46 Ky. 556 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1847
delivered the opinion of the Court. —
Bridges having an unsatisfied judgment against the Railroad Company, upon which an execution had been returned no property, brought this suit in Chancery, to obtain satisfaction of his judgment, making various individuals defendants, alledging that some of them were indebted to the company on account of the reception of illegal dividends, others on account of stock subscribed,, and that others had acted as Directors and Managers of the affairs of the company, and by declaring a distribution of the profits, when no profits existed, had by their illegal management of a fund set apart by the charter for the payment of the debts, of which they had the control,
The individuals who acted as Directors at the time the dividends were made, rely in their defence on the followinggrounds: First, that there were nett profits to divide, and consequently the declaration of the dividends was legal, and authorized by the charter.
Secondly, if there were no profits to divide among the stockholders, that in declaring the dividends they acted in good faith, under a mistaken conception it may be of what constituted profits, and without a full knowledge of the actual state of the affairs of the company, having-been mislead by an incorrect exposition of its condition presented by the officer regularly appointed and authorized under the charter to keep its accounts, but without any wrongful intention on their part, and that therefore they are not individually responsible.
In the third place, they plead and rely upon the statute of limitations.
Lastly, they aver that other suits, had been brought by the company’s creditors, previous to the institution of this one, for the recovery of various demands, exceeding the whole amount of the dividends in controversy, and that the suits so brought will exhaust the whole fund, and leave nothing for the complainant.
This case presents substantially the same facts that were contained in the case of Gratz vs Redd, (4 B. Monroe, 178.) The Court in that case decided that there were no nett profits at the time the dividends were made. For the reasons there assigned, which it is now unnecessary to recapitulate, we entertain the same opinion. This point in the defence must therefore be regarded as untenable, and not open for further debate or discussion.
The liability of the Directors to ^ the creditors of the company, on account of having misapplied this fund, if not expressly adjudged, was intimated in that opinion. The order directing the payment of these dividends out of the trust fund, was deemed illegal on the part of the Directors who concurred in the act, and Gratz, one of the Directory who concurred, being also a stockholder, and having received the money, was held accountable for
It is contended that the statute can have no operation in this case, for various reasons. In the first place, it is argued that the Directory were trustees, bolding and managing the fund misapplied for the benefit of the creditors, and that in cases of trust, the statute cannot be relied
In the case of the Bank of the United States vs Dallam, &c. (4 Dana, 574,) it was decided that the statute of limitations applies to only such actionsof debt as are ■founded on contracts in fact, and not to such obligations as are imposed either expressly or constructively, by ■mere law. On the strength of that decision it is contended that the obligation in this case on the Directors, was imposed by the charter; that if a suit at law had been brought against them they could not have relied upon the statute of limitations, and having been sued in chancery they should not be permitted to avail themselves of it. That decision was made upon the particular phraseology of the statute of limitations, which by its language, is ■made to apply only to such actions of debt as are ‘ ‘grounded upon any lending or contract without specialty.” By the statute which was the foundation of the suit in that case, it was provided that the estate of every shareholder should be liable for the payment of all demands contracted by the corporation, upon the failure of the incorporate ■funds to discharge the same. The statute imposed a direct liability, to enforce which at law, an action of debt was the appropriate remedy.
In this case the statute imposes no personal liability apon the Directors for the payment of the debts of the company. Their liability, if any exist, results from their ©wn wrongful act, and the appropriate remedy at law against them, would be, if they are liable at law, not debt, which could not be maintained, but an action on the case, against which the statute of limitations can always be relied upon, so that there is an essential difference, both as it regards the foundation of the liability and the appropriate action at law, between that case and this one.
