41 Neb. 175 | Neb. | 1894
Tbe State Bank of Nebraska at Crete, Nebraska, sued tbe Globe Publishing Company and the stockholders thereof in the district court of Saline county to recover the amount of a promissory note owing by said Globe Publishing Company to the said State Bank. Both the bank and the Globe Publishing Company were domestic corporations, having their principal places of business in said Saline county. The bank had judgment, and the Globe Publishing Company and all stockholders, except two, bring the case here for review.
The liability of the stockholders of the publishing company for the debt due from it to the bank was based on the failure of the publishing company to publish an annual notice of its existing debts, as provided by section 136, chapter 11, General Statutes, 1873, in force at the titne the debt sued for here was contracted. That section is as follows : “ Every corporation hereafter created shall give notice annually in some newspaper printed in the county or counties in which the business is transacted, and in case there is no newspaper printed therein, then in the nearest paper in the state, of the amount of all the existing debts of the corporation, which notice shall be signed by the president and. a majority of the directors; and, if any-corporation .shall fail to do so, all the stockholders of the corporation shall be jointly and severally liable for all debts of the corporation then existing, and for all that shall be contracted before such notice is given.” After this suit was brought, but before judgment Was rendered therein, the legislature repealed this section 136 without á saving clause. The argument of counsel for plaintiffs in error now is that the repeal of said section abated this action. Whether this is true depends upon the nature of the statute' repealed. If it was a statute- contractual in its nature; if the right of action acquired by the bank against the stock
1. A suit pending to enforce a right or remedy conferred solely by statute is abated by the unconditional repeal of such statute, before judgment rendered in such suit. (Bennet v. Hargus, 1 Neb., 419; Knox v. Baldwin, 80 N. Y., 610; Victory Webb Printing & Folding Machine Mfg. Co. v. Beecher, 97 N. Y., 651; Gregory v. German Bank of Denver, 3 Col., 332; Breitung v. Lindauer, 37 Mich., 217; Yeaton v. United States, 5 Cranch [U. S.], 281; Norris v. Crocker, 13 How. [U. S.], 429.)
2. Was this a penal statute? This question must be answered by the authorities. In 1848 the legislature of New York enacted a statute governing manufacturing corporations (ch. 40). Section 12 of that act was as follows: “Every such company shall annually, within twenty days from the first day of January, make a report, which shall be published in some newspaper published in the town, city, or village, or if there be no newspaper published in said town, city, or village, then in some newspaper published nearest the place where the business of said company is carried on, which shall state the amount of capital and of the portion actually paid in and the amount of its existing debts, which report shall be signed by the president and a majority of the trustees and shall • be verified by the oath of the' president or secretary of said company and filed in the office of the clerk of the county where the business of the company shall be carried on; and if any of said company shall fail so to do, all the trustees of the company shall be jointly and severally liable for all the debts of the company then existing and for all that shall be contracted before such report shall be made.’.’ A New York corporation organized under this law failed
Section 15 of chapter 18 of the Revised Statutes of 1868 of the state of Colorado is a copy of section 12 of the New York act. The nature of this section 15 of the Colorado act was before the supreme court of that state in Gregory v. German Bank of Denver, 3 Col., 332, and of that statute that court said:- “This statute is in its nature penal. It prescribes a determinate penalty for neglect of a duty imposed by law upon the trustees of companies organized under our general incorporation act. The amount of the forfeiture is measured by the aggregate debt contracted by the company. The liability is not founded upon “con tract, but arises from misconduct in office.” This case was reaffirmed by the supreme court of Colorado in Larsen v. James, 29 Pac. Rep. [Col.], 183. A statute of Michigan required annual reports of cer
A statute of Connecticut provided that in the case of every corporation, certificates showing their condition should be filed annually by the president and secretary with the town clerk, and that in case of neglect those officers should be liable for all the debts of the corporation contracted during the period of such neglect. The supreme court of that state, construing this statute in Mitchell v. Hotchkiss, 48 Conn., 9, said: “We do not see how it is possible to construe this statute as creating, or attempting to create, any contract relation or duty between the creditors of a corporation and its president. The adoption of such a construction would suggest grave doubts as to the validity of the act which should attempt so arbitrarily to make a debtor out of a stranger to the debt, or, in other words, to • make the debt of one person the debt of another. There was no privy between Hotchkiss and the plaintiffs. They had no transaction with each other, and the former owed the latter no private duty from which a promise might be implied.” This Connecticut statute came before the supreme court of the United States, and its nature was construed by that court in Steam Engine Co. v. Hubbard, 101 U. S., 188, and that court held that the Connecticut statute was penal and must be strictly construed.
The supreme court of Illinois in Diversey v. Smith, 103 Ill., 378, defines a penal statute thus: “A penal statute is an act by which a forfeiture is imposed for transgressing the provisions of the act. It may also be remedial in one part and penal in another. The effect and not the form of the statute is to be considered, and if its object is clearly
Cook, Stock & Stockholders [2d ed.], sec. 223, in discussing the enforcement of the statutory liability of stockholders in the courts of a state other than the one in which said corporation was created, uses this language: “In general, when the courts of one state are asked to enforce the statutory liability of stockholders in a corporation created by another state, two things are to be considered: First —Is the statutory liability itself a contract liability or a mere penalty ? * * * The law is clear that the courts of one state will not enforce penalties imposed by another state. But the usual statutory liability of stockholders is not a penalty. * * * The ordinary statutory liability of stockholders is a contract liability and will be enforced as such by the courts of all the states. A different rule prevails as to the statutory liability of corporate officers for failure to file reports or give certain notices or make certain contracts. Such liability is generally construed to be penal, and will not be enforced by the courts of other states.”
