87 Vt. 121 | Vt. | 1913
The statute (P. S. 4307), respecting corporations by voluntary associations, provides: “No debts shall be contracted by the corporation exceeding in amount two-thirds of the capital stock actually paid in, and a director assenting to the creation of an indebtedness exceeding such amount shall be personally liable for the excess.”
On the authority of the foregoing cases, we think it clear that the statute in question is contractual, and that this liability is secondary to that of the corporation, and is for the benefit of all the creditors entitled to share in the fund to be derived therefrom, in proportion to the amount of their debts entering into the excess, so far as may be necessary to pay the same. It follows that the repeal of the statute after the alleged acts of the defendants rendering them liable, and before the commencement of this suit, does not affect the plaintiff’s right of action, which had previously accrued. This is so by statute. P. S. 35; Harris v. Townshend, 56 Vt. 716.
The statute is silent as>to the remedy for the enforcement of the liability, and one ground- of demurrer assigned is, that the statute does not give the plaintiff any right to maintain this action. Thus the question is presented, whether a single creditor can enforce the liability by a suit at law. We do not find that this precise question has been passed upon by this Court. In Farr v. Briggs’ Estate, noticed above, the question was not raised, nor was any allusion thereto made by the Court. In Rice & Company v. Kennedy, 76 Vt. 380, 57 Atl. 971, the statute upon which the action was based, was essentially like the one here under consideration, and the question whether the cause of action was cognizable at law, was argued on demurrer; but it being held that at the time when the plaintiffs ’ debt was created, the contracting corporation, of which the defendant was a director, was not subject to the provisions of the statute there in question, the demurrer was sustained, and final judgment passed for the defendant, without considering the question as to the form of action. In Cady v. Sanford, 53 Vt. 632, the statute expressly provided that the directors should be personally liable in an action on the statute, and no question was made but
In the case at bar the declaration alleges that the indebtedness to the plaintiff is a part of the indebtedness assented to by the defendants as directors, in excess of the sum of two-thirds of the capital stock actually paid in, and that the corporation was then insolvent and unable to pay its said indebtedness to an amount of, to wit, five thousand dollars. From the allegations, it fairly appears that the excess to which the directors assented, is comprised in part of the debt to the plaintiff, and in part of debts to other creditors. The creation of these debts may or may not have been severally assented to by all and the same directors, or the assent in more or less instances may have been by directors in part different. Individual liability depends upon individual assent to violation of the law; and eon
It is further argued in effect that the suit should be brought by a receiver, and that the allegations do not even show that one has been appointed. However this might be if the corporation were in the hands of a receiver who was closing up its affairs, in the circumstances appearing by the record, a suit in equity may be brought, all the creditors joining, or if the creditors are numerous, by one in behalf of himself and all the others. Stimson v. Lewis, 36 Vt. 91; Darling v. Osborne, 51 Vt. 148.
Judgment reversed, demurrer sustained, declaration adjudged insufficient, and judgment for the defendants to recover their costs.