Milroy v. Spurr Mountain Iron Mining Co.

43 Mich. 231 | Mich. | 1880

Marston, C. J.

This action was brought against the corporation and one of its stockholders under section 35 of Aet No. 113 of the Session Laws of 1877, p. 95.

It appeared upon the trial and was not disputed, that the plaintiff, and his son, a minor, performed labor for the corporation in 1877 and 1878; that they worked six months, commencing September 1st, 1877, and that plaintiff was to receive eighty dollars per month, and for his son’s labor thirty-five dollars per month. It was admitted that the value'' of the services of the 'plaintiff and his son for the six months ending March 1st, 1878, was six hundred and seventy-six dollars.

Early in- February, 1878 — the exact date does not appear — the plaintiff assigned to Bigelow, Dousman & Co., merchants at Michigamme, of his claim against the corporation, one hundred dollars and eleven cents. On the 13th of February, 1878, suit was commenced in justice’s court to ' recover the amount so assigned, in the name of the plaintiff herein, for the usé and benefit of Bigelow, Dousman & Co., and judgment was rendered therein February 27th for the amount assigned and costs. This judgment not having been satisfied, this action was brought to recover the entire amount that the plaintiff would have been entitled to from September 1st, 1877, *235when he and his son commenced work, to March 1st, 1878.

The judgment rendered in justice’s court was introduced by the defendants, who claimed, 1st, that such action having been brought against the corporation alone, the labor debt became merged in the judgment therein rendered, and that an action on the claim for labor could hot afterwards be maintained against the corporation, or the stockholders, or both jointly; and 2d, that the assignment to Bigelow, Dousman & Co. of a part of plaintiff’s claim, action brought and judgment recovered t, srefor, would prevent the plaintiff from afterwards maintaining any action for that portion of his claim Which had accrued at the time, such action was commenced and not included therein.

To meet in part this second position the plaintiff claimed that the corporation had assented to the assignment, and that this would- operate as a waiver of the objection. The plaintiff was permitted to recover for the services of himself and son which accrued subsequent to the date of the assignment, but not for any portion accruing previous thereto, and he now assigns error.

There was no evidence in the ease tending to show any assent by the company which would prevent or preclude it from making this defense. There was evidence of negotiations between Bigelow, Dousman & Co. whereby they were to take assignments from the laborers of the amount of their respective accounts, give them credit for a specified time thereafter, and take the paper of the corporation, payable in three months, for the amounts assigned; but this was not consummated, they, Bigelow, Dousman & Co., giving notice of the assignments and commencing suit to recover the amount thereof immediately thereafter.

There can be no question, either upon reason or authority,, that a claim like the present • cannot be split and cut up into separate causes of action to suit the convenience or whim of the plaintiff. . If so he could *236assign, after working six months, a month’s wages to an individual or firm, and so of each and every month, and thus have six separate suits commenced; or he might commence six separate actions in his own name. The assignment, and the fact that the suit was commenced in the assignor’s name for the use and benefit of the assignees, can in law make no difference; the suit must be treated precisely as though the assignees had no interest whatever therein, so far as this question is involved. The fact that he was hired by the month, and that his wages were payable monthly, cannot make any difference. A man may be hired by the day, and at the close thereof a cause of action would accrue to him for his wages, and so for each day that he would work under such an agreement, he could quit work at any time and maintain an action for his unpaid wages. He could not, however, work thirty days or for any other period, then quit, and commence a separate action for each day’s wages. In such a case, although the contract of hiring was by the day, and the parties may not have contemplated.or provided for any additional labor, yet if they did silently proceed, the one to work and the other' to receive his labor, at the expiration thereof the entire amount unpaid would constitute but one cause of action. To permit separate causes under such circumstances would be to subject the debtor to costs and expenses far in excess of the principal debt, besides the annoyance and injury which so many suits would necessarily be to him. This the law will not tolerate or permit. It gives the creditor a remedy against his debtor to enable him to collect his demand and the whole thereof, and it at the same time protects the debtor against needless and vexatious causes of action.

Can this action be maintained against the corporation and a stockholder, for the amount of the judgment recovered in the justice’s court?

It was argued that the assignees had a right to sue *237in the assignor’s name for that part of the claim assigned to them, and that the Constitution and laws gave them the right to bring their action in justice’s court; that the process of a justice would not extend and could not be served beyond the bounds of his county, and the stockholders who did not reside in the county could not therefore be reached, and that the remedy given by sec-' tion 35 of the-act of 1877 by its language was applicable only to courts of record..

