12 Mo. App. 148 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1882
delivered the opinion of the court.
This was a proceeding by motion in the St. Louis Circuit Court against the appellant, Britton A. Hill, as a stockholder in the defendant corporation, for an alleged balance of unpaid stock, under section 736 of the Revised Statutes of 1879 (p. 121). Adopting the clear and accurate statement of the appellant, it appears that on the hearing of the motion the plaintiff offered evidence tending to show that the defendant corporation was chartered by the special and
That on the 20th of July, 1866, the defendant Hill became a subscriber for sixty-four shares of the stock of the corporation, of the par value of $100 a share, and paid up twenty-five per cent thereof in cash on subscription, and gave his stock-notes for the balance thereof, one dated the 11th of July, and three dated the 20th of July, 1866, payable on demand and subject to calls for instalments on notice when required ; and that prior to the twentieth day of January, 1871, said defendant had made further payments in cash to the amount of $2,400, including all.
That on said 20th of January, 1871, the capital stock of the defendant corporation was reduced to $100,000; and that the defendant Hill’s shares were reduced to thirty-seven shares of $100 a share, at par value, in place of the sixty-four shares by him subscribed, and that after such reduction he made further payments thereon in cash to the amount of $1,110, on and prior to the 27th of February, 1872, making in all $3,510 paid, leaving, according to the appellant’s view of the evidence, a balance of $190 on his thirty-seven shares, at that date.
That, in 1872, the corporation ceased doing business, reinsured its risks, and proceeded to wind up its affairs; and that after that date a further call was made on the defendant Hill, which he refused to pay, saying that the cor
That the reduction was such (as testified by Mr. Conroy, attorne3r for the corporation), that “the capital stock of the company was reduced to $100,000, with twelve and one-half per cent paid up, and that the subscriptions were equalized on this basis, which left the defendant thirty-seven shares.”
That the plaintiff obtained judgment against the defendant corporation on the 9th of May, 1878, for $5,653.80, and costs, and had execution thereon returned nulla bona on the 15th of February, 1879.
At the close of the plaintiffs’ case, the defendant Hill asked the following instructions, which were refused, and exceptions taken: —
“ 1. The court declares the law to be, that defendant’s liability as a subscriber to the capital stock of the defendant in the suit, on which this motion is based, ceased by limitation before this motion was filed.
“2. The court declares the law to be, that under the evidence in this case the defendant had paid for all stock subscribed by him in the Excelsior Insurance Company, the defendant in the principal suit, on which this motion is based, before said motion was filed.”
The defendant then testified in his own behalf, that he had made the payments shown him by the plaintiff: that he had always understood that when the reduction of the stock was made in 1870, to $100,000, the prior payments made by the shareholders were to be, and were, applied by the company as made upon the reduced stockand that on that theory he had paid for his stock in full in cash, less about $190.
He also testified, that in 1872, when the company concluded to quit taking risks, he was employed by the company to prepare a bill in equity to close its affairs, and that, with considerable labor and time, he prepared such a bill, making all its stockholders parties ; that in preparing this
Ho also testified that the notes offered in evidence by the plaintiff, as given by him to the company, were given in payment for his subscription to its stock, and were so accepted, and that he paid all assessments whenever official notice was given him by the company; but that he never presented any bill, or made any claim against the company, for his services. It does not appear that the company ever •sued him for any balance of stock thereafter.
And thereupon the court, after advisement, found that the defendant was, aud is, a stockholder in such corporation, owning thirty-seven shares of stock of the par value of $100 each, and that the unpaid balance on said shares is $2,127.50, and that he is liable to the execution of the plaintiff in this amount; and ordered execution for said sum and costs.
Thereupon the defendant Hill filed his motion for a new trial, for the reasons therein specified, covering all the points intended to be raised here, which motion was overruled, and an exception taken ; and the case is brought up by appeal.
The following questions are raised on this record : —
1. The respondent directs attention to the fact that the motion upon which this proceeding is based is not incorporated into the bill of exceptions ; and he therefore takes the position that there is nothing for this court to pass upon. It is true that a motion in a case is no part of the record proper, and that whenever the terms of a motion become
2. The next point is made by the appellant, and it is, that the stockholders of this company are, by the terms of its. charter, exempt from this summary proceeding by motion. Recurring to the statement of facts, it will be perceived that the corporation was created by a special charter passed February 9, 1859. ' Sess. Acts 1859, p. 74. Section 1 of this act provided : “ That an insurance company be, and is hereby, established in the city of St. Louis, to be known by the name and style of the ‘ Excelsior Insurance Company,’ the stockholders of which are hereby declared a body corporate and politic, with the same amount of capital stock and period of existence, and with the same rights, privileges, and restrictions as were conferred upon the Washington Insurance Company of St. Louis by an act of the general assembly of the state of Missouri, approved March 3, 1857, with the exception of so much of section 8 of said act as declares the same a public act and exempts said corporation from the operation of section 18 of Article I. of the act entitled ‘ An act concerning corporations,’ approved November 23, 1855.”
