30 Minn. 173 | Minn. | 1883
This plaintiff recovered a judgment against the Meriden Mill Company, a manufacturing corporation, upon a debt
We are required to determine whether this action can be maintained, or whether the only remedy of the plaintiff to enforce the personal liability of the defendant for the debt of the corporation is an action in the nature of a suit in equity against all of the stockholders, and in which all of the creditors should be joined, or in which the plaintiff should prosecute in behalf of himself and of the other creditors. In the pleadings it is not alleged that the Meriden Mill Company was organized for manufacturing purposes; but this is found as a fact by the court, and in the argument of the question under consideration in this court counsel treated it as a fact, and we are not asked to regard the omission of the allegation in the pleadings. Hence we treat the case as though such fact had been alleged.
The law creating and defining the personal liability of stockholders in a maufacturing corporation for the corporate debts is as follows: “Each stockholder, in any corporation heretofore or hereafter formed or organized under any of the laws of this state for the purpose of carrying on any kind of manufacturing or mechanical business, shall be liable to the amount of stock held or owned by him for corporate
The other statute relating to the remedy for enforcing the personal liability of stockholders, and which was in existence long prior t© the passage of the act of 1878, extending such liability to manufacturing
The judgment is reversed, and the cause remanded to the district court for such further proceedings therein as may be directed by that court.
Gillillan, O. J., because of illness, took no part in this case.