23 Mo. App. 413 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1886
delivered the opinion of the court.
The St. Louis County Railroad Company was a duly organized corporation which, in 1877, as the testimony tended to prove, became insolvent and ceased to do business, when all its property was sold. The defendant was, and still is, the owner of ten shares of the capital stock of the company, of the par value of one hundred dollars per share, of which forty-five dollars remains unpaid, on each share. The plaintiff is owner of six interest coupons of thirty-five dollars each, issued by the company, which were due and payable, respectively, on October 1, 1880, April 1, 1881, October 1, 1880, April 1, 1880, October 1,1879, and April 1,1876. This suit was commenced before a justice of the peace on June 3, 1885, to hold the defendant liable, under Revised Statutes, section 745, as .a holder of unpaid stock, for the debt of a dissolved corporation. On the defendant’s appeal, the plaintiff obtained a judgment in the circuit court for $139.02.
The defence was limitation, and the only question in the case is, whether the statute began to run at the time when the corporation was dissolved, or at the time when the coupons became due and collectible. In the first alternative, the judgment should be for the defendant ; in the second, for the plaintiff.
It is, of course, well understood that the dissolution of a corporation does not imply its lapse into nonentity for every purpose. Means are always provided, or capable of being provided, under the law, for the compulsory collection of its dues in liquidation. There is generally little or no uncertainty about the time when the statute of limitations begins to run, because our statute places it, in all cases of contract, at the date when the right of action accrues. The difficulty in the present case arises from the fact that two separate rights of action upon the same demand against the defendant have accrued at dif
A natural inquiry here may be, for whom are statutes of limitation enacted? One answer is: For the public—having in view the maxim: “ Interest Reipublicae ut sit finis UtiumR But this answer furnishes little light for our inquiry, since the plaintiffs and the defendants are supposed to be alike interested in the public welfare. On several grounds, however, it may be said that, as between the parties to an action, the statute has the plaintiff and his status for its special objects. It operates a restraint upon him, forbidding him to exercise the common right of demanding legal redress, after a certain length of time has passed. The justice of the statute is defended on the ground that the plaintiff by making no demand during a long lapse of time, has virtually admitted his consciousness that he had not a just claim against the defendant. When the statute operates, it destroys in the plaintiff’s hands an inchoate value which, by earlier action, he might have made consiimmate. The argument to be drawn from these and similar considerations is, that the effect of the statute is to be dated from the time when it fastens upon the plaintiff and his rights, in a given cáse. And, as we find that, as to some of the coupons sued on, the plaintiff’s right of action had not accrued five years before the institution of the present suit, by reason of their non-maturity, the restraining influence of the statute can not be brought
On the other hand, something may be said in favor of a different view of the statute and its objects. English and American courts have never ceased to declare that statutes of limitations are statutes of repose. Repose for whom ? Certainly not for the plaintiff in a case. For, if the statute there operates at all, it effects his serious discomfiture. It is the defendant who finds the repose, in the release from the plaintiff’s pursuit. The statute creates a defence, and for whom can that be provided but for the defendant? For the debtor who has paid and discharged his obligation, but who, by the loss of his receipt, or the death of a witness, is deprived of all proof of the fact, the statute fixes a day when he may feel himself forever free from the demand, notwithstanding his loss of the proofs, which were his sole dependence for its defeat. The defendant may claim, too, an identity of interest in the statute with that of the public, since he is peculiarly benefitted by the £ £ end of litigation.”
It thus appears that much maybe said on either side of the question, as it is presented by learned counsel in their briefs. But there is another consideration, wholly apart from all these views, which, as we think, must control the determination of this cause. If there were no joint stock corporation in the case, the weight of the argument might be in favor of the defendant. But it is not now questioned anywhere, that the capital stock of a corporation is a trust fund for the benefit of the corporation’s creditors. When any part of the stock remains unpaid for in a stockholder’s hands, he is the trustee, holding for the objects of the trust so much of the fund. When a person subscribes for stock and leaves the whole or a part unpaid, he takes upon himself, to that extent, a trusteeship which brings him in privity with the creditors, present or future, of the corporation, until all their claims are satisfied, or until he has discharged his obli
With the concurrence of all the judges, the judgment is affirmed.