delivered the opinion of the court.
This bill is an ordinary creditor’s bill, the sole object of which is to obtain payment of the complainant’s judgment. It is true it is brought on behalf of the complainant and all other creditors of the corporation who might choose to coifie in and seek relief by it, contributing to the expense of the suit. But no other creditors came in ; and it does not appear that there is any other creditor, unless it be one of the stockholders, who was made a defendant, and who filed a cross-bill which he afterwards dismissed. All the stockholdеrs were not made defendants.
The bill was not a bill seeking to wind up the company. It sought simply payment of a debt out of the unpaid stock subscriptions.
That unpaid stock subscriptions are to be regarded as a fund, which the corporation holds for the payment of its debts, is an undeniable proposition. But the appellants insist that a creditor of an insolvent corporation is not at liberty to proceed against one or more delinquent subscribers to recover the amount of his debt, without an account being taken of other indebtedness, and without bringing in all the stockholders for contribution. They insist, also, that by the terms of the subscriptions for stock made by these appellants they were to pay for the shares set opposite their names respectively, “ as called for by the said company; ” that the company made no calls for more than thirty per cent; that, therefore, this company could not recover the seventy per cent unpaid without making a previous call; and that .a court of equity will not enforсe the contract differently from what was contemplated in the subscription.
These positions, we think, are not supported by the authorities, — certainly not by the more modern ones, — nor are they in harmony with sound reason, when considered with reference tо the facts of this case. The liability of a subscriber for the capital stock of a company is several, and not joint. By his *211 subscription each becomes a several debtor to the company, as much so as if he had given his promissory note for the аmount of- his subscription. At law, certainly, his subscription may be enforced against him without joinder of other subscribers; and in equity his liability does not cease to be several. A creditor’s bill merely subrogates the creditor to the place of the debtor, and garnishes the dеbt 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 bе ascertained, should be made parties, that complete justice may be doné by equalizing the burdens, and in order to prevent a multiplicity of suits. But this is no such case. The most that can be said is that the presence of all the stockholders might be convenient, not that it is necessary. When the only object of a bill is to obtain payment of a judgment against a corporation out of its credits or intangible property, that is, out of its unpaid stock, there is not the same reason for requiring all the stockholders to be made defendants. In such a case no stockholder can be compelled to pay more than he owes.
In
Ogilvie
v.
Knox Insurance Company
(
This case is directly in point, and it does not stand alone. In
Bartlett
v.
Drew
(
So in
Pierce
v.
The Milwaukee Construction Co.
(
In
Marsh
v.
Burroughs
(
The case of
Wood
v.
Dummer
(
The cases of-
Pollard
v.
Bailey
(
*214 We hold, therefore, that the complainant was under' no obligation to make all the stockholders of the bank defendants in his bill. It was not his duty .to marshal tbe assets of the bank, or to adjust the equities between the corporators. In all that he had no interest. The appellants may have had such an interest, and, if so, it was quite in their power to secure its protection. They might have moved for a receiver, or they might have filed a cross-bill, obtained a discovery of the other stockholders, brought them in, and enfоrced contribution from all who had not paid their stock subscriptions. Their equitable right to contribution is not yet lost.
That the appellants are not protected by the fact, if such was the fact, that their subscriptions for stock were payable' “ as called for by the company,” we think is clear. Assuming that such a clause in the subscription meant more than an agreement to pay on demand, and that it contemplated a formal call upon all subscribers to the stock of the company, the subscriptions werе still in the nature of a fund for the payment of the company’s debts, and it was the duty of the company to make the calls whenever the funds were needed for such payment. If they were not made, the officers of the company violated their trust, held both for the stockholders and the company. And it would seem to be singular if the stockholders could protect themselves from paying what they owe by setting up the default of their own agents. But in this case the company went out of business before the complainant obtained his judgment, and it does not appear that since that time it has had any officers who could make the calls. Before that time its president was dead. However this may be, it is well settled that a court of equity may enforce payment of stock subscriptions though there have been no calls for them by the company. In Henry v. Railroad Company (17 Ohio, 187), a suit brought by a judgment creditor of a corporation to enforce payment by its stockholders of their unpaid subscriptions, for which calls had not been made, it was held that when a company ceases to keep up its organization, and abandons all action under the charter, a proceeding at the instance of the creditor becomes indispensable.. It was further said: “ When a company, becoming insolvent, as in this case, aban *215 dons all action under its charter, the original mode of making calls upon the stockholders cannot be pursued. The debt, therefore, from that time must be treated as due without further demand.” This means, of course, as between the debtor and the creditor of the corporation. After all, a company call is but a step in the process of collection, and a court of equity may pursue its own mode of collection, so that no injustice is done to the debtor.
In the English courts a
mandamus
is sometimes awarded to compel thе directors to make the necessary calls.
Queen
v.
The Victoria Park Co.,
1 Ad. & El. n. s. 544;
Queen
v.
Ledgard,
id. 616 ;
The King
v.
Katharine Dock Co.,
4 Barn. & Ad. 360. But this remedy can avail only when there are directors. The remedy in equity is more complete, and it is well recognized.
Ward
v.
The Griswoldville Manufacturing Co.,
In
The Dalton, &c. Railroad Co.
v.
McDaniel
(
In view of these considerations we think none of the assignments of error are sustained.
Pecree affirmed.