The Constitution does not prohibit the Legislature from giving the circuit courts jurisdiction in cases where the amount claimed is less than one hundred dollars. The Constitution, art. vi., § 18, gives to justices of the peace in civil cases exclusive jurisdiction to the amount of one hundred dollars, “with such exceptions and restrictions as may be provided by law.” In. suits between copartners and for the foreclosure of mortgages, the circuit courts in chancery are given jurisdiction by statute although the amount in dispute is less than one hundred dollars. 2 Comp. L. § 5059. So the circuit courts were given jurisdiction in claims against boats and vessels irrespective of the amount claimed, and other instances might be given.

Nor do we think that the language of section 35 will bear the construction contended for by counsel for plaintiff. The section does not in terms exclude justices’ courts, but' it requires the cleric of the court to indorse certain directions to the officer, upon the execution. And it is said that “clerk of the court” here means the circuit court, as there is no clerk in justices’ court. This reference to or mention of the clerk "is merely to the person issuing the execution, which in the circuit would be the clerk. In justices’ court the execution is issued by the justice who acts as his own clerk and who under this statute would be the proper person to make the required indorsement, and we should require much clearer language than this to warrant us in saying that a justice of the peace would have no jurisdiction in actions sought to be commenced under this statute. The mere fact *238that the process issued by the justice could not be served upon all the stockholders is an argument equally pertinent to many cases in the circuit. It is a fact of which this court may well take judicial notice, that very many of the stockholders in our mining corporations are nonresidents of this State, and therefore beyond the jurisdiction of the circuit court, in so far as rendering a personal judgment against them is involved. But whether the remedy is ample or not, we are of opinion that justices’ courts have jurisdiction in cases commenced under this section; and if anything is lacking to afford parties sufficient relief therein, another department of the government must be resorted to.

Section 3S makes the stockholders individually liable for all labor performed for such corporation, and specifies when and how the liability may be enforced. Suits against the stockholders must be brought within two years from the time when payment for such labor became due, and against the corporation alone at any time within six years. “ Suit for such labor may be commenced against any or all the stockholders and the corporation jointly.”

In Hanson v. Donkersley 37 Mich. 184 it was held that under the Constitution and statute then in force the stockholders were not primarily liable for corporation debts for labor.

The individual liability of the stockholders under the Constitution means a liability beyond that of members of the corporation, and has no reference to a mere separate or several one. While therefore the Legislature cannot relieve the stockholder from the liability imposed by the Constitution, yet it may point out and regulate the manner or method of enforcing the same. Prior to the act of 1877, with certain exceptions, the stockholder could only be held liable after a judgment had been obtained against the corporation, and. an execution returned unsatisfied. In other words, the remedy against the corporation must have been first exhausted. Under the present statute a remedy is given against any *239or all of the stockholders and the corporation jointly, to be commenced within two years, or against the corporation alone at any time within six years. The creditor or laborer has here an option given him to pursue either the corporation alone, or join one or more of the stockholders with the corporation. Should he sue the corporation and one of the stockholders and recover a judgment, clearly we think he could not afterwards commence and maintain an action against the corporation alone, or against'it and some other of the stockholders jointly. Having once elected, by action and judgment, the party would be bound thereby.' Under the old statute two actions were given — first, one against the corporation; then, under certain circumstances, one'against the stockholders. Under the present statute a choice of remedies is given: the creditor may elect to pursue the corporation alone, or he may join as defendants with the corporation any or all of the stockholders; but he cannot even then proceed against their property by levy and sale upon his execution until the property of the corporation shall have been exhausted. The property of the corporation is made primarily liable for the labor debts; the individual property of the stockholder secondarily. The policy of the statute can be as effectively carried out against the property of the corporation where the stockholders are joined as where they are not, and the corporation should not be put to the expense of a suit against it alone, and then of a second where joined with one or more of its stockholders.

We are of opinion that where a creditor sues the corporation alone and recovers a judgment against it, he cannot afterwards maintain an action against the corporation and the stockholder for the same cause of action. The judgment in the first case, although unsatisfied, would be a bar in the second.

The judgment must-be affirmed with costs.

Graves and Campbell, JJ., concurred. Cooley, J. I concur in the result.
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