57 N.Y.S. 699 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1899
The plaintiff, as a creditor of the Madison Square Bank, brought this action in behalf of himself and all other creditors similarly situ
When the decision of the Court of Appeals, reversing the order ■of this court granting a new trial and affirming the judgment of the Trial Term dismissing the complaint, was made the judgment of the •Supreme Court, the seventeen defendants who had appealed to the Court of Appeals ceased to be parties to the action. They were no longer connected with it, and the condition of the action then was ■the same as though they had never been made parties. The question presented, therefore, is, can this action, under the facts here presented, be maintained against the remaining stockholders after seventeen of them had finally been discharged from liability? We -do not think it can.
The statute (Laws of 1892, chap. 689, § 52) provides that the ¡stockholders shall be individually responsible equally and ratably, .and not one for another, for all contracts, debts and engagements of ■the corporation to the extent of the amount of their stock therein at the par value thereof, in addition to the amount invested in such ■shares.' The manifest purpose of the statute is to provide a fund 'by contribution from all the stockholders, out of which all the creditors of the corporation are to be paid. To create this fund an
And the Court of Appeals, when the present case was last before it, approved the principle announced in the Marshall Case (supra), and the rule there laid down governing the liability of stockholders.. Judge Haight, in delivering the opinion of the court, said: “It-was evidently not intended by the provisions of this statute that one-creditor should be preferred and paid to the detriment of other creditors, but that the stockholders should be responsible equally and ratably for all of the debts of the corporation to the extent of their capital stock at par value. In other words, they were te
When the motion of the petitioners was made, which resulted in the order appealed from, seventeen of the stockholders of the MMison Square Bank, as we have already seen, were not, and could not-be made, parties to this action. The complaint had been dismissed as to them, but their liability to contribute had not been extinguished.. Had the motion therefor been granted, it would not have benefited the petitioners, because they could not have maintained the aetion. against the other defendants.
It follows that the order was right and must be affirmed, with ten. dollars costs and disbursements.
Van Brunt, P. J., Barrett, Rumsey and Patterson, JJ., concurred.
Order affirmed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements.