236 F. 105 | 9th Cir. | 1916
The appellant, a seaman, while at sea and employed on a vessel of the Pacific Shipping Company, a California corporation, received personal injuries through the alleged negligence of the shipping company. To recover damages therefor,
“Each stockholder of a corporation, or joint association, shall be individually and personally liable for such proportion of all its debts and liabilities contracted or incufred, during the time he was a stockholder, as the amount of stock or shares owned by him bears to the whole of the subscribed capital stock, or shares of the corporation or association.”
In Young v. Rosenbaum, 39 Cal. 646, the court said:
“The stockholders are not sureties of the corporation, but are principal debtors. * * * A judgment against the corporation does not extinguish or suspend the liability of the stockholders, and it clearly does not merge it. The remedy against the corporation may, for some cause, be suspended, or perhaps barred, without impairing the remedy against the stockholders, because the liability of the latter is primary, and is conditional or contingent only in this, that there must be a subsisting debt against the corporation.”
The decisions in that case and in M. H. C. & M. Co. v. Woodbury, 14 Cal. 265, have since been consistently followed by that court. Sonoma Valley Bank v. Hill, 59 Cal. 107; Morrow v. Superior Court, 64 Cal. 383, 1 Pac. 354; Hunt v. Ward, 99 Cal. 613, 34 Pac. 335, 37 Am. St. Rep. 87; Western Pac. Ry. v. Godfrey, 166 Cal. 346, 136 Pac. 284, Ann. Cas. 1915B, 825; Eva v. Andersen, 166 Cal. 420, 137 Pac. 16. In the case last cited the court said:
“It is settled in California that a stockholder’s liability accrues immediately upon a debt being contracted by the corporation. A creditor therefore need not resort to the assets of the corporation before proceeding against the stockholders.”
The adoption of the California law and the construction of its provisions seems to have been influenced by the stockholders’ liability law of New York- as it then was. That law was that:
“The stockholders shall be liable In their individual capacity for the payment of the debts of sneh company, * * * to be recovered of the stockholder who is such when the debt is contracted.” Freeland v. McCullough, 1 Denio (N. Y.) 414, 43 Am. Dec. 685; Conklin v. Furman, 57 Barb. (N. Y.) 484.
Similar provisions are found in some of the earlier laws of Connecticut and South Carolina, in both which states shareholders were held to be original debtors and liable in the same manner as though there had been no incorporation. Southmayd v. Russ, 3 Conn. 52; Bank v. Bivingsville Cot. Mfg. Co., 10 Rich. (S. C.) 95.
Such being the peculiar nature of the stockholder’s liability, we think it necessarily follows that the liability of the shareholders in the present case is not merged in the judgment, and that, by obtaining a judgment against the corporation, the plaintiff has waived none of his rights to pursue the stockholders upon their individual liability.
It is true that, although the liability of stockholders under the law of California is primary, it is a liability created by statute. The Supreme Court of that state has so held. In Green v. Beckman, 59 Cal. 545, the court adopted the language of Chief Justice Waite in Terry v. Little, 101 U. S. 216, 25 L. Ed. 864, and said: “The individual liability of stockholders in a corporation is always a creature of statute.” See, also, Hyman v. Coleman, 82 Cal. 650, 23 Pac. 62, 16 Am. St. Rep. 178; Moore v. Boyd, 74 Cal. 167, 15 Pac. 670; Hunt v. Ward, 99 Cal. 612, 34 Pac. 335, 37 Am. St. Rep. 87; and Knowles v. Sandercock, 107 Cal. 629, 40 Pac. 1047. It must also be the law in California, as elsewhere, that the liability of stockholders, while statutory in origin, is contractual in its nature and not penal. Flash v. Conn, 109 U. S. 371, 3 Sup. Ct. 263, 27 L. Ed. 966; Whitman v. Oxford National Bank, 176 U. S. 559, 20 Sup. Ct. 477, 44 L. Ed. 587. While the admiralty jurisdiction cannot be enlarged by state enactment (The Lottawanna, 21 Wall. 558, 22 L. Ed. 654), it is well settled that the maritime law may be changed by state enactment conferring rights of action arising out of marine torts resulting in death (The Hamilton, 207 U. S. 398, 28 Sup. Ct. 133, 52 L. Ed. 264; La Bourgogne, 210 U. S. 95, 28 Sup. Ct. 664, 52 L. Ed. 973). Such being the case as to torts resulting in death, no good reason is seen why the admiralty court may not have jurisdiction of a cause to recover damages for personal injuries resulting from a marine tort against those whom the state law declares shall be primarily liable to respond in damages therefor. The stockholders of the shipping company were not tort-feasors and were in no wise implicated in the tort, but they are liable to respond in damages therefor for the reason that the law makes them directly answerable for the debts and liabilities of the corporation. We hold that a liability so created by state law and arising out of a marine tort is subject to the jurisdiction of a court of admiralty. It is believed that this view of the question does not contravene any decision of a federal^ court, or result in prejudice to the uniform administration of maritime law.
The decree is reversed, and the cause is remanded for further proceedings.
ROSS, Circuit Judge, dissents.