42 Minn. 327 | Minn. | 1890
This action was brought upon a debt of the defendant company, a corporation organized under the laws of Dakota territory, and against the other defendants, citizens of this state, as stockholders, to obtain judgment against the company for the amount of the debt, and against the other defendants for the respective amounts alleged to be due and unpaid on the stock held by them, so far as necessary to satisfy the judgment against the corporation. To dispose of certain preliminary questions raised by the defendants, it may be stated at the outset that it is elementary law that, where a person becomes a stockholder in a corporation organized under the laws of a foreign state, he must be held to contract with reference to ,all of the laws of the state .under which the corporation is organized and which enter into its constitution; and the extent of his individual liability as a shareholder to the creditors of the company must be determined by the laws of that state, not because such laws are in force in this state, but because he has voluntarily agreed to the terms of the company’s constitution. It is equally clear, upon both principle and authority, that this liability may be enforced by creditors wherever they can obtain jurisdiction of the necessary parties. This does not depend upon any principle of comity, but upon the right to enforce in another jurisdiction a contract validly entered into. The remedy, however, does not enter into the contract itself;
That the remedy resorted to by plaintiff in this case is a proper one is well settled. Merchants’ Nat. Bank v. Bailey Mfg. Co., 34 Minn. 323, (25 N. W. Rep. 639.) Upon the trial the judge considered it to be one triable by the court, but, on his own motion, submitted a specific question of fact to a jury; but subsequently, considering the verdict as immaterial, he proceeded without regard to it, and found the facts upon all the issues in the case. As neither party claims anything from this special finding of the jury; and as there is no exception which raises the question whether the action was triable by the court or by a jury, the whole case is reduced to the single question whether the conclusions of law are justified by the findings of fact.
Section 413 of the Civil Code of Dakota provides that “each stockholder of a corporation is individually and personally liable for the ¡ debts of the corporation to the extent of the amount that is unpaid! upon the stock held by him.” This is but declaratory of the commons law.
The findings of fact, so far as here material, are, in substance, as follows: Prior to November 13, 1886, there had been organized, and were at that date in existence, under the laws of Dakota, two mining corporations, viz., the Gustin Belt Gold Mining- Company, and the Minerva Mining Company, of the latter of which the plaintiff, a national banking association of Deadwood, Dak. was a creditor. On the date named the defendant corporation -was organized for the purpose and with intention of consolidating the other two ■companies, acquiring their property, and with the property so acquired carrying on a general mining business. “At the time of the organization of the defendant company, and as the scheme on which the same was based, it was agreed by the parties so incorporating, and by those representing and having authority to act for the two existing companies, that all the mines and mining property of such
Returning, now, to the subsequent management of the affairs of the defendant company, the board of directors, pursuant to the scheme of organization, offered for sale in the open market the 150,000 shares remaining in the treasury, as fully paid-up stock, and some of it was, bought as such by the other defendants in good faith, for a price ex-1 eeeding its fair market value, (but not exceeding one dollar per share,) j believing it to be fully paid-up stock. This is called in the findings ! “Treasury Stock.” The holders of the old company stock also placed their stock in the market, some of which the defendants also bought, under like circumstances and in the same belief. In March, 1887, the board of directors, pursuant to a resolution adopted by them, dis-i tributed pro rata among the individual shareholders all the stock remaining unsold in the treasury. Of this the individual defendants received their respective shares, for which they paid nothing. This! is called in the findings “Pro rate Stock.” The court also finds that none of such defendants ever contracted, promised, or in any manner agreed, or intended to contract, promise, or agree, to pay, on account of such stock, any other or different or greater sum or consideration, unless the law would impose or imply such promise, contract, or agreement from the foregoing facts. The holdings of the defendants consist, in part, of old company stock, in part of treasury stock, and in part of prorate stock.
The general proposition advanced by plaintiff cannot be controverted, but the principle upon which this trust in favor of creditors rests and is administered' must not be overlooked. The whole doctrine that the capital stock of corporations is a trust fund for the pay-, ment of creditors rests upon the equitable consideration that the distribution of the capital among stockholders without making adequate provision for the payment of debts, or the issue of fictitiously paid-up stock, is a fraud upon creditors who contract with the corporation in reliance upon its capital remaining intact, or in reliance upon the |
These views effectually dispose of the question of the liability of the defendants, at ieast on account of their old company and treasury stock. We think it also logically follows from what we have said that the defendants are not liable to the plaintiff upon their
Judgment affirmed.
Note. A motion for a reargument of this case was denied February 5, 1890.