49 La. Ann. 1350 | La. | 1897
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The plaintiff appeals from the judgment dismissing his suit to compel payment by defendants of check held by them of the insolvent corporation, represented by plaintiff, as receiver.
The petition charged in substance the organization of the corporation, the Dupuis Refining Company, with a capital of forty-five thousand dollars, with three corporators, the two defendants, Adams, Rice and Dupuis; that Dupuis was permitted to pay his stock subscription in the formula for the proposed manufacture, the two defendants were credited on their subscription with services claimed to have been rendered in forming the corporation and claim to
The discussion in defendants’ brief in reference to the asserted full payment by them of their stock originally subscribed for requires no attention. They claim that subscription left no liability to creditors although not wholly paid. In argument here, it is alleged liability for the Dupuis stock, fifteen thousand dollars, that is asserted against the defendants. The serious question is as to the effect of issuing to defendants, without any.payment, these one hundred and fifty shares of stock, purchased by the company of one of its shareholders. Whether issued originally or after the purchase, can the ■shareholder partake of any issue by the corporation or acquisition from it, of shares of stock, without incurring liability to the corporate creditors.
In this case there is the agreement to increase the stock from forty-five thousand dollars to one hundred thousand dollars, and the required announcement to the public. Then follows the issue to defendants of one hundred and fifty . shares, without payment. Thereafter the corporation creates debts, and defendants’ proposi
It is urged on us by defendants that the one hundred and fifty shares had been paid for by the subscriber to whom it had issued, before the increase; that the stock was purchased by the corporation, and hence defendants, the sole corporators, had the right to-divide it without any resulting liability to creditors. This position is sought to be supported by treating the stock purchased as property which corporators can divide, if the corporation is solvent. No-right, if any creditor is concerned or invaded when such a division occurs. But instead of a division of property, we have in this case the division of purchased stock, which, by the purchase, was canceled and remained canceled for all purposes, until reissued. Morawitz,. Secs. 112, 114. This is the well defined result when the corporation purchases its stock. The purchase is an unauthorized use of the-corporate funds, but when permitted to stand or is unassailed, the purchase simply extinguishes the stock and increases the rights of the remaining stockholders. This division or donation of the purchased stock was not, in any sense, a distribution of corporate property, and hence the transaction is not within the protection the law gives to the division of corporate property between corporators, of a solvent corporation.
In this case there was no subscription by defendants to the one hundred and fifty shares. It is, however, well settled that the accepting certificates of stock, or claiming the benefits of shareholders, is enough to create the liability of shareholding. In this case certificates for the shares were issued to the defendants in accordance with the donation to themselves, as we find it expressed in their testimony. That holding made them shareholders as effectively as if they had formally subscribed. Morawitz, Sec. 128 at seq. It was the issue to themselves of the shares of the stock of the corporation organized with the announcement to the public of its five hundred thousand dollars of capital. The contract to pay for the stock the law implies from that issue. Upton vs. Tribilcock, 91 U. S. 47, 48.
The liability of the shareholder to pay for the shares is deemed contracted in the interest of all who may become creditors of the corporation. The corporate franchise is conferred by the State, but on the condition there shall be a capital subscribed and paid for, and.
In our view the defendants incurred the liability of shareholders when they took the fifteen thousand dollars of the stock purchased, and afterward reissued to them by the corporation, and that liability subsists in favor of creditors. Nor is it of the least consequence there was no corporate creditors when that issue was made. The shareholder’s liability for unpaid stock received for the corporation is to future as well as subsequent creditors.
But the receiver’s suit against shareholders for the amounts due-on their stock is in the interest, of creditors, and the recovery is-limited by the debts of the corporation to be satisfied. In this ease the unpaid corporate debts, as well as we can ascertain from the record, and in the absence of any indication of the briefs, is far less than fifteen thousand dollars claimed by the receiver from the de - fendants. We think the judgment in his favor should be restricted to an amount sufficient to pay the corporation debts and the costs and expenses of this appointment and liquidation of the receiver, and to fix the amount and to give judgment the case will be remanded.
It is therefore ordered, adjudged and decreed that the judgment of the lower court be avoided and reversed, and that the case be remanded for further proceedings in accordance with this opinion and decree, and that defendants pay costs.