ORDER
Findings of Fact
This action arises from the discovery and removal of asbestos from Bel Ar Mall which is located in Mobile Aabama. Plaintiffs in *602 this action are D. Mark Nix, as trustee for Bel Air Liquidating Trust, East-West Belt-line, Inc. and Bel Air Corporation. On December 27, 1984, Bel Air Corporation was legally merged into East-West Beltline, Inc., and Easb-West Beltline, Inc.’s name was changed to Bel Air Corporation. Easb-West Beltline, Inc. and Bel Air Corporation are, therefore, the same corporation. On January 2, 1987, Bel Air Corporation was legally dissolved. Following its dissolution, the remaining corporate assets of Bel Air Corporation were placed in a liquidating trust for the benefit of the former shareholders of Bel Air Corporation. Among the powers given to the trustee was the power to litigate or settle claims on behalf of the beneficiaries.
Plaintiffs have now filed three separate lawsuits arising from the removal of asbestos from Bel Air Mall. On December 18, 1987, these plaintiffs filed an action in the Circuit Court of Mobile County (hereinafter “Nix I”). In accordance with the Alabama Rules of Civil Procedure, plaintiffs also named certain fictitious defendants. On August 5, 1992, plaintiffs amended their state court action to add defendants W.R. Grace, U.S. Gypsum and National Gypsum as defendants in that action.
On January 19, 1989, plaintiffs filed an action in the United States District Court for the Southern District of Mississippi (hereinafter “Nix II”) which was virtually identical to the action filed in Alabama state court. Following the transfer of Nix II to this Court, plaintiffs amended the complaint on September 7, 1990, to add defendants W.R. Grace, U.S. Gypsum and National Gypsum Company, all of which were manufacturers of asbestos products allegedly used in the construction of the mall.
On August 23, 1990, plaintiffs filed the instant action in the United States District Court for the Southern District of Mississippi (hereinafter “Nix III”). Again, Nix III is virtually identical to the two previously filed action, the only difference being that W.R. Grace, United States Gypsum and National Gypsum are the only defendants in the latest action. 2 In Nix II, this Court ruled that plaintiffs’ action was barred by Alabama’s corporate survival statute which requires that suits brought by, or on behalf of, a dissolved corporation be brought within two years after the corporation’s dissolution.
Conclusions of Law
As in Nix II, the issue before the Court is whether this action is barred by Ala.Code § 10-2A-203 (1975), which specifies the time within which suit may be brought on behalf of a dissolved corporation. That statute which is commonly referred to as a corporate survival statute, states, in relevant part:
The dissolution of a corporation ... shall not take away or impair any remedy available to or against such corporation, its directors, officers or shareholders, for any right or claim existing, or any liability incurred, prior to such dissolution if any action or other proceeding thereon is commenced within two years after the date of such dissolution.
Id. It is undisputed that the instant action was filed more than two years after the dissolution of the Bel Ar Corporation. 3
In response to the motion for summary judgment in this case, plaintiffs have adopted the same arguments they made in Nix II. First, plaintiffs contend that they have satisfied § 10-2A-203 by filing the state court abatement action within two years of the dissolution of the corporation. According to plaintiffs, since the statute requires only that “any action or other proceeding” on a claim be commenced within the two years, commencement of the state court action satisfied the two-year limitations period for all future proceedings on their asbestos abatement claims.
*603
Those courts which have addressed similar fact situations have held that filing a suit in one jurisdiction does not toll the corporate wind-up period under the applicable survival statute to permit an otherwise untimely suit in another jurisdiction., In
MBC v. Engel,
The New Hampshire Supreme Court gave several reasons for rejecting plaintiffs argument. First, the court noted that corporate continuance statutes such as the one at issue expand common law rights and remedies and, therefore, should be strictly construed. Second, even though the state and federal court actions were virtually identical, they were not the same suit or action. Finally, the court held that “[t]o allow lawsuits to commence in contravention of a clearly expressed legislative policy would thwart the orderly process of corporate dissolution conceived by that policy. It would ‘produce a continuous dribble of business activity contrary to the intent of the winding up provisions of the statute.’”
