Libby v. Tobey

82 Me. 397 | Me. | 1890

Foster, J.

This case comes before the court on report. The plaintiff having recovered judgment against the Deer Isle Silver Mining Company for $5,634.69 debt, and $116.10 costs of suit, claims the right to enforce his judgment against this defendant as a stockholder of the corporation by force of R. S., c. 46, §§ 46, 47.

The liability sought to be enforced is a statutory one; and in order to prevail the plaintiff must bring his case within the statute by proving that he has a lawful" and bona fide judgment against the corporation “based upon a claim in tort or contract, or for any penalty” recovered within two years next prior to this action, — that the defendant subscribed for or agreed to take stock in the corporation, and has not paid for the same as defined in § 45, — that the cause of action, upon which his judgment against the corporation was founded, was contracted during the defendant’s ownership of such unpaid stock, — and that the proceedings to obtain this judgment against the corporation were commenced during the defendant’s ownership of such unpaid stock, or within one year after its transfer was recorded on the books of the corporation. Grindle v. Stone, 78 Maine, 176.

That there was a valid judgment in favor of the plaintiff against the corporation, recovered within two years next prior to the commencement of this action, is not in controversy.

*403By tlie certificate of organization, it appears that the corporation was organized in August 1879, with what purported to be a paid up capital of $300,000, divided into shares of the par value of $5 each, and that this defendant subscribed for and agreed to take 2,250 shares. An examination of the evidence satisfies us that payment, for the stock thus subscribed, was not made in cash or in any matter or thing at a bona fide and fair valuation thereof within the purview of § 45.

It appears that the associates voted to purchase the mineral right on Dunliam Point, Deer Isle, for the sum of $240,000, and to issue stock to the several owners for their respective shares.

It becomes material to ascertain how this capital was paid up; whether it was a payment in a “matter or thing at a bona fide and fair valuation thereof.”

The case shows that twenty persons, of whom the defendant was one, joined together for the purpose of purchasing, opening and developing this mineral right, and paid the owner for three fourths of the property $5,000, — or at a valuation of $6,666.67 for the whole. It was this property alone for which the corporation paid $240,000 in its stock at par.

After the organization of the company the land was put in at $240,000, and the owners of three fourths ratably returned 12,000 shares amounting to $60,000 to the corporation as a working capital. Under that arrangement this defendant returned six hundred shares as his proportion, and received a certificate of 1650 shares of paid up stock. The total actual cost to these associates, including $2,500, expended in improving and developing the property, was not over $375 each, or a fraction less than twenty-three cents a share for 1650 shares each.

That the property was not actually worth the sum of $240,000, at the time it was purchased is too evident to require discussion. The price paid, as well as the acts of the purchasers immediately after the organization in voting to sell the capital stock of the company to the amount of $545,000, at fifty cents a share, or at one tenth its par value, — the sale of a considerable portion of the treasury stock within sixty days of the organization at that figure, — the fact that the whole $60,000 of treasury stock was *404sold' at prices ranging from fifty cents to one dollar and fifty cents a share,- — -and the very low figure at which many of the stockholders sold their stock, — is evidence from which we may well infer that the value of $240,000, placed upon this property by the corporation, was not a “bona fide and fair valuation thereof.”

The payment of stock in anything but money will not be regarded as a payment except to the extent of the true value of the property or thing received in lieu of money. R. S., c. 46, § 45. Thomp. on Liability of Stockholders, §§ 127, 201. Boynton v. Hatch, 47 N. Y. 225; Nathan v. Mohawk Ins. Co., 3 Ed. Ch. 215.

The cause of action against the corporation was contracted on the 18th day of November, 1882. On that day the defendant had standing in his name four hundred shares only of the original stock for which he had subscribed, the balance having been transferred by him before that date. He, also, at that time had one thousand shares purchased in the market from Richardson, Hill & Co., of Boston, on March 23, 1882.

The defendant claims that, if liable at all, he is liable only upon this four hundred shares of original stock.

This position we think is correct.

The individual liability of members for the debt of a corporation is a departure from the established rules of law, and is founded solely upon grounds of public policy, depending entirely upon express provisions of statute law. The defendant, if chargeable at all, is chargeable upon a statute liability, as having “subscribed for or agreed to take stock in said corporation,” and who has “not paid for the same.” The contract was not made with him, or on his account. There was no contract express or implied betweendrim and the plaintiff. Such liability is “therefore to be construed strictly, and not extended beyond the limits to which it is plainly carried by such provisions of statute.” Gray v. Coffin, 9 Cush. 192; Erickson v. Nesmith, 4 Allen, 233, 235; Knowlton v. Ackley, 8 Cush. 93, 96.

