137 P. 541 | Mont. | 1913
delivered the opinion of the court.
Action by the plaintiff upon a promissory note for $5,000, payable on demand and executed and delivered by the Judith Basin Milling Company (hereafter referred to as “the company”) to the Empire Bank & Trust Company, of Lewistown, Montana, on March 6, 1911, and thereafter assigned to the plaintiff. Prior to the execution of the note to the bank, the defendants indorsed it as guarantors, waiving presentment, demand, protest and notice. The complaint is in the usual form, alleging demand upon the milling company and the defendants, and their failure to make payment. The defendants, admitting that they had indorsed the note and that they have not paid it, deny generally all the other allegations of the complaint. They then allege as a special defense substantially the following: That at the times mentioned in the compaint the plaintiff was the owner of the entire capital stock of the company; that on March 6, 1911, they were in charge of the business and affairs of the company, at the request and with the consent of the plaintiff, under an agreement t.o purchase from him the capital stock thereof; that it became necessary for the company to borrow the sum of money for which the note was executed; that they guaranteed the payment thereof as accommodation indorsers solely for the benefit of the company and at its request, receiving no consideration whatever therefor; that the sum received thereon was used by the company; that the agreement between the plaintiff and the defendants was not carried out, but that on August 26, 1911, the plaintiff sold the entire capital stock to one Charles Borgeson; and that as part of the agreement of sale to Borgeson, and
The evidence discloses the following: The note was executed to the bank for money borrowed for the use of the company, and was used by it.' At that time the defendants were ostensibly directors of the company, and the defendant McCullough was acting as its president. On August 26, 1911, the plaintiff sold the stock to Borgeson, the sale being witnessed by a writing which, after stating that the plaintiff is the owner of all the capital stock of the company and reciting the consideration paid by Borgesoa, contains this stipulation: “Now, therefore, in consideration of the premises and of the purchase, of said capital stock of the said party of the first part by said party of the second párt upon said terms, the said party of the first part, for himself, his heirs, and administrators, does hereby agree to and with the said party of the second part that upon such sale he will turn over to said party of the second part all of the capital stock of the said Judith Basin Milling Company, free and clear of all encumbrances of every kind soever; that he will save the said Judith Basin Milling Company harmless from any debts, suits, judgments, liabilities, or obligations of any kind soever,
It does not appear that the plaintiff was at any time a director of the company, nor, if there were others besides the defendants, how many and who they were; but it does appear that at the time the debt to the bank was contracted the plaintiff was the owner of the entire capital stock of the company, and that at the time the sale was made to Borgeson he was in control of all of its property. It also appears by necessary inference that the defendants were not qualified to act as directors, even by nominal ownership of stock. It will be noted, further, that the plaintiff agreed to deliver to Borgeson the immediate possession of the property belonging to the company. It must therefore follow, as a necessary conclusion from the facts thus disclosed and the inferences justified by them, that the defendants, though acting as ostensible directors, were in fact mere
What are the rights of the parties in the premises? Counsel for the plaintiff cites many authorities which announce the rule that the stockholders are not liable for the debts of the corporation and that the courts will not ignore its existence and entity, but will recognize and preserve it, even though the stock is all owned by one person. In most instances there is no doubt that this rule aids the purpose of the legislature in authorizing the creation of corporations, particularly industrial corporations, such as is the company here, viz., to encourage trade and industry by enabling natural persons to make profitable investment by availing themselves of the skill, experience and personal' fitness of others, without incurring personal liability for the obligations incurred in the management of the business of the corporation. So, after a corporation has been once lawfully
Under section 3833 of the Revised Codes, the powers of a corporation must be exercised by a board of not less than three nor more than thirteen directors, to be elected from among the stockholders, or, where there is no capital stock, then from the members of the corporation. “Directors of corporations for profit
If the bank were seeking recovery on the note which is the subject of this suit, we think it should be treated as a stranger to the corporation; but, so.far as concerns the rights of the plaintiff and the defendants inter sese, the plaintiff should be deemed the corporation itself, and as 'occupying exactly the relation to the defendants as did the corporation when they indorsed the note. And this is but just, because the company could not have borrowed money without the plaintiff’s consent, nor could the defendants have become parties to the contract, except as his agents. The district court was clearly right in looking at the
Counsel for the plaintiff has devoted considerable space in his brief to a discussion of the distinction between a contract of indemnity and one of suretyship and guaranty, and insists that, since the indemnity clause in the contract of sale runs to Borgeson only, only he or someone claiming under him can enforce it. The disposition we have already made of the case renders it unnecessary to consider the nature of this feature of the contract. Conceding it to be merely an agreement to indemnify Borgeson, it indemnifies him against a claim which the plaintiff cannot enforce against the company in any event,
The judgment is affirmed.
Affirmed.
Rehearing denied January 7, 1914.