40 A. 341 | R.I. | 1898
The declaration sets out that the plaintiff is a creditor of the Commonwealth Loan and Trust Company, a corporation under the laws of Kansas, upon a judgment of the U.S. District Court for the district of Kansas; that execution issued on said judgment, which has been returned unsatisfied; that the defendant holds ten shares of the stock of said company, of the par value of one hundred dollars each; that he owes the plaintiff the sum of one thousand dollars under the laws of Kansas, which provide that execution for an amount equal to his stock may issue against a stockholder, when property of the corporation cannot be found whereon to levy an execution against the corporation, or that the plaintiff may proceed by action to charge the stockholder; that by the constitution of Kansas, and by decisions of its Supreme Court, the liability of the stockholder is contractual, several, and transitory; and that, having been so decided, under the provisions of the constitution of the United States an action on such liability may be had in this State. Art. 12, § 2, of the constitution of Kansas; Art. IV, Chap. 23, Par. 1192, of the Kansas statutes, and the decisions of the Supreme Court of Kansas in Howell v. Manglesdorf,
The defendant demurs to the declaration.
The plaintiff does not claim that a purely statutory liability *468 in one State is a cause of action in another State, but that when it is of a contractual nature, or of a kind adapted to the lexfori, it is a cause of action. Accordingly it seeks to bring this case within the contractual class, and its proposition is this:
The law is construed in Kansas to constitute a contract; full faith and credit must be given to this construction, as a judicial proceeding, in other States; hence the plaintiff is entitled to enforce, in this State, the liability of a stockholder in a Kansas corporation, as on a contract.
The argument is pressed with ability and plausibility, but we are not able to see that it is applicable to this case. The declaration does not aver that the defendant has made a contract, nor that the law under which the corporation exists has made him a contracting party, but that an opinion of the Supreme Court of Kansas says that the relation between a stockholder and a corporation creditor is that of a contract.
The provision of the federal constitution relates to statutes, judgments, and decrees. These are the things which are to have full faith and credit in the several States. Opinions of courts are not judgments; and although a court, in the interpretation of the statutes of its own State, will be followed by other courts, there is no rule of comity or law that a court should be followed when its opinion is given simply upon its interpretation of general legal principles. Still less would an opinion be binding when it is not a decision, but merely adictum. It does not appear to us that the opinion of the Supreme Court of Kansas, which is relied on in this case on the matter of contract, was, as to that question, anything more than a dictum. Howell v. Manglesdorf is the leading case. But the question to be decided was whether execution could be ordered, against a non-resident stockholder, upon a notice served outside of the State; and the court said that it could not. Incidentally the court said that the liability was statutory and in the nature of a guaranty. But this was not a question in the case, nor was the statement one which applied to any interpretation of the statute involved in the question at issue. It was only a remark upon the general *469
nature of the liability, in connection with the statement that it was independent of that of the company; and at the close of the opinion the dictum is added that an action may be brought in any State where service can be made. Abbey v. Dry Goods Co.,
We come, then, to the question whether we can construe the statute of Kansas to create a contractual relation. However much the provisions which make a stockholder liable for debts of a corporation may differ in the several States, they are essentially the same in principle. They declare a liability and provide for its enforcement. In this respect the statute of Kansas is like our statute, which makes stockholders of manufacturing corporations liable for corporate debts until the capital stock is paid in and a certificate filed. In Sayles v.Bates,
We are aware that the greater number of cases call the liability a contract, and, undoubtedly, the relation of a stockholder to a corporation has certain equitable features both of a contract and a guaranty; but we think it much more accurate to say that the liability is a statutory liability simply, *471
incidental to the ownership of stock, than to say that it is a contract. In Rice v. Hosiery Co.,
As this view is so clearly founded in reason, and as this court has already decided, in Sayles v. Bates, supra, that the liability is not a contract, we do not feel called upon to change that decision, even though the majority of courts may hold the other way.
It follows, therefore, that the declaration does not state a contract under the law of Kansas, as construed by the decisions of the Supreme Court of that State to which we have been referred, nor by our own construction of it.
But a statutory liability may sometimes be prosecuted in another State, and the question comes whether the liability here set out can be so prosecuted. The rule adopted by this court, inO'Reilly v. N.Y.R.R. Co.,
We do not think that the declaration before us states a case within this rule.
Under Gen. Laws R.I. cap. 178, § 9, stockholders of a bank are made liable for its debts, and under cap. 180, liabilities are imposed upon stockholders of manufacturing corporations. But the declaration does not aver that the Commonwealth Loan and Trust Company was either of these. If not, this action seeks to enforce a liability against a stockholder which is not enforceable under our law. The statutes of a State do not operate beyond its own limits, and comity between States does not require that one State should enforce the statutory *472
provisions of another State which are contrary to the policy of its own laws. New Haven Horse Nail Co. v. Linden Spring Co.,
A recent case, contra, is Guerney v. Moore, 32 S.W. Rep. (Mo.) 1132.
Our conclusion is that the demurrer must be sustained.