As early as 1836, the legislature of this state saw fit to provide a remedy in favor of creditors of corporations, whereby the stock*405holders of all corporations were made liable individually for the corporate debts to the amount of their several shares. The history of the numerous and somewhat complicated enactments upon this branch of the law may be found in an opinion by Tenney, C. J., in Milliken v. Whitehouse, 49 Maine, 527, and it is unnecessary to enter upon any extended review of the legislation on this subject here. It is sufficient to say that, up to 1871, the liability existing by general statute (R. S., 1871, e. 46, §§ 24, 26,) had been against the “stockholders,” to the amount of their stock, in case of deficiency of attachable corporate property. But, by the act of 1871, c. 205, the statute in relation to the liability of stockholders in corporations was modified,_ and the word “stockholders” which had existed in previous statutes was omitted, and the remedy therein provided now exists only against persons “who have subscribed for or agreed to take stock in said corporation, and have not paid for the same,” etc.

Referring to this act, Appleton, C. J., in Poor v. Willoughby, 64 Maine, 379, 383, says : “'The language of the act of 1871, c. 205, is clear and explicit. No room is left for any doubt as to its meaning. It was intended to have effect according to its terms. The past liability of stockholders had been fixed by previous legislation. This act. was to fix their liability in future. So far as it modifies, changes, restricts or limits the then existent liability of stockholders, it must be regarded as a repeal of any law, which is thus modified, changed, restricted or limited by its provisions.”

The defendant having sold and transferred all the original stock for which he had subscribed, except the four hundred shares, at the time this cause of action was contracted, can not be held upon the one thousand shares which he had purchased in the market. They were not shares ho had “subscribed for or agreed to lake” within the meaning of the statute. Thames Tunnel Co. v. Shelden, 6 B. & C. 341 (13 E. C. L. 194.) A fair inference to be drarvii from the language of the statute is that of a transaction or contract with the corporation in accepting, subscribing for or agreeing to take stock, and not one between individuals in the purchase of stock in open market. Had the legislature intended *406to make the rejnedy as broad as that contended for by the plaintiff, and thus render the defendant liable as a “stockholder” upon all stock held or owned by him, regardless of the manner in which he may have obtained it, it would have been an easy matter to have so expressed its meaning. Not having done so, it is not the province of the court to extend the remedy beyond the express provisions of positive enactment, especially in cases where the statute is to be construed strictly.

But it is claimed, on the part of the plaintiff, that inasmuch as the defendant was a stockholder in the corporation and knew the circumstances under which the stock was originally issued by the corporation, he was a purchaser with notice, and therefore liable on the thousand shares purchased in the market as well as on the four hundred shares of original stock.

We do not think this doctrine can properly be extended to the facts existing in this case. The authorities relied on in support of this proposition will be found to differ essentially from the case at bar, and relate to cases influenced by some peculiar statute provision differing essentially from that of our own state, or to cases where the certificates for stock were assessable upon their face or by the charter or by-laws of the company, and payable by instalments. In such case the stock, either upon its face, or by the charter or by-laws being liable to assessments, and transferred while the company is solvent, the transferee is substituted for the original subscriber or holder of the stock as to the rights of the company in demanding and collecting assessments. Upton v. Tribilcock, 91 U. S. 45; Pullman v. Upton, 96 U. S. 328; Angell and Ames on Corp. § 534.

The same was true in Seymour v. Sturges, 26 N. Y. 134, where the stock was assessable on its face, or by the by-laws of the corporation ; and in Hartford & New Haven R. R. Co. v. Boorman, 12 Conn. 530, and Ward v. Griswoldville Mfg. Co., 16 Conn. 593, the transferee voluntarily assumed the liabilities of the original stock. So in Mann v. Cooke, 20 Conn. 178, the defendant dealt directly with the corporation, the action being brought by a receiver upon a subscription which was special in its terms, and the case turned partially upon the construction and effect of a statute of the state of New York.

*407Cook on Stock and Stockholders, § 257, lays down no affirmative rule, the discussion there relating to oases where the corporation itself had a right- to enforce calls or assessments on the stockholder, notwithstanding this did not always appear on the face of the certificates.

In the case at bar, the stock was issued by the corporation itself as fully paid stock, and the corporation had no right of assessment or future calls upon the stockholders, and no right of action existed in favor of. the corporation against any stockholder for assessments or calls. Scoville v. Thayer, 105 U. S. 143, 153, 154 ; Cook on Stock and Stockholders, § 88. Whatever, therefore, may be the rule of law governing cases where the stock is assessable on its face, as in Upton v. Tribilcock, supra, and where in such cases, the transferee with notice is personally liable for the unpaid part-value of the stock, it has no application to the case before us, where fully paid stock was issued for property, though the property was put in at an overvaluation. There was no promise to the corporation to pay any deficiency, either express or implied. No obligation could, therefore, be transferred by novation from the original holder of the stock to the transferee.

The defendant being liable on the four hundred shares is liable only for so much as remains unpaid thereon. That would be the difference between the par value of $5, and the amount which the evidence shows he has paid, namely, twenty-three cents per share, amounting to $1,908.

Judgment for plaint,iff for $1,908, with interest thereon from date of writ.

Peters, C. J., Walton, Yxegxn, Libbey and Haskell, JJ., concurred.