The section of the Nebraska statute under consideration is almost a literal copy of the eighteenth section of the first article of the corporation act of the state of Missouri, approved March 19, 1845, the section of the Missouri law being in the following words: “Every corporation hereafter created shall give notice annually in some newspaper printed in the county where the corporation is established, and in case no paper is printed therein, then in the nearest paper, the amount of all the existing debts of the corporation, which notice shall be signed by the president and a majority of the directors; and if any of the said corporations shall fail so to do, all the stockholders of the corporation shall be jointly and severally liable for all the debts of the company then existing, and for all that shall
Thus far we have been reviewing authorities which show that the Nebraska statute under consideration, and statutes like it, is a penal one. We now direct our attention to the argument of counsel for the defendant in error, and the authorities cited by them, that section 136 of the Nebraska statute is in its nature contractual. In other words, that the right of action given thereby to the creditors of a corporation against its stockholders for the failure of the corporation to publish the annual statement of its indebtedness is a right of action arising by contract and therefore a vested right and one that the legislature could not take away by repealing the statute. It is contended that as sec
Among the authorities relied upon by the eminent counsel for the defendant in error to sustain their argument that the section of the Nebraska statute under consideration was •contractual in its nature is the case of Hawthorn v. Calef, 2 Wall. [U. S.], 10. An examination of that case, how-' ever, discloses that it does not by any means sustain' the •contention of counsel. A statute of Maine passed in;,1836 provided that the shares of the individual stockholders of a
It is conceded by counsel for defendant in error that section 12 of the New York act construed in the cases cited above was and is penal, but it is said that, as that act made the trustees of the corporation liable for not publishing the notice of the corporation’s existing debts, a distinction exists between the nature of that act and section 136 of the Nebraska act, wherein the liability is made to attach to all the stockholders of the corporation. We have reflected much upon this argument and confess our inability to comprehend the distinction which counsel would draw. We have been unable after a patient search to find any decided case or any text-writer supporting the counsel’s argument. It may be that .the directors of a corporation would be liable for fraud or deceit practiced by them in the name of the corporation upon another, and it may be that they would be liable for any damage which another should sustain in dealing with such corporation by the failure of such directors to comply with the law in force governing the corporation! but if such liability exists, it is not a statutory liability, but a common law liability; and in either of the cases supposed the liability of the directors would be measured by the damages sustained. If section 12 of the New York act is penal because it compels the directors to pay the debts of the corporation because they, its managing officers, did not comply with the requirements of the law, it would seem that a statute which makes all the stockholders of a corporation liable for the default of the corporation’s directors would also be penal. If the section of the Nebraska statute under consideration is not a penal one, we are at a loss to .know how the legislature could frame a penal statute. It certainly is not a statute of rewards. True, thepunishment inflicted is pecuniary, but by the provisions of this' statute a stockholder who owns $10 of stock in a corpora-.
But, again, counsel for defendant in error say that the nature of the statute under consideration is no longer an open question in this court, as we have decided that the statute was not penal but contractual. In Howell v. Roberts, 29 Neb., 483, and again in Coy v. Jones, 30 Neb., 798, we did so decide. A somewhat extensive re-examination of the subject, however, constrains us to say that the conclusion reached by us in those cases was wrong and they must be overruled. We did say in those cases that said section 136 of the Nebraska statute was contractual in its nature. We were mistaken. The rule we announced in those cases is not supported by the weight of authority, nor indeed is it supported by any authority that we have been able to find. We conclude, therefore, that said section 136 was a penal statute, and that all rights of action which accrued thereunder to the creditors of a corporation against the
This suit was brought against the Globe Publishing Company and the stockholders thereof jointly. Was the action against the stockholders prematurely brought? We think it was. Cook, Stock & Stockholders, sec. 219, thus lays down the rule: “ Even when not expressly provided by statute, it is the rule, according to the weight of authority, that corporate creditors, before they can proceed against the shareholders upon their statutory liability, must first exhaust their remedy against the corporation and its assets.” We have no doubt but this is the general rule and the better practice, especially in the absence of a statute which authorizes a different procedure; but we are not concerned with what the rule may be in other states and courts. Section 4, article 11, of the constitution provides that “In all cases of claims against corporations and joint stock associations, the exact amount justly due shall be first ascertained, and after the corporate property shall have been exhausted, the original subscribers thereof shall be individually liable to the extent of their unpaid subscription, and the liability for the unpaid subscription shall follow the stock.” The word “ ascertained ” in this provision we take to mean “judicially ascertained; ” and to “judicially ascertain ” the amount due from a corporation to a creditor means to have the finding and judgment or decree of a court as to such amount. Such an ascertainment of a debt due from a corporation could then be ascertained, and ascertained only, within the meaning of this constitution, in a suit brought by a creditor of a corporation against it; not against the stockholders thereof, nor against the stockholders and corporation jointly. The expression in the constitutional provision just quoted above, “that after the corporate property shall have been exhausted,” means exhausted by judicial proceedings; that is, when executions issued on judgment ■ or decrees rendered against corporations shall be returned.
Judgment accordingly.