The provision here referred to in the charter of the Washington Insurance Company is as follows, so far as material: “The corporation established by this act shall
The provisions of the act of November 23, 1855, concerning corporations, here referred to, from the terms of which the Excelsior Insurance Company was thus exempted, were embodied in the Revised Statutes of 1855, and, so far as material, were as follows : —
‘ ‘ The charter of every corporation that shall hereafter be granted by the legislature, shall be subject to alteration, suspension, and repeal, in the discretion of the legislature.” Rev. Stats. 1855, chap. 34, sect. 7.
“ In all corporations hereafter created by.the legislature, unless otherwise specified in their charter, in case of deficiency of corporate property or estate liable to execution, the individual property rights and credits of every member of the co-partnership, or body politic, having a share or shares therein, shall be liable to be taken on execution, to an additional amount equal to that of the amount of his stock, and no more, for all debts of the corporation contracted during his ownership of such stock; and such liability shall continue, notwithstanding any subsequent transfer of such stock, for the term of one year after the record of the transfer thereof on the books of the corporation, and for the term of six months after judgment recovered against such corporation, in any suit commenced within the year aforesaid : Provided, that in every such case, the officer holding the execution shall first ascertain and certify upon such execution, that he cannot find corporate property or estate.” Rev. Stats. 1855, chap. 34, sect. 13.
“ In such case, the officer may cause the property of such stockholder to "be levied upon, by execution, in the same manner as if the same were against him individually, after*158 giving him forty-eight hours’ previous notice of his intention, and the amount of tlie debt or deficiency, if he reside within the county; or, if not within the county, to his agent if he have any within the county; otherwise to the clerk or cashier, or some other officer of the corporation, unless such stockholder, his agent, or the clerk, or other officer, on demand and notice as aforesaid, shall disclose and show to the execution creditor, or the said officer, corporate property or estate, subject to execution, sufficient to satisfy said execution and all fees.” Rev. Stats. 1855, chap. 34, sect. 14.
“ Such creditor, after demand and notice, as mentioned in the preceding section, at his election, may have an action against any such stockholder or stockholders, on whom such demand and notice may have been served, jointly or severally, or so many of them as he may elect, to recover of him, or them, individually, the amount of his execution and costs, or of the deficiency as aforesaid, not exceeding the amount of the stock held by such stockholder or stockholders.” Rev. Stats. 1855, chap. 34, sect. 15.
It will be perceived that this statute falls within that class of statutes which create a liability ,and prescribe a remedy for its enforcement. It created what was known in this state as a “ double liability,” and prescribed a remedy to enforce it. It related solely to this superadded liability. It had no reference to what may be called the stockholder’s common-law liability — the liability which he assumes by contract, and which is generally worked out for the benefit of the creditors of the corporation by the processes furnished by courts of equity. Irrespective of this statute, every stockholder in the Excelsior Insurance Company stood liable to pay the amount which he had subscribed to the capital stock of the company, and in the event of the insolvency of the company, he stood liable to pay it to a receiver, to an assignee, or other trustee representing the creditors. It is unnecessary to cite authorities to this proposition. It has been constantly recognized by
What, then, is the effect upon this liability, of the statute of 1879, under which the present proceeding is instituted? Does it operate to impose on the defendant a more onerous liability than that under which he stood by virtue of the charter of the company ? Did it change any rule of evidence, so as to render it possible to charge him with liability upon a smaller quantum or lower grade of evidence than would have been necessary before? In short, did it come within any of the definitions of a retrospective law, or a law impairing the obligation of contracts ? Or was it a law affecting merely the remedy — the mode of procedure to which a creditor of the corporation might resort, in order to enforce the liability which the defendant had assumed by his contract of subscription?
The statute would seem to have no other effect than to change the creditors’ remedy from a protracted and expensive suit in equity, in which all the shareholders, so far as practicable, would have to be made parties, in which all the creditors would be beneficiaries, and in which the whole fund might be eaten up with the costs, to a direct, informal, and inexpensive proceeding against any stockholder whom the creditor might chance to find who had not paid into the capital stock of the debtor corporation the amount which he had agreed to pay in his contract of subscription. We cannot see wherein the liability of the stockholder is made more onerous, by the remedy afforded by the Devised Statutes, although it is reached and enforced more quickly, and with less expense to the creditor.
