107 F. 849 | 1st Cir. | 1901
This is a suit by assignees in tbe interest of creditors against Lemuel R. Howe, who, it is claimed, was a stockholder in a Maine corporation, and who, it is admitted, had not paid in the full amount of his stock. One important question below was whether the defendant was a stockholder, within the meaning of the statute, and liable for its debj:s. Under the evidence, as shown by the record, we think it was a question for the jury, under instruction, whether Howe was a stockholder under such circumstances as to make him liable under the statute. This court decided, in effect, in Houghton v. Hubbell, 33 C. C. A. 574, 91 Fed. 453, although the stock, without explanation, stood upon the books of the corporation in the name of one who was, in fact, not the owner, that the real owner was liable; the creditors having elected to proceed against him. That decision, however, as we understand it, is not inconsistent with the idea that the record stockholder may also be liable under such circumstances as make him. a stockholder within the meaning of a given statute. The record liability of the stockholder is statutory and for the security of creditors, yet a creditor may waive such statutory liability, and proceed against the real owner under the statute and qn general principles; but it does not necessárily follow, because, the real or equitable owner is liable, that the record stockholder is not liable. Of course, there are many expressions in the books, as in Stanley v. Stanley, 26 Me. 191, to the effect that the record is conclusive as to who are stockholders, but such expressions are subject to qualification and limitation, as suggested in Mudgett v. Horrell, 33 Cal. 25, Ellis v. Marshall, 2 Mass. 269, and Insurance Co. v. Hobart, 2 Cray, 543; for one who never accepts, but refuses to accept, stock in a corporation is not a stockholder, even though the secretary enters his name in the books as such.
The learned judge at the trial term seems to have taken the case from the jury upon the idea that, as Hosford was liable, the defendant, the stockholder of record, was not liable. We think this error, for the reason that two persons may be liable for the same stock, the record holder under the statute, and the real owner under the statute and upon common-law principles, — in one case upon statutory grounds, while not an actual stockholder, because he allows himself to be held out to the world as such; and in the other case on statutory grounds, because he is the actual stockholder. The Bur-rill Case, to which reference was made (86 Me. 72, 29 Atl. 938), is not like the case at bar; for there it appeared that Parsons, the stockholder of record, had no knowdedge of ihe issue of the shares, and never saw the certificates, and that the certificates had been taken by Burrill in Parsons’ name without his knowledge or authority; while in the present case the stock not only stood upon the corporation books in the name of the defendant, under the circumstances disclosed by the record, but the defendant gave a receipt for the stock, and subsequently signed a proxy, where he recites that “I, the undersigned stockholder in the Bangor Pulp & Paper Company, do appoint,” etc., “for me and in my name to vote,” etc., “with