93 Ala. 468 | Ala. | 1890
— Appellees seek by the action to charge appellant individually with a debt contracted by the Decatur Building Supply Company. The averments of the complaint show, that proceedings were instituted in the Probate Court of Morgan county by Joseph W. Barton and three other named persons, defendant not being one of them, for the purpose of forming a private corporation by the name of the Decatur Building Supply Company, by filing a written, declaration, signed by themselves, substantially conforming to the statutes then in force; and that a commission was issued by the judge of probate, constituting two of the signers of the declaration a board of corporators to open books of subscription to the capital stock of the company, having first given due notice of the time and place of opening the same in the manner prescribed in the commission; and that the signers of the declaration took no other or further proceedings of record to complete or perfect the corporate organization. The complaint further avers, that the persons proposing to become incorporated did business under the name of the Decatur Building Supply Company, dealing in builders5 supplies, and assumed to act in a corporate capacity, contracting in the corporate name; and that defendant became associated with them in February, or March, 1888, when' certificates of stock were issued to him for a valuable consideration. It further avers, that defendant was president of the company, and acted and held himself out to the public as president and a director; also, that while he was thus acting openly and notoriously for the company, plaintiff sold to the company lumber and other material for building, for which the debts sued on were'contracted.
The complaint shows a colorable compliance with the requirements of a law under which a corporation, for the purposes, and with the powers exercised by the Decatur Building Supply Company, might be lawfully incorporated, and a user of the rights claimed to be conferred by the law, — the exist
In the case of Snider's Sons Co. v. Troy, 91 Ala. 224, decided at the present term, the question in this case was fully considered; and we then held, that a creditor, who has dealt and contracted with a corporation defacto, can not .hold the stockholders liable for the corporate debt.individually, as partners, or otherwise. On the authority of that case, the judgment must be reversed. The clerk will certify the opinion in that case, as the law of this case.
Reversed and remanded.