33 Ky. 214 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1835
delivered the opinion of the Court.
Silas Mallett, as administrator of Zachariah Mallett, deceased, filed his bill against James De Wolf and others, as share-holders in the Hope Distillery Company, incorporated by an act of 1817 — alleging, that his intestate had obtained a judgment against said company for thirteen hundred and sixty seven dollars, with interest from the first day of October, 1821, which had abated by his death, and that the corporation being dissolved, and the share-holders dispersed, some of them being non-residents, there was no mode of regularly reviving the judgment, praying that the share-holders, who were defendants, should be decreed to pay the amount, with interest, &c. and that other defendants;
De Wolf, who alone of the principal defendants, answered the bill, denied that he owed the complainant any thing, and alleged that, if any judgment had been obtained, as stated in tire bill, it was fraudulent and void, and recovered by collusion between Mallett and others. But there being no proof of these allegations, and the record of a judgment regularly entitled “Zachariah Mallett vs. the Hope Distillery Company,” having been exhibited, a decree was rendered for the full amount, with interest, according to the prayer of the bill.
By the opinion of this court, rendered at the October term 1829, (see 4 J. J. M. 401,) this decree was reversed, for want of proper parties; and all the shareholders, or their representatives, having been made defendants, and a similar decree having been agáin rendered, the defendants have appealed to this court, for a second reversal.
Before the decree was rendered, the infant heirs of Buggies Whiting, deceased, who had been a share-holder in the company, answered by their guardian ad litem, denying, in á more specific manner than De Wolf had done, the validity of the judgment as' against the corporation, and the existence of any debt to Mallett.
The additional record, which is now brought up, contains at large an exemplification of the proceedings in the action at law, which terminated in the judgment set up in the original bill. An inspection of these proceedings has brought the Court to a very different conclusion in regard to the justice of the decree, from that intimated in the former opinion, delivered when the process and orders in the action at law were not contained in the record. As the case then stood, Mallett appeared to have a judgment against ‘the Hope Distillery Company,’ which he was seeking to revive and enforce against its individual members, by the aid of a Court of Equity. As the case now stands, if he appears to have a judgment at all, it is only against two members of the company — of whom one is a resident ,of the state, and the other is not alleged to have any debt or other
None can be considered as parties to a suit at law or . t ... m chancery, but such as have been served with process, actual or constructive, or such as waive the service of process by appearance in court; and it is the settled rui° °f this Court, to consider the general entries upon the record, stating the appearance and pleadings of the defendants, as referring to those defendants only who have been served with process.
The case before us demonstrates the propriety of this rujc and demands its application. The record of the . _ 7 . . A A , . . •, action at law, which was by petition and summons, sh°ws that it was brought upon a note dated the 1st of October, 1821, and signed — “Hope Distillery Company— Per $imeon Goodwin, Agent.” The summons issued against ‘the Hope Distillery Company,’ and the return °f the officer states it to have been executed on “Simeon S. Goodwin, agent of said Company” and “Buggies Whiting, stock-holder of said Company.” There were other stock-holders, as is shown by the present bill; but there was no further service of process; and it does not in fact appear, in either record, whether the company existed at that time in an organized form, or not. In the suit at law, the company was sued by its corporate name; of course, the same name is kept up in the title of the suit, and the style of the record. But the entries of the appearance and pleading of the defendants by attorney, are in the usual form, and the judgment follows against the defendants, without any thing in its own import, or in that of any previous order or entry, to show that ‘the defendants' were any others than those on whom the summons had been actually executed— unless the style of the record can be construed to enlarge or vary the effect of the entry of appearance, or unless the service of process upon two private corporators can be considered as sufficient service upon the corporation to make it a, defendant, and thus a party to
We come therefore to the question whether the return of the process in this case, shows that the corporation had been summoned. The answer to this question is, in our opinion, obvious. The statute incorporating ‘the Hope Distillery Company’ prescribes no peculiar mode of executing process upon it as a defendant. By the common law, with which the general practice in this country accords, a corporation, unless its charter direct otherwise, is to be summoned by executing process on its Mayor, President, or other head officer (1. Tidd’s Practice, 140) and we know of no law, or rule of practice, which authorizes it to be made a party by service on two private corporators. The corporation, therefore, was not a party to the record, and is not bound by the judgment.
If, as is alleged in the answer of the infant defendants, the corporation was dissolved when the proceedings at law were instituted, that circumstance cannot make the service of process upon two stockholders so operate
The question then arises — to what relief, if any, is he entitled against Goodwin and the heirs of Ruggles Whiting, who are parties to the record and judgment?
He asks, first, to have the judgment revived in his name, as administrator of Z. Mallett, the plaintiff at
But,.second, the .complainant, alleges,- that-an-execution which had been issued, on. the-judgment at law, had been improperly levied upon the'land of James De Wolf, junior, who was not a member of the • company, on the erroneous supposition that it was -the. land .oi J ames De Wolf, senior, who was a member, and who.,is,one of the defendants; and that the amount bid for the land, was credited on the execution; he prays, therefore, that the sale and credit be set aside, to which the purchaser, who was the plaintiff’s agent,- gives -his assent, and this was in .effect done, by decreeing the defendants .to pay the full amount of the judgment, with interest. Should the .Chancellor afford him this relief? . .
In the first place we answer, that the sale is itself void, both because, the land sold was not the property- of James De Wolf, senior, and because if it had .been, there was no judgment against him, and, under these circüm-stances, the return of the officer on the execution, can be set aside or amended, without resorting to a suit in
By the act incorporating ‘the Hope Distillery Company’ (Session Acts of 1816, page 55,) the share-holders are made liable for debts of the corporation in proportion to their interest in the company. From the complainant’s bill, it appears that the stock of the company consisted of twelve shares of five thousand dollars each, of which Goodwin held one, and Whiting four. They were therefore liable personally, as members of the corporation: one of them for one twelfth, and the other for a third part of this debt. But a judgment, which they cannot now reverse, and which was evidently supposed by themselves, and by the plaintiff, to have been rendered against the corporation, has been in fact rendered against them individually, for the whole sum: whereby the liability of each is greatly increased. The question is not merely, whether the Chancellor will withhold his aid from enforcing this exaggerated liability, accidentally incurred, under an erroneous judgment — but as by an accident or mistake of the plaintiff (if not by his wrongful act,) these defendants have, by reason of the credit on the execution, obtained an accidental advantage, which reduces their liability, and in some measure compensates for the former error against them; the question is, whether the Chancellor will interfere, and take from them this advantage, in order to subject them again toa demand greater than they justly owe. We think it would be contrary to the principles and practice of a Court of Equity to do so, and that the plaintiff must be left to free himself from this difficulty as he may.
The same reasoning applies to a similar prayer in the first bill which was filed, if the object of that prayer has not already been effected. We conclude, therefore, that the complainant is entitled to no relief in equity.
Wherefore, the decree of the Circuit Court is reversed, and the cause remanded, with directions to dismiss the complainant’s bill, with costs.