49 N.Y.S. 404 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1897
This action is brought under the provisions -of section 51 of the Stock Corporation Law (Chap. 688, Laws of 1892), making stockholders of every stock corporation “ personally liable for all debts due and owing to any of its -laborers, servants or employees other than contractors, for services performed • by them for such corporation.”
■The plaintiff is an attorney-at-law, and the services performed by him were professional- services rendered pursuant to a written ■agreement by which the corporation employed him, in the language of the complaint, “ to do .and perform such work as it might place in his hands 'as an attorney and counsellor-at-law, in connection with the business of the said company, and to pay him therefor a weekly salary of $50 per week, payable on teach and -every Saturday.” The defendants' are stockholders of the corporation; and the notice required to charge them was duly served, and a timely judgment was recovered against the corporation, exe■cution issued and returned unsatisfied.
Is the plaintiff within the protection of the statute? Do the words “ employees other than contractors,” include an attorney-at-law, employed to perform professional services at a weekly, stipend? Although the languáge of this act-is broader and more ■comprehensive than that of other kindred acts which have received judicial construction, I am of the opinion that it is not suffi•ciently ample to embrace the Case presented ■ by. the plaintiff. Statutes imposing upon stockholders a personal liability for the •corporate debts have always been strictly construed in "this state; . -and such construction has always been in conformity with the ■ intent of the statutes without extending the liability beyond their literal terms.
The object of the statute is to furnish to the servants, laborers -and all other like employees of corporations, in terms broad enough to cover every employee of the corporation as such, greater security for the payment of their stipulated salaries and agreed compensation than the credit of the corporation alone would furnish. The words,, “laborers, servants and employees,” are used in their cognate
In construing a statute, effect is given if possible to every word and expression used. It is assumed that the words “ laborers ” and “ servants ” are used by the lawmaker advisedly, and are not surplusage. ' “ Laborers ”• are those who toil in a menial capacity; “ servants ” are those who serve manually, yet include a class above the mere laborer; and “employees” embraces every other grade of similar service with brain and hand. If, however, the plaintiff’s contention is correct, and the word “ employees is to be re-garded as the correlative'of “employers,” the words “ laborers ” and “ servants ” would be meaningless. In that'sense these words would be included in the word “ employees,” and the statute would be construed as if it read “ all debts due and owing to any of its employees other than contractors.” The association and collocation of the words actually used would thus be ignored, and a different law substituted for. the one passed by the legislature.
In People v. Remington, 45 Hun, 329, it was held that under a statute giving a preference to employees, operatives and laborers of a corporation, an attorney employed to render professional services for the corporation was not an employee within the meaning of the statute. This case was affirmed by the Court of Appeals (109 N. Y. 631), on the opinion of the General Term, and its authority remains unquestioned.
The case of Gurney v. Atlantic G. W. Railway Co., 58 N. Y. 358, is not in conflict with the views herein expressed. In that case the question decided was whether the language of an order appointing a receiver and directing him to pay debts owing to the laborers and employees of the corporation, was intended to include a claim for professional services. Evidence was' given that the order was the result of negotiation and compromise, and that the word “ employees ” was used by the parties drafting' the order with a distinct view of embracing the claim for. professional services of the company’s attorney. The court distinguished the case from those creating a statutory liability. There is, said Chief Judge
I am not considering the case, which would be presented if the plaintiff were exclusively employed in the service of the corporation. There is no claim here that the corporation contracted for all the time of the plaintiff fe. he exclusion of other clients: The plaintiff’s office is not in any building or on the property of the corporation, nor were his services rendered within the corporate domain. The case is one of engagement for special services, differing from the ordinary employment of a lawyer only in that a definite period‘-of time is . fixed,, and the compensation is reduced to a weekly allowance.
The demurrer should be sustained, with costs.
Demurrer sustained, with costs.