108 So. 359 | Ala. | 1926
In 1916 the Ariton Banking Company and the People's Bank of Ariton were incorporated banking concerns doing business in the town of Ariton. Each of them was capitalized at $25,000, their capital stock consisting of 250 shares of the par value of $100 each. The Ariton Banking Company stock had been paid for in full; of the People's Bank stock 40 per centum remained unpaid. In October of the year mentioned these two banks were consolidated, or, to use the language of the bill, the People's Bank was merged into the Ariton Banking Company. For the purpose of the consolidation or merger the assets of the Ariton Bank were appraised at $35,000; the assets of the People's Bank at $17,500; "but said unpaid 40 per centum of said capital stock of said People's Bank of Ariton did not enter into the appraisement of its assets." The stock of the consolidated bank was placed at 390 shares of the par value of $100 each, of which 260 were issued to the shareholders of the Ariton Bank, 130 to the shareholders of the People's Bank, in lieu of and in full payment for their interests in the older corporations. Complainant (appellant) filed the bill in this cause July 16, 1925, seeking to collect 40 per centum of the subscriptions to the stock of the People's Bank for the benefit of creditors of the consolidated bank, now insolvent and in process of liquidation by complainant according to the statute in such cases made and provided. It is to be inferred that the debts, for the satisfaction of which this collection is sought, were contracted by the Ariton Bank subsequent to the consolidation. The stockholders of the People's Bank are made parties defendant. In the circuit court, in equity, their demurrer to the bill was sustained.
We understand from the averments of the bill that the capital stock of the merging or consolidating corporations was converted into the stock of the consolidated corporation, and thereby the merging or consolidating corporations became one corporation as provided by section 3503 of the Code of 1907, which, as amended by the act of September 30, 1919 (Laws 1919, p. 1108), became section 7038 of the Code of 1923.
Sections 3504, 3505, and 3506 of the Code of 1907 (sections 7040, 7041, and 7042 of the Code of 1923), provided as follows:
"3504. Powers, Duties and Liabilities of. — Consolidated or merger corporations shall possess all the rights, powers, and privileges, and be subject to all the restrictions, disabilities, and duties of each of the consolidating corporations, unless additional powers not inconsistent with the provisions of this chapter, are expressed *485 in the said agreement and acts of consolidation, and unless the powers possessed by the several merging corporations are limited or restricted in said agreement.
"3505. Rights, Privileges, Powers, Franchises, and PropertyVested in Consolidated or Merger Corporations. — Upon the consummation of such merger or consolidation, all and singular, the rights, privileges, powers, franchises, and all property, real, personal, or mixed, and all debts due on any account, as well as for stock subscriptions, and all other things in action belonging to each of the said several corporations, shall be vested in the consolidated corporation; and all property, rights, privileges, powers, and franchises and all and every other interest shall thereafter be as effectually the property of the consolidated corporation, as they were of the respective former corporations, and the title to any real estate by deed or otherwise under the laws of this state, vested in any of such respective former corporations shall vest in the new corporation, and shall not in any way be impaired by reason of such consolidation.
"3506. Rights of Creditors and Liens Preserved. — Rights of creditors and all liens upon the property of any of the said former corporations shall be preserved unimpaired, and the former corporations may be deemed to continue in existence in order to preserve the same; and all debts, liabilities, and duties of each of the said former corporations shall thenceforth attach to the consolidated corporation, and may be enforced against it to the same extent as if said debts, duties, and liabilities had been incurred or contracted by it."
In the original act, from which these sections of the Code were taken, sections 3505 and 3506 were written continuously as one section, and complainant refers to that circumstance as having significance in the pending cause. We shall keep this fact in mind.
