141 Mo. App. 570 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1910
The plaintiffs’ suit is in three counts: The first for goods sold by them in May, 1905, to the Golden Islet Mining Company of the State of Colorado; the second for labor performed for the corporation ; the third for goods sold to it. The two latter are claims alleged to have been assigned to plaintiffs. The defendants are sued as directors of said corporation.
The petition sets out a certain statute of the State of Colorado upon which plaintiffs base their right of recovery against the defendants as directors of the corporation. This statute required all corporations of the kind mentioned to file an annual report in the office of the Secretary of State of said State within sixty days after the first day of January, 1905. There is no allegation as to the nature of the report required, but perhaps we will be justified in supposing it to be a recitation of the resources and the general financial condition of the corporations. The section copied in the petition reads as follows: “And if such corporation . . . shall fail, refuse or omit to file the annual report aforesaid and to pay the fee prescribed therefor within the time above prescribed, all the officers and directors of said corporation shall be jointly, severally and individually liable for all the debts of said corporation . . . that shall be contracted during the year next preceding the time when said report should by this section have been made and filed.” The petition alleges that the required report was not filed as the statute provided and that therefore the defendants as directors of the corporation became liable for the debts of the corporation in suit.
The defendants filed a demurrer to the petition which the court sustained and rendered judgment against plaintiffs, from which they appealed.
The question raised by the demurrer is whether the statute quoted is penal or remedial? If the former it is not enforceable in this State, it being a statute of »
In the State of Colorado where enacted the statute is held to be penal. [Hazelton v. Porter, 17 Colo. App. 1; Cannon v. Breckenridge, etc., Co., 18 Colo. App. 38.] While the interpretation put upon the statute by the highest court of the State where enacted is not binding upon the courts of a sister State, yet it is entitled to much credit, because as a rule the courts of the country of the birthplace of the law would naturally have some advantage in dealing with the question by reason of their familiarity with local conditions and the purposes of legislation suitable to such conditions.
Independent of the decisions of Colorado, there are many authorities to the effect that the statutory liability of corporate officers for failure to file reports is penal and will not be enforced by the courts of other States. [Cook on Corporations, vol. 1, sec. 223, p. 421; 10 Cyclopedia of Law, 854; Thompson Commentaries on Corp., vol. III, sec. 3050; Derrickson v. Smith, 27 N. J. 166; Telegraph Co. v. Bank, 74 Ill. 217.]
It is held that: “A suit upon a bond subjecting the obligors to the payment of statutory penalty for misfeasance in office, is an action on a penal statute, and cannot be maintained, in Ohio, on a statute of Indiana.” [State of Indiana v. John et al., 5 Ohio 217.]
Under a statute of Pennsylvania the total amount of debts and liabilities of certain corporations should not exceed the amount of the capital paid in, and if debts should be contracted to exceed said amount the officers or directors contracting the same should be liable jointly and severally for the whole amount of excess. The Court of Appeals of Maryland held that the statute was penal and non-enforceable in that State. [Bank v. Price, 33 Md. 487.]
The Supreme Court of this State has decided that a similar statute of the State is a penal statute. We quote from the opinion which we think fully governs
The plaintiff has invoked authorities of very high character, that hold such statutes are in no sense penal, but remedial. The Supreme Court of the United States in construing the maxim of international law that “the courts of no country execute the penal law of another” holds that a penal law, or a penalty “denotes punishment, whether corporal or pecuniary, imposed and enforced by the State for a crime or offense against its law.” [Huntington v. Attrill, 146 U. S. 657.] And the law is so stated in Black on Interpretation of Laws, 292. And it is said in Whitman v. Bank, 176 U. S. 559, that the question is no longer an open one. And many cases so holding are to he found in the Federal Reports.
Speaking for myself I am of the opinion that the true rule is stated in Huntington v. Attrill, supra. If it should be enforced in all the States it would prevent individuals from evading civil liability in such cases
But we are bound by the decisions of the Supreme Court to abide by the rule as announced in Knitzer y. Woodson, supra, and Cable v. McCune, supra, wherein it is held that the statute is altogether penal. And if it be so, it is not enforceable in this State. Therefore the cause is affirmed.