116 F. 1019 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern New York | 1902
The Iowa statutes give to the individual creditor of an insolvent corporation a right which he did not possess before their passage,—the right to recover the whole amount of his claim, or some part, at least, of it, from a solvent individual stockholder, without having to give any consideration to the claims of his fellow creditors. Those statutes provide an expeditious method for the enforcement of that right by an action at law, creditor against stockholder, and Whitman v. Bank, 28 C. C. A. 404, 83 Fed. 288, is authority for the proposition that, when diversity of citizenship will permit, such action may be brought in a federal court in another state.
As to the contention that the complaint is defective, in that it does not aver that defendant ever subscribed for the 'stock, or expressly agreed to pay the par of his holdings, many authorities, somewhat inharmonious, have been cited. The utmost that can be said of them is that it does not necessarily follow that one who holds a share of stock which was never fully paid is liable for the difference between its par and the amount which was paid, because the circumstances under
Demurrer overruled, with leave to answer within 20 days.