The bill avers in effect that the constituent corporations (so for convenience to speak of the original banks) surrendered their stock, and in lieu thereof stock in the consolidated corporation, paid in full, was issued to stockholders in the constituent corporations in proportion to their interest in the assets taken over by the consolidated corporation. Section 3506 secured and conserved the rights of creditors of the constituent corporations. But, as we have noted, complainant does not represent creditors of that class. Unpaid subscriptions to the capital stock of corporations constitute a trust fund for the benefit of corporate creditors. Adams v. Perryman,
Complainant's brief likens the transaction in question to the sale by a stockholder of shares partly paid to a prospective stockholder in the same corporation. But in that case the question arises whether a stockholder may shift his liability for the unpaid balance of his stock subscription to his assignee, and the conditions upon which that may be done are stated in the decisions of this court. Allen v. Montgomery,
Section 3505 of the Code of 1907, supra, provided that upon the consummation of the merger or consolidation of two corporations "all and singular, the rights, privileges, powers, franchises, and all property, real, personal, or mixed, and all debts due on any account, as well as for stock subscriptions * * * shall be vested in the consolidated corporation," and upon this provision of the statute is hung the argument for liability in this cause; but this provision we think, contemplates the case in which the shares of the new corporation are issued for shares of the old, share for share, and must be construed in connection with those provisions of the cognate section 3506, by which the rights of *486 the creditors of the constituent corporations are conserved and made enforceable against the consolidated corporation to the same extent as if incurred or contracted by it. The consolidated corporation comes into existence as a new corporation, the constituent corporations being dissolved, and the rights and liabilities of the new stockholders, except as limited and controlled by the statute, are determined by their relation to the new corporation. This, we think, is the effect of our statute, and this is the effect attributed to like statutes in other jurisdictions. 5 Cook on Corps. (8th Ed.) § 897.
As related to the People's Bank, the operation of consolidation amounted to a reduction of its capital stock. In strict reason and in practical effect the reduction preceded the consolidation. Such reductions are authorized by the Code, section 7003, and the provision is that:
"No such decrease of capital stock shall release or otherwise affect the liability of any stockholders whose shares shall not have been fully paid, for debts of the corporation theretofore contracted."
And the courts hold that:
"If the original subscriptions were not paid in full, corporate creditors who were such before the reduction may disregard the reduction and enforce payment of their debts from such original unpaid subscriptions, as though no reduction had taken place. * * * But the creditors whose debts were contracted subsequently to the reduction can look only to the capital stock as reduced for security. They will be held to have given credit upon the faith of that amount of stock alone." 1 Cook on Corps. (8th Ed.) § 289; Cooper v. Frederick,
The result, in complete consonance with justice and equity, is that the only right or interest of the creditors of the new corporation whose claims accrued after consolidation, as against the individual stockholders of the People's Bank, is that the new stock shall have been honestly paid for in full. The averments of the bill disclose a case in which the consolidated corporation received full value for the stock issued to the stockholders of the People's Bank. Nor is there averment that the transaction thus shown was in any wise affected by fraud or bad faith. We find in the bill, therefore, no sufficient reason for calling the individual defendants to account for their original subscriptions to the stock of the People's Bank, and this disposes of the bill.
We note appellant's citation of Austin State Banking Commissioner v. Duffer (Tex.Civ.App.)
In the brief for appellant it is stated, as the effect of some of our decisions, that, "if a demurrer with several separate grounds is interposed and sustained, an assignment of error merely challenging the ruling sustaining the demurrer, with no separate assignments challenging the ruling as to the separate grounds of demurrer, is too general, does not comply with said rule 1 [Supreme Court Rule 1], and cannot be considered," and for that reason appellant, out of abundance of caution, bases a separate assignment of error on each separate ground of the demurrer filed in the trial court. The cases cited do not sustain the practice. The cases have been misconceived. In Alabama Chemical Co. v. Hall,
The trial court correctly held that there was no equity in appellant's bill. Other questions argued in appellant's brief need not be discussed.
The decree is affirmed.
ANDERSON, C. J., and GARDNER, and MILLER, JJ., concur.