86 Mass. 239 | Mass. | 1862
This is a bill in equity against the Somerville Dyeing and Bleaching Company and certain persons, who are described as stockholders in the corporation. It alleges that the company is indebted to the plaintiffs in certain sums of money, for the payment of which all the other defendants are jointly and severally liable; that the company is indebted also to many persons beside the plaintiffs, and is insolvent and unable to pay all those debts in full; and it thereupon prays that an account may be taken of all the property and assets of the company, and that the same may be decreed to be appropriated to the benefit of, and distributed among, all the creditors in proportion to the amount of their respective debts; and that the defendants named as stockholders may be decreed to pay the deficiency, in proportion to the liability to which by law they are severally subjected.
The defendants, who are described as stockholders, have filed a demurrer to the bill, setting forth as one among many grounds of objection to its maintenance, that the plaintiffs have not established their alleged claim by the recovery of any judgment therefor against the corporation. To this the plaintiffs answer, in the first place, that even if, upon a proper construction of the provisions of Rev. Sts. c 38, § 31, such a
The question then made by the demurrer arises directly upon the construction of the terms of the statute, which provides that when any of the officers or stockholders are liable, as mentioned in the two preceding sections, for.the debts of the company, the person to whom they are liable may, instead of the proceedings mentioned in the said two sections, have his remedy against them by a bill in equity. Rev. Sts. c. 38, § 31.
This provision refers to two classes of persons who are under such liability, namely, the officers and the stockholders in the corporation. The proceedings referred to are not the same with respect to both of them. As to those persons who are merely stockholders, their persons or property may, for any debt for which they are liable, be taken on a writ of attachment or execution against the company in the same way and manner as on writs and executions against them for their individual debts. The efficient remedy thus given to the creditor consists in the right to levy an execution, issued upon a judgment rendered against the company, on the person or the private individual property of the stockholder. § 30. An attachment of property on mesne process can have no such operation or effect. It is no satisfaction of the debt or cause of action stated in the writ and declaration, but it merely creates upon the property taken a lien which is to stand as security for the ultimate payment and satisfaction of the judgment which may be recovered in the suit
That this is the true exposition of § 31 becomes very apparent upon considering what the particular proceedings referred to in it, instead of which a creditor is authorized to proceed by bill in equity against the two classes of persons respectively liable for the debt, are, and what is the difference in the method and course of proceeding in the two cases prescribed. As to the officers of the company, it is provided that an action may be brought directly against them, or any one of them, to recover judgment on any debt for which they are liable; and that such an action, in which shall be stated in the declaration the claim against the company and the ground upon which the plaintiff expects to charge them for it, may be brought and prosecuted notwithstanding the pendency of another action against the company for the recovery of the samé claim ; and that both actions may be prosecuted until the plaintiff shall have obtained payment of his debt and of all his costs of suit. § 29. It is in the place of these proceedings, that is, instead of a suit prosecuted directly
It is easy to perceive the reason which probably induced the legislature to ordain that this distinction in the remedies which it gave authority for pursuing against the two classes of persons liable for the debts of the corporation should exist. The officers have the control and management of its affairs, and may therefore be presumed to know whether the claims preferred against it are justly due, and when a defence ought to be interposed against a claim for which payment is demanded, and how and in what manner and by what means an unjust demand may be most effectually resisted. The mere stockholder cannot be supposed to have any, or an equal amount of, such knowledge and advantages in respect to the contracts and obligations of the company. He has no personal possession of the books or records of the company; he does not transact its business, and has no special means by which he may ascertain what contracts have been made or what liabilities may have been incurred on its account. And although it may be very just and reasonable that the stockholders shall be held ultimately responsible for the due performance of all the obligations of a company in whose operations and gains they have a direct and immediate interest, it would hardly be thought reasonable to allow coercion to be
All these considerations show that in making the provisions contained in § 31 it was the intent of the legislature that a creditor of the corporation should not have a right to bring and maintain a bill in equity against any of the stockholders until the claim upon which it is founded had first been prosecuted to final judgment against the principal debtor. Even in that stage of the proceedings when he has obtained an execution, which the law allows him to levy directly upon the person or property of any stockholder, he may find it quite important, instead of doing 50, to proceed against him by some new and original process. For whether any particular person is a stockholder in the corporation is a question for the determination of which no possible opportunity was, before the enactment of St. 1851, c. 315, afforded at any point of the proceedings anterior to the rendition of judgment against the company and the issue of an exe< cution upon it. Yet this is a question of vital importance ; for if the person upon whom, or upon whose property, the execution
It may be proper, though it can hardly be nec'essary, to add, that the recent acts of legislation in relation to the general subject of the liability of stockholders in manufacturing corporations, and the remedies which may be pursued by creditors against them, viz.: Gen. Sts. c. 60, §§ 31, 32, 33, and c. 68, § 17, which took effect since the commencement of the bill, and St. 1('62, c. 218, enacted since the case was submitted to the