87 N.J. Eq. 615 | N.J. | 1917
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The appellant moved to dismiss the bill for want of equity. His motion w'as denied and he appeals.
The bill is a most extraordinary one. It is a bill filed by a receiver in insolvency of a New York corporation, who wras appointed by our court of chancery, and seeks to establish a stockholder’s liability for stock issued for property purchased, as is said, at a gross overvaluation. We pass over the informal statements contained in the bill, and put upon it the best face possible. The corporation itself is not. made a party. There is nothing to show that a receiver has ever been appointed in New York, the domicile of the corporation. Nothing is averred in the bill which would justify' our courts in appointing a receiver in insolvency of a New York corporation. The draftsman seems to have conceived the notion that under our statute a receiver in insolvency can be appointed for a foreign corporation by the same procedure that is authorized in the case of a New Jersey corporation. We mention these difficulties because they are of so fundamental a character that we ought not to pass them unnoticed and thereby appear to justify what seems by the averments of the bill to have been an unwarranted interference' by our courts in the internal affairs of a foreign corporation. Probably the proceedings for a receiver were ex parbeA and the attention of' the court was never called to the fact that the corporation ■was not a Newr Jersey corporation. The matter is important. The bill seeks to do what can only be done by a receiver in case he possesses all the powers ota statutory receiver in insolvency, and .shows on its face that the utmost powers he could have would
To enforce a stockholder’s liability for unpaid stock issued as' full paid, the receiver can act only in the right of creditors. By the contract between the corporation and the stockholders, the latter have no further obligation with respect thereto, but where stock has been issued for property at an overvaluation, the stockholders may, in a proper case, be held for the deficiency. But their obligation is no greater than the obligation of stockholders whose subscriptions were payable in cash—that is, to pay so much of what is unpaid on the stock as will satisfy the claims of corporate creditors and meet the expenses of winding up its affairs. Cumberland Lumber Co. v. Clinton Hill Lumber Mfg. Co., 57 N. J. Eq. 627-629. In that case we reversed a decree which ordered payment of the whole amount remaining unpaid, and held that only so much should be paid as was necessary to satisfy creditors.
Since this is the limit of the stockholder’s obligation, it follows that the amount must be ascertained by a tribunal which has the power to ascertain the total amount of the debts and the total amount of the assets of the corporation. This cannot be done in a forum where only an ancillary receivership is possible. It must, be done in the forum of the domicile. The bill in the present case, indeed, sets up an attempt to compel creditors to bring in their claims and the entry of an order barring-creditors in the insolvency suit. As far as we know, the only authority for such a proceeding is section 75 of the Corporation act (Comp. Stat. p. 1648); but this can only apply to a New Jersey corporation; our courts cannot force a New York credi-. tor of a New York corporation to submit his claim to our tribunals under penalty of losing all right to participate in the distribution of the assets. It is manifestly quite as necessary to ascertain the total assets of the corporation afe its total liabilities in order to fix the amount needed to pay creditors, and these assets can only be finally ascertained jn the courts of the domicile to which assets may be remitted by courts of other forums acting through ancillary receivers, as in Irwin v. Granite State Provident Association, 56 N. J. Eq. 244.
Again, in order to fix a stockholder’s liability, he must be bound by the proceedings to determine the amount thereof. He cannot be bound without some sort of notice, and it .can rarely happen in the case of a large corporation that all the stockholders are subject to a single jurisdiction, and it is probable that even in the case of a small corporation, some of the stockholders reside in different jurisdictions. That seems to be the present case where the stockholders are only seven in number. For a time this difficulty of subjecting stockholders to the jurisdiction of a single tribunal seemed. insuperable. It was finally settled in Hawkins v. Glenn, 131 U. S. 319, applying the rule of Sanger v. Upton, 91 U. S. 56, that a stockholder is so far an integral part of the corporation that, in the view of the law, he is privy to the proceedings, touching the bod}'' of which he is a member. We have adopted this rule, Cumberland Lumber Co. v. Clinton Hill Lumber Mfg. Co., 57 N. J. Eq. 627, after expressing some doubt as to its soundness in Meley v. Whitaker, Receiver, 61 N. J. Law 602, 604. See, also, Gilson v. Appleby, 79 N. J. Eq. 590. Where the assessment is made in a proceeding at the domicile of the corporation to which the corporation is a party, the stockholder cannot question the propriety or amount of -the assessment; although he may contend in a subsequent action againstjiim personally to collect the assessment that he is not liable at all. Coe v. Armour Fertilizer Works, 237 U. S. 413, 423.
These considerations make it clear that the propriety and amount of an assessment to pay creditors are internal affairs of the corporation with which the courts of another jurisdiction will not intermeddle. Illustrations are to be found in analogous cases of assessments upon members of mutual insurance companies. Condon v. Mutual Reserve Fund Life Association, 89 Md. 99; 42 Atl. Rep. 944; Stockley v. Thomas, 89 Md. 663; 42 Atl. Rep. 766; Swing v. Consolidated Fruit Jar Co., 74 N. J. Law 145.
So far, then, as the bill is to be looked on as a bill to compel an assessment upon stockholders to pay debts, it fails to make out a case. It is equally futile as a bill to compel a single stockholder to pay his individual liability. It is settled, on the clearest basis of reason, that the stockholder is not bound to pay until the assessment is made and he can know how much he has to pay. Scovill v. Thayer, 105 U. S. 143. The court, in Scovill v. Thayer, was dealing with the defence of the statute of limitations. After saying that by the contract between the stockholder and the company, the stock was fully paid, and that no suit could have been maintained by the company to collect on the unpaid stock, and that it was only the right of creditors that made the action maintainable, the court added: “In this case there was no obligation resting on the stockholder to pay at all until some authorized demand in behalf of creditors was.made fox payments. The defendant owed the creditors nothing, and he owed the company nothing, save such unpaid portion of his stock as might be necessary to satisfy the claims of the creditors. Hpon the bankruptcy of the company his obligation was to pay to the assignees, upon demand, such an amount upon his unpaid stock as would be sufficient with the other assets of the company
Following that ruling, the logic and justice of which we do not question, no suit can be maintained against the demurring defendant until the amount of his liability has been ascertained by proceedings in New York. When that liability has been ascertained, it must be enforced in a court of law (Barkalow v. Totten, 53 N. J. Eq. 573; Hood v. McNaughton, 54 N. J. Law 425), unless some element of equity jurisdiction appears, not present in this case as far as the bill shows.
The decree must be reversed and the record remitted to the court of chancery in order that the bill may be dismissed. The defendant is entitled to costs in both courts.