•It is, however, contended thatihe statute of limitations has no application where a fraud has been perpetrated or a mistake exists, until a discovery is made of the-commission of the one or the existance of the other.. The exemption from the operation of th-e statute, has some, times been limited to cases of fraud only. But according to the decisions of this Court in Crane vs Prather, (4 J. J. Marshall, 75,) and Frankfort Bank vs Markley, (1 Dana, 373,) the statute does not apply where either fraud or mistake exists, until their existance is discovered. As the Directors were not guilty of fraud, but committed a mistake in distributing the fund, wha't effectps thereby produced upon the application of the statute in their favor? When the existance of a mistake is said to relieve the remedy for the redress of the injury occasioned by the mistake from the effect of the statute, what kind of a mistake is contemplated ? Is it not a mistake made by the complaining party, under which he labois, which has-worked him an injury, and to redress which he cannot be said to have a cause of action until its ex-istance is discovered ?
The mistake relied upon in this instance is of a different character. If it can be regarded as having the effect ascribed to-it, still the party who seeks to shelter himself from the operation of the statute under such an excuse, must show that by the exercise of that vigilance, which the law requires on the part of every creditor, he could not have made an earlier discovery of the matter relied upon. Now it is apparent, that by the proceedings on the part of the company in the fall of the year 1837, the report
It is very evident that the liability of the Directors cannot, if they be liable at all, exceed the amount of the fund improvidently distributed by them, and that if they should have to pay the amount of that fund to the creditors, they would in equity, be entitled to reclaim it for their indemnity, from the stockholders who had received it. Now the right of the stockholders to rely upon the statute of limitations against any suit brought to reclaim these dividends is unquestionable. Indeed it may well be doubted whether they would be liable to any proceeding for this purpose, on the part of the Directors, except an action of assumpsit for money had and received, and whether proceeded against by the creditors or the Directors, it is perfectly evident that they might avail themselves of the limitation to defeat a recovery. Great injustice would then be done the Directors, if the statute of limitations would not operate in their favor when sued for this fund, but would operate against them when a suit was brought by them to have it refunded. The hardship and injustice appear more manifest when it is recollected that their liability, if it exists at all, arises from a mere error, and not from any wilful or fraudulent misconduct.
We have, therefore, come to the conclusion that the Directors have a right to rely upon the statute of limitations in this case, and that its effect is to discharge them from all personal liability to the complainant, more than five years having elapsed from the time the action of tho Directors in relation to these dividends was publicly
But as the decree of the Chancellor is against some of the stockholders for the dividends received by them, as well as against those persons who acted as Directors when such dividends were declared, and as other creditors are alledged to have a prior lien on this fund in the hands of the stockholders, by having brought suits to reach it, before the commencement of this suit by the complainant, and such creditors having been made defendants, and the demand of the Northern Bank, the President, Directors &. Co. of said Bank being one of the said creditors, having been by the decree postponed to the complainant’s demand, we are next led to enquire into the propriety of the action of the Chancellor in refusing to set aside the order taking the complainant’s amended bill for confessed, and to permit the answers of the defendants to be filed. On the 15th of October, 1844, the amended bill was filed making the complainants in those prior suits defendants. Process on this amended bill was executed in November following. The cause was set for trial on the 13th of December of the same year; was heard on the 17th, and the decree rendered on the 20th of the same month. On the 3d day of January, 1845, during the same term, the Northern Bank and other defendants, made a motion to file answers to the amended bill, which answers were then offered. They filed in support of their motion, the affidavit of M. C. Johnson, their counsel. He states in his affidavit that he was employed by the defendants, in the month of November, immediately after the service of process upon them, to file their answer. That he forthwith sent for a copy of the amended bill, which was transmitted to him. That he was compelled to go to Cincinnati on business, and on his return had to attend the Federal Court at Frankfort, and the Fayette Circuit Court having had a chancery and criminal term, which had been continued from time to time, until the 23d of December, he had been almost
The decree is also against Robert Wickliffe, and the question occurs, whether or not there is any error in it, so far as he is-concerned. The complainant having filed an amended bill during the progress of the cause, requiring the President and Directors of the Railroad Company to answer and set forth the stockholders, if any, who had subscribed for stock- and bad failed to pay the amount subscribed ; the President of the company in pursuance of that cal-1-upon- him-, filed an answer specifying various individuals who had subscribed for stock, and having failed to pay the same, it had been- forfeited for sack
Wherefore, the decree of the Chancellor is reversed, and cause remanded for further proceedings in conformity with this opinion.