140 P. 633 | Or. | 1914
delivered the opinion of the court.
The existence of the trust doctrine as applicable to the assets of a corporation which is a “going concern” has been denied by this court: Sabin v. Columbia Fuel Co., 25 Or. 15 (34 Pac. 692, 35 Pac. 854, 42 Am. St. Rep. 756). The rule has been settled by our adjudications that mere insolvency does not of itself convert corporate property into a trust fund; but, when a corporation ceases to transact business and is insolvent, its assets then constitute a trust fund for the payment of the corporate debts without the intervention of a court of equity to administer upon the
“Section 1765, which prohibits payment of dividends by insolvent corporations generally, seems to recognize that,” such “liability is to the corporation, by providing that such liability is to restore the full amount, except in certain cases. Restoration can only be made to the source from which the dividends came. ”
In Skrainka v. Allen, 7 Mo. App. 434, 441, the conclusion reached was based upon a clause of the statute of Missouri which is set forth in the opinion. In that case, the plaintiff, having obtained a judgment against a corporation, caused an execution to be issued and returned nulla bona and thereupon moved for leave to issue execution against a stockholder. It would seem that under the statute of Missouri a judgment creditor of a corporation, upon a motion therefor, might obtain the issuance of an execution against a stockholder for an unpaid subscription of stock: Erskine v. Loewenstein, 82 Mo. 301, 305. In referring in that case to such procedure the court remarks:
“This motion takes the place, under the statutory provision, of the suit in equity, at common law, to reach the assets in the hands of the stockholder.”
The rule announced in Missouri and in Wisconsin in construing statutes of the respective states is not controlling in Oregon, where no enactment regulating the procedure exists.
It may be conceded that, when a corporation is a “going concern,” it is a proper party plaintiff to sue
Such being the case, the plaintiff is not a proper party plaintiff, and the suit should have been instituted by the G-arets on-Gras on Lumber Company, the corporation which it is alleged rendered such service. The judgment is affirmed, except that the action should be dismissed without prejudice, and it is so ordered.
Affirmed: Dismissed, Without Prejudice.