56 Neb. 46 | Neb. | 1898
In 1888 there was organized under the laws of this state, and domiciled in the city of Omaha, a corporation known as the Guaranty Loan & Investment Company. This corporation was organized for the purpose of negotiating real estate loans and guarantying the payment of the same. The authorized capital stock of the company was subscribed; but it seems that each subscriber paid in cash for only a part of the stock subscribed for by him, giving his note to the corporation for the remainder of the subscription. The corporation made a loan of $6,500, which was secured by a mortgage upon real estate. It then sold this mortgage loan to one Bertha Zenner, guarantying the payment of the same. The loan Was also guarantied by John L. Kennedy and David Bennison and other stockholders of the corporation. Early in 1889 the stockholders of the corporation held a meeting, and, because it was not doing a profitable business, resolved to wind up its affairs. At this meeting the stockholders set aside out of the company’s funds $500 to be used in defraying future expenses, “liabilities, and needs.” They also levied an assessment of three per cent on the stock for the purpose of covering losses of the company, and by resolution returned to each stock subscriber seventy-seven per cent of the cash paid by him on the stock for which he had subscribed, called in the outstanding stock and cancelled it, and surrendered to each stock subscriber his note. Some four years after this, Bertha Zenner foreclosed the mortgage which had been sold to her by this investment company, and caused the property mortgaged to be sold; but the proceeds of the sale were net sufficient to satisfy the mortgage debt,
It appears from the evidence that Kennedy held one |500 share of stock. It further appears that he paid on behalf of the company, one-half of the deficiency judgment, or more than four times Ms entire subscription to the stock company. He cannot be held liable to the International Loan & Trust Company until he has collected from his co-stock subscribers an amount sufficient to make his payments on stock and expenditures made on behalf of the company less than his stock subscription.
The district court placed its denial- of the appellants’ right to recover on the following grounds: “That the
The judgment of the district court against Kennedy, in favor of the International Loan & Trust Company, is reversed; and the judgment of said court, dismissing the plaintiff’s action, is reversed, and the cause remanded, not for retrial, but with instructions to the district court to enter a judgment in favor of the plaintiffs, as prayed for in their petition. All other orders and rulings made by the district court in the case are
Affirmed.