An equitable petition was filed in the superior court of Decatur county by W. M. Blount and J. B. Crawford, as receivers of the Bank of Bainbridge, against H. D. Wilson, as receiver of the Bainbridge Compress Company, and certain named persons alleged to be subscribers to the capital stock of that company. The material allegations of the petition were, in substance, as follows: On July 21, 1890, the Compress Company executed and delivered a promissory note for the principal sum of $2,500, hearing interest, at the rate of 8 per cent, per annum, payable to the Bank, and due November 21 of the same year. On the 16th day of the following month, the Compress Company, with a view to securing the payment of this note, gave to the Bank a mortgage covering certain machinery and other property belonging to the company. It subsequently, however, without the knowledge or consent of the Bank, disposed of the machinery to an Ohio corporation, which had removed the same beyond the limits of the county. At the May term, 1893, of the superior court, plaintiffs, as receivers of the Bank, obtained judgment against the Compress Company for the full amount of principal, interest, and attorneys’ fees due upon the above-mentioned note. Of this amount only $90 had been realized. Aside from the sum remaining due upon this judgment, the Compress Company was indebted to the Bank in the further sum of $375.75 on an open account, suit upon which had been instituted and was pending in the superior court. A proceeding to foreclose the mortgage above referred to had also been brought, but while it was pending
None of the defendants undertook by demurrer to challenge the right of the plaintiffs to thus institute a proceeding independent of that in which Wilson had been appointed receiver, and, upon the sole ground that he had been remiss in his duty, to practically depose him from office and themselves proceed directly against delinquent shareholders. On the contrary, Wilson filed an answer disclosing the amount of assets in his hands as receiver, and assigning reasons for his failure to collect unpaid subscriptions; and such of the defendant stockholders as attempted to make any defense at all joined in an answer to the following effect: Though the “Bank of Bainbridge may have the note and mortgage set out in” plaintiffs’ petition, defendants “deny that they are liable on-same.” At
We gather from the record before us that, during the course of a pending proceeding previously instituted by parties other than the plaintiffs, the court had already appointed a receiver to take control of the affairs of the Compress Company, and had passed an order directing him “to at once proceed to collect any and all assets, rights, and credits in any manner belonging to the corporation.” Presumably, this was done with a view to bringing about an equitable winding up of that company’s affairs and adjusting the equities of all persons concerned. Yet, the plaintiffs in error failed entirely to urge upon Blount and Crawford the propriety of their intervening in that pending cause, but, on the contrary, suffered themselves, without protest, to be forced to trial as defendants to a wholly independent and apparently antagonistic proceeding. This being true, they certainly are not in a situation to invoke any aid at the hands of the court; nor, indeed, to enlist for themselves any marked degree of sympathy. They elected to stand upon their contention that, if hable at ah to account for their unpaid stock subscriptions, the liability of each was limited to his ratable and proportionate part of a sum sufficient to pay off and discharge the claims against the corporation held by the plaintiffs. In other1 words, their position was, not that they were entitled to contribution from shareholders not before the court, but that their liability to the plaintiffs was, as matter of law, thus limited. We think this position whohy untenable. If, as against a judgment creditor who has exhausted his legal remedies, the liability of a shareholder with respect to his unpaid stock subscription be no greater than that above indicated, the doctrine of contribution could have no possible application in this class of cases. As we understand the law, that doctrine is predicated upon the idea that as each shareholder of a corporation is hable for the full amount of his unpaid subscription, he has an equitable right, whenever called upon by a creditor to pay more than his just proportion of a given claim, to enforce contribution from other shareholders who have not been proceeded against. Certainly, in view of the express terms of the charter under which the stockholders of the Compress Company organized,
Judgment affirmed.