Id.
at 638 (quoting
Bishop v. Schield Bantam Co.,
In
Syrian Arabian Oil Co. v. Syrian Arab Republic,
Second, even assuming that the Company and Menhall were identical, the court held that the filing of the first suit did not extend the time for filing the second suit.
[Ejven if. the- Company was able to show an identity between itself and Menhall, the Syrian suit would have no effect on this litigation. Section 278 continues a corporation’s life beyond the three year period only for the limited purpose of completing actions which were already begun within three years of dissolution. Thus, assuming arguendo an identity between Menhall and the Company, under the plain wording of the statute, the Company would have been empowered to act beyond April 1964 only with respect to the Syrian suit. It could not file a distinct suit in another jurisdicif the two suits were allegedly brought to enforce the same cause of action.
Id. at 604.
Finally, in
Smiths-Johnson Steamship Corp. v. United States,
The Court finds the reasoning in the cases cited above to be persuasive. As the New Hampshire court noted in
MBC,
the purpose of' corporate survival statutes is to ■ “insure that there is ‘a definite point in time at which the existence of a corporation and the transaction of its business are terminated.’ ”
MBC,
Plaintiff Nix argues that even if summary judgment is appropriate as to the corporate defendants, it is not proper as to him as the trustee for the shareholder trust. Nix argues that the shareholders’ claims are not barred because the corporation made a general assignment of claims to the shareholder trust prior to its dissolution. Plaintiff bases his argument on dicta found in
Hutson v. Fulgham Industries, Inc.,
First, it is important to understand the history and purpose behind corporate survival statutes. Alabama’s statute, Ala. Code §. 10-2A-203 (1987), which is modeled after the Model Business Corporation Act, requires that all claims by or against a dissolved corporation, its officers, directors or shareholders be instituted within two years of the corporation’s dissolution. Any claim not brought within that time period is extinguished.
Hutson,
at 1460 (11th Cir.1989). As discussed above, the purpose of such statutes is to insure that there is a definite point when the claims of a dissolved corporation cease.
MBC,
In a small number of cases, courts have held corporate survival statutes inapplicable to suits filed by shareholders of a dissolved corporation even though those actions were based on injuries to the corporation. In each of those instances, however, the court’s reasoning was based on the equitable principle that a corporation’s assets devolve to its shareholders, and the shareholder in each case could identify “a tangible property asset” which had devolved by operation of law or which had been assigned to the shareholder.
Davis v. St. Paul Fire & Marine Ins. Co.,
For example, in
Jenot v. White Mountain Acceptance Corp.,
It is this limited exception that was the focus of the
Hutson
opinion. Like Nix, the plaintiff in
Hutson
claimed that the breach of contract and tort claims he asserted were assets of the dissolved corporation and became his either by operation of law or by assignment. The issue in
Hutson
was “whether Foresco [the dissolved corporation] possessed any corporate assets to which Hut-son, as a former Foresco shareholder, became legally entitled upon Foresco’s dissolution.”
Hutson,
In discussing the contract claim, the court, citing Jenot, recognized that the corporate survival statutes “were not intended ‘to supplant the equitable rule that former shareholders succeed to the assets of a dissolved corporation,” but held that it was “unwilling, however, to extend the equitable rule so far as to recognize a ‘property interest’ in an unasserted corporate contract claim which involves evidentiary problems and factual disputes.” Id. at 1462-63. The Court then went on to state that such contract claims “must be asserted within the wind-up period (or be properly assigned) to survive dissolution.”
Based on the latter statement, Nix asserts that a mere general assignment of all corporate claims will defeat the survival statute. Moreover, Nix argues that since defendants have not challenged the validity of the general assignment, the assignment must have been proper. Plaintiff ignores the appellate court’s holding that an unasserted breach of contract claim is not a property interest or asset.
