60 N.H. 363 | N.H. | 1880
I. The defendants claim that the bill is multifarious, as it joins other creditors than the bank. This objection, if it were valid, might be obviated by an amendment such as the plaintiffs have offered to make; but the bill is not open to the charge of multifariousness. By our statutes, remedies of the character here sought must be prosecuted by bill in chancery. Gen. St., c. 186, s. 1. "A creditor seeking to enforce it must join in the suit all the parties in interest who can be affected by the decree. The suit must be prosecuted for the benefit of all the creditors, and not for a portion of them. All the stockholders who can be reached by the process must be made defendants. The corporation itself must also be joined, and thus, by avoiding a multiplicity of suits, the whole liability of the corporation is apportioned among the solvent stockholders, who can be reached by the process of the court, and by the decree each stockholder is compelled to pay his proportionate share of the debts; and thus in one suit the affairs of the corporation are practically wound up, and its burdens distributed equally among the shareholders." Hadley v. Russell,
II. The sufficiency of the demand for payment of the note in question is controverted by the defendants. It is claimed that it should have been made personally, and not by letter, and that it should have been a demand on the company to pay the note, or to expose personal property for attachment. But what is the object of a demand in a case like the present one, and why should it be made personally and not by letter? As indicated by the statute, its object is to afford the officers and stockholders an opportunity to pay the debt, or expose personal property of the company so that it may be attached, and thus to protect the stockholders from a suit against them. Therefore it is said, in Haynes v. Brown,
III. The master having found the fact that this suit is prosecuted for the benefit of the plaintiffs alone, and that they are not indemnified by any other party or parties, as was claimed by the defendants, the doctrine of ultra vires is no defence in this case. By Gen. Sts., c. 135, s. 4, the corporation was forbidden to contract debts exceeding one half of its capital stock then actually paid in and unimpaired, and of its its other property and assets; but in Ossipee Manufacturing Co. v. Canney,
It is also immaterial whether the debt was contracted by a vote of the company or by its officers, or whether the officers were authorized to contract it. If contracted by the company, it is valid, without reference to the question whether, having received the benefit of it, the company is estopped to deny its validity; and if contracted *370
by its officers without authority in the premises, their act has been ratified by the company by receiving and enjoying the benefit of the money thus borrowed. Ossipee Manufacturing Co. v. Canney,
IV. It is insisted that the plaintiffs having commenced a suit against the company, they are not entitled to the relief sought by this bill until they have exhausted their legal remedy. But the defendants' liability is created by a statute which contains no such limitation or condition. "The officers and stockholders of corporations, except banks, whose object is a dividend of profits, shall be individually liable for the debts and contracts of the corporation in the cases and to the extent specified in this chapter, and not otherwise." Gen. Sts., c. 135, s. 1. "The only remedy to enforce the payment of a debt of a corporation against the individual stockholders thereof shall be by bill in chancery." Gen. Sts., c. 136, s. 1. Upon demand of payment of any debt of a corporation, it is made the duty of the officers and stockholders to discharge it, or to expose unincumbered personal property that it may be attached; and if such property be thus exposed, no suit shall be maintained against the stockholders. Gen. Sts., c. 136, s. 3. The requirements of the statute preliminary to the commencement of this suit have all been complied with. The debt has not been paid, and unincumbered personal property has not been exposed upon demand.
"Every stockholder, except stockholders in banks, shall be liable for all debts and contracts of the corporation until the whole amount of the capital fixed and limited by such corporation shall have been paid in, and a certificate thereof, under oath, signed by the treasurer and a majority of the directors, has been filed and recorded by the clerk of the city or town where such corporation has its principal place of business," etc. Gen. Sts., c. 135, s. 8. As the conditions upon which the defendants' liability for "all the debts and contracts of the corporation" terminates have never happened, their liability under the statute would seem to be complete. Hicks v. Burns,
These suggestions also dispose of the defendants' claim that the plaintiffs should first exhaust their remedy against Dunsmore and Willard, who, having no right, it is claimed, to create the relation of principal and surety between themselves and the company, are directly liable to the plaintiffs as principals. Without considering how this might be in a suit between these men and the company, we do not perceive any reason why these plaintiffs, who have acted without any fraudulent or sinister purpose from the beginning, should be compelled to seek their remedy first against the sureties on this note.
The plaintiffs are entitled to a decree.
Case discharged.
STANLEY and CLARK, JJ., did not sit: the others concurred.