The learned counsel for the defendant suggests that his liability is rendered more onerous in this, that, indepen
But if the case of Andrews v. Callender (supra) were to be regarded as sound, it would still not be an authority for the position here contended for; and for the very reason on which that case was decided, that the liability there in question was a statutory liability, while here we are dealing only Avit-h the liability which the principles of equity attach to the subscriber’s contract. No reason has been suggested, and we can see none in the nature of things, why the giving by the legislature of the direct and. inexpensive remedy by motion should be construed to deprive the shareholder thus proceeded against of his right of contribution against his fellow-shareholders. The only change Avhich we can perceive in the nature of the remedy is this : under the proceeding in equity, the labor, delay, and perhaps the expense of securing to shareholders the equalization of their burdens as among themselves, falls upon the moving creditor, who is not benefited by it; Avhereas, under the statutory remedy, it falls on the shareholder, who is benefited '
The question thus seems clear upon principle; but there are not wanting authorities in support of the conclusion at which we have arrived. The cases of Stanley v. Stanley (26 Me. 191), and Marcy v. Clark (17 Mass. 334), which hold that it is competent for the legislature to pass a law making the private property of the stockholders of existing corporations liable to be taken in execution for debts of such corporations thereafter contracted, such liability not existing before, go much further than we go in this case. They apply to the case of this defendant in this respect: that he became a shareholder in this corporation after the Revised Statutes of 1865, which first gave the present remedy by motion, went into effect. These cases, however, are not well reasoned, and it is not necessary that we should commit ourselves to the doctrine which they lay down. Other cases, though not directly in point, furnish more persuasive analogies. Although the right of the creditors of a corporation to the security afforded by the liability under which its stockholders stand by the laws existing at the time of the contracting of his debt, is in the nature of a contract, and cannot be impaired by subsequent legislation (Hawthorne v. Calef, 2 Wall. 10); yet statutes which give the right to arrest and imprison a stockholder for a debt due the corporation (Penniman’s Case, 11 R. I. 333), and statutes which drive such a creditor from a direct proceeding by suit at law against any individual stockholder to a general proceeding in equity brought by a trustee on behalf of all creditors against all stockholders (Story v. Furman, 25 N. Y. 214; The Commonwealth v. Cochituate Bank, 3 Allen, 42), do not impair the obligation of the corporation’s contract, but affect the remedy merely, and arc hence not unconstitutional. The rule of the latter cases ought to work both ways. If the present remedy by
2. The appellant also argues that the provision of the Revised Statutes under which this proceeding is instituted (1 Rev. Stats., sect. 736), beiug a general law, is not to bo construed as applying to stockholders in corporations which, like the present, were created by special statutes previously enacted ; and in support of this view he appeals to the well understood principle, that a general statute treating a subject in a general manner and not expressly contradicting a special statute, previously enacted, is not construed as affecting the more particular and positive provisions of the special statute, unless it is necessary so to construe it in order that its language may have any meaning at all. The rule is not, perhaps, as strong as the learned counsel for the appellant has here stated it. It proceeds upon the-maxim which obtains in the construction of all written'instruments and laws, generalia specialities non derogant, and is founded upon the idea that the legislature, having given its providential attention to a special subject, is not to be understood by the subsequent enacting of a general law relating to all similar subjects, as intending to abrogate what it has thus specially provided for. The State ex rel. v. Wesleyan Cemetery Assn., 11 Mo. App. 560, 570. We are disposed to give full effect to this principle in the interpretation of our legislation. In view of this principle, we decided some
3. It remains to consider the defence of payment and set-off interposed by Mr. Hill. We may premise that this proceeding is so far in the nature of a proceeding at law, that the findings of facts made by the circuit court will be deemed conclusive in this court, if the bill of exceptions shows that there was substantial evidence to support such findings. This was no doubt the understanding of the appellant when he drew his bill of exceptions; for it does not purport to set out the testimony in hcec verba, but it merely recites that there was testimony tending to show certain facts, as a bill of exceptions should do in cases at law. We could not be expected, upon such a presentation of the evidence, to consider the questions of fact de novo, as we do in an appeal in equity.
The circuit court has found that Mr. Hill was, and is, a stockholder in the Excelsior Insurance Company, owning thirty-seven shares of stock of the par value of $100 each ; that the unpaid balance on said shares is $2,127.50, and execution against him was awarded for this amount. The bill of exceptions discloses substantial evidence to support this finding. This will be seen by recurring to the statement of facts which we have already given. We may concede most of the positions as to the law, taken by the counsel for the appellant with reference to this question of payment, — that the right of the plaintiff attaches only to those who were stockholders owing an unpaid balance at
The case here is conducted without formal pleadings. If Mr. Hill’s counter-claim had been a good counter-claim, it would have been allowed merely upon evidence setting it up, without requiring him to plead it. That it appears on the evidence setting it up to have been barred by limitation at the date of the motion, is as fatal to it as though the statute of limitations had been pleaded.
If we are right in these views, it results that the judgment of the circuit court must be affirmed. It is so ordered..