the action.
The company (if incorporated) was incorporated under the act of 1852, chapter 228. They filed in the proper offices the certificates required by the act. They went through the form of receiving from one Eamsay, as a subscriber, $1,400,000 in gold at one of the banks in this city; about $80,000 in gold being brought from the vaults of the bank and placed on its counter, and then delivered by Eamsay to an officer of the company, the company delivering it back to Eamsay in payment by the company for rights transferred by him to it, estimated at the total amount of his subscription, and then Eamsay delivered the $80,000 back to the bank. Such a contrivance may not have protected the company from the annulling of the franchise assumed by it, in a proceeding instituted for this purpose by the state. But neither the company nor Eamsay could ever set up that the payment was not made in
If we are to assume (as the referee finds) that the ten per cent was not paid, then the defendant must maintain the position that one who is a subscriber to the stock of a company, and has appeared as such on its books, (and has acted as a stockholder,) cannot be liable to creditors, if he can show that the company has not received ten per cent of its capital from its subscribers, although the company has been in operation (as this company was) for more than a year.
The act of 1852 authorizes “ any seven or more persons who may desire to form a company” for these purposes, to make, sign, acknowledge and file a certificate, stating among other1 things “ the specific objects for which the company shall be formed,” and then declares (§ 2) that “ when the certificate shall have been filed as aforesaid, and ten per cent of the capital named paid in, the persons, &c. shall be a body politic and corporate.” The effect of this section is that when its two requirements are complied with, the certificate duly made and filed, and the ten per cent paid in, the associates become a body corporate, even as against the people, and are entitled to, and possessed of, the franchise of a corporation, as effectually as if it had been a grant from the state ; and that orí quo warranto by the state, they could set up and sustain their title.
The general rule also has been that a person dealing with a company which is in the user of its franchise cannot set up that it has no corporate existence, either in consequence of acts which would cause a forfeiture of its charter, or of the omission of acts which should have been performed before it could acquire a perfect title as against the state. In McFarlan v. The Triton Ins. Company, (4 Denio, 392,) McFarlan had given his bond' to the company, and being sued on it, offered to prove under the plea of nul tiel corporation, that the subscriptions to the capital stock were not taken in accordance with the act; that no money was paid to the commissioners by the subscribers, but that the commissioners gave credit. The company commenced its business and continued it for two years. There was evidence that the whole of the stock was taken before the company was organized, but the report seems to imply that it was not paid for. Under the act, the
The 6th section of the act recites that the stockholders shall be severally individually liable to the creditors of the corporation, to an amount equal to the amount of stock held by them respectively, for all debts and contracts made by such corporation, until the amount of its capital stock shall have been paid in and a certificate made and recorded. This makes each stockholder liable for the debts of the company in his individual capacity, severally, and not jointly with the others. It is not necessary, therefore, to join the other stockholders as defendants. The object is not to compel a pro rata contribution. To do that, not only all solvent stockholders would be necessary defendants, but all the creditors of the company would be necessary plaintiffs. Instead of that, each creditor
The remedy is not against such stockholders as have not paid for the stock, but is against “ stockholders," without any such restriction. It is not to the extent of their unpaid subscriptions, but “to an amount equal to the amount of stock held by them respectively.” “ The stock held" gives the measure of the recovery, not the stock unpaid. As each is liable to the extent of the stock held by him, and this amount would vary with different persons, it also shows that the-action was not to be joint but several.
The judgment for the plaintiff for the debt.demanded, which was less than the stock held by the defendant, should be affirmed with costs.
Mitchell, Clerke and Dames, Justices.]