— The bill in this case was filed by two policyholders of thp Mobile Life Insurance Company, in behalf of themselves and such other creditors of said company as may make themselves parties- to the cause, and contribute to the costs and expenses thereof. Several of the stockholders of said company were made parties defendant, and the object of the bill was to enforce that additional liability, over and above dues on stock subscriptions, which by section 3 of Art. XIII of the Constitution of 1868, and section 1760 of the Revised Code of 1867, was provided in favor of the creditors of insolvent and dissolved corporations. — McDonnell v. Ala. Gold Life Ins. Co., 86 Ala. 401. Demurrers were interposed to the bill, on the ground that it fails to show that the parties
In Hatch v. Dana, 101 U. S. 205, it was held that a creditor of a corporation, who has exhausted his remedy at law, can, in order to obtain satisfaction of his judgment, proceed in equity against a stockholder to enforce his liability for the amount remaining due upon his subscription, and in such case the other creditors of the company and the other s'ockholders thereof need not be made parties to the suit. In reference to the maintenance of such suit against one or more subscribers, without joining the others, it was said in the opinion: “At law, certainly, the subscription may be enforced against him without joinder of other subscribers; and in equity liis liability does not cease to be several. A creditor’s bill merely subrogates the creditor to the place of the debtor, and garnishes the debt due to the indebted corporation. It does not change the character of the debt attached or garnished. It may be that, if the object of the bill is to wind up the affairs of this corporation, all the shareholders, at least so far as they can be ascertained, should be made parties, that complete justice may be done by equalizing the burdens, and in order to prevent a multiplicity of suits. But this is no such case.” Other decisions might be cited to show that, in a suit brought simply to obtain payment of a debt against a corporation, out of the unpaid stock liability of some of its shareholders, the complainant is under no obligation to bring in all the shareholders as defendants. — Wait on Insolvent Corporations, § 78; 1 Morawetz on Private Corporations, $$ 315; Cook on Stock and Stockholders, § 206, cases cited in note 3.
But a different rule must prevail in the enforcement of the statutory liability above referred to. In Smith v. Huckabee, 53 Ala. 191, this court, held, that that liability could not be asserted in an action at law, or in behalf of one creditor only; that it should be enforced by proceedings in chancery, where all the creditors may come in, and all rights and equities can be.fully adjusted. It was there suggested that, in the enforcement of such a liability, the principle that equality is equity should be applied. The suit is properly brought in behalf of all the creditors, and the object of the bill is really to wind up the affairs of the corporation, for the existence of the statutory liability against the stockholders presupposes the practical dissolution of the corporation (Cent. Ag. & M. Asso. v. Ala. Gold Life Ins. Co., 70 Ala. 120); and the course of the suit is the ascertainment of the claims of creditors, and the satis
Reversed and remanded.