See also Canadian Ace Brewing Co. v. Joseph Schlitz Brewing Co.,
That the Hutson court did not intend plaintiffs interpretation of the assignment language is evidenced in the court’s discussion of how an assignment might have saved Hutson’s contract claim.
Had Foresco or its officers or shareholders initiated the contract claim during the statutory two-year period and then assigned it to Hutson, he could now claim that he is entitled to pursue the claim to judgment.
Id. at 1463, n. 16. Thus, the appellate court expected that a claim must, at a minimum, have been asserted prior to dissolution in order for an assignment to preserve the claim past the wind-up period.
While Hutson at least gives plaintiff an argument that his contract claims are tangible assets which became his by assignment, that case completely negates any similar argument with respect to plaintiff’s tort claims. Addressing Hutson’s fraud claim, the appellate court held that such claims
“fall[] into a category that the survival statute clearly intended to prohibit after the wind-up period. This unasserted corporate claim should have been brought during the two year wind-up period because, as one court has noted ‘[t]he expired right is no more enforceable in the former shareholders’ possession than it is in the defunct corporation’s”
Id.
at 1464 (quoting
MBC, Inc. v. Engel,
A general assignment of claims by a corporation to its shareholders prior to the corporation’s dissolution does not preserve unasserted claims past the statutory wind-up period. To hold otherwise would be completely contrary to the purpose of corporate survival statutes. As the Davis court stated:
Allowing assertion of unexecuted or nascent claims past the time set by survival statutes would produce a ‘continuous dribble of business actions contrary to the intent of the winding up provisions.’ Allowing pursuit of corporate claims which are merely embryonic beyond the winding up period would expand the corporate sur *606 vival statute beyond its terms and would interfere with its purpose of requiring the prompt and orderly winding up and finalization of corporate affairs.
Davis,
In sum, both of plaintiffs’ arguments in opposition to summary judgment are contrary to the express language of the corporate survival statute and to the purpose of the statute. Consequently, the Court finds that all defendants are entitled to judgment as a matter of law. It is, therefore, ORDERED that the motions for summary judgment filed by defendants United States Gypsum Company and W.R. Grace be and hereby are GRANTED. Consistent with the Court’s ruling in Nix II, judgment will be entered by separate order in favor of all defendants. 5
JUDGMENT
Pursuant to the Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law of even date herewith, it is hereby
ORDERED, ADJUDGED and DECREED that judgment be entered in favor of Defendants W.R. Grace & (previously known as W.R. Grace & Co.); United States Gypsum Company, and National Gypsum Company.
. In addition, W.R. Grace has filed a motion for leave to amend its answer and to amend its motion for judgment on the pleadings/summary judgment to assert a defense under Ala.Code § 10-2A-203 (1975) based on plaintiffs’ failure to bring this action within two years of the dissolution of the Bel Air Corporation. That motion is hereby GRANTED.
Notes
. Apparently, the instant action was filed in anticipation of a potential statute of limitations problem in Nix II. Among the issues raised by defendant W.R. Grace in its motion for summary judgment in Nix II was whether the claims against defendants added after the transfer were subject to the Alabama statute of limitations, rather than the more favorable Mississippi statute. The defendants in the Nix III were all added to Nix II after the transfer.
. The corporation was dissolved on January 2, 1987. This action was filed on August 23, 1990.
. Numerous courts have rejected equitable tolling arguments in the analogous statute of limitations context where plaintiffs have contended that the filing of a suit in state court tolled the statute of limitations with respect to a later-filed federal court action.
See, e.g., Pace Industries, Inc. v. Three Phoenix Co.,
. In Nix II, the Court ordered the plaintiffs to show cause why its order should not be applied to all defendants, even though only one defendant moved for summary judgment based on the corporate survival statute. Plaintiffs' only response was a motion to reconsider on behalf of Nix in which Nix argued that the statute was not applicable to the shareholders. The Court has applied its ruling in Nix II to all defendants and will do the same in this action.
