56 Neb. 201 | Neb. | 1898
The Commercial and Savings Bank of Kearney wa,s incorporated under the laws of this state on September 2, 1889, and for some time thereafter was engaged in the business of banking. William F. Pickering was a stockholder therein, owning ten shares of the stock of the face value of $100 each. Samuel C. Hastings was a depositor in said bank, and had money on deposit therein at the time the bank closed its doors and ceased to do' business. Hastings recovered a judgment against said bank in the sum of $649.80 for moneys so deposited as aforesaid. Execution was issued on said judgment, which was returned nulla Iona. Thereupon this action was instituted by Hastings in his own behalf in the county court of Buffalo county .against Pickering alone, under section 7, article 11 of the constitution, to enforce the liability imposed by said section upon stockholders in banking corporations. A general demurrer to the petition was sustained by the county court, and on error proceeding this judgment was reversed by the district court, and the cause was retained
It was stipulated in open court on the trial that plaintiff and the several other persons mentioned in paragraph 6 of the answer were residents of Buffalo county and stockholders of the Commercial and Savings Bank of Kearney at the time the bank became indebted to . Pickering, as well as when the suit was instituted, and that there were and are numerous creditors of said bank similarly situated with plaintiff, whose claims were due and unpaid. The proper disposition of the case at bar can be based upon a single ground, and that is, whether the action was properly brought to enforce the liability created by the section of the constitution already mentioned, which declares: “Every stockholder in a banking
White v. Blum, 4 Neb. 555, cited in brief of plaintiff, is easily distinguishable. So far as the report of that case discloses plaintiffs were the only creditors of the Midland Pacific Railway Company, and the defendants were the sole stockholders of said corporation. That the proper parties were before the court was a matter not in controversy, the principal contention being whether a joint judgment for unpaid subscription to capital stock could be rendered against all the stockholders, where the amount due for each on account of his subscription equaled or exceeded the demands of the corporation creditor.
Smith v. Steele, 8 Neb. 115, was an action ait law against the stockholders of a corporation and the corporation itself, and it does not appear that there were any creditors of the corporation other than the plaintiffs.
Doolittle v. Marsh, 11 Neb. 243, was a suit against a stockholder of the Omaha Horse Railway Company to enforce the payment of a judgment recovered against the corporation for a tort. It was held that the action would not lie under section 136 of the chapiter of the General Statutes on Corporations.
Howell v. Roberts, 29 Neb. 483, and Coy v. Jones, 30 Neb. 798 were actions at law against stockholders to enforce the liability created by said section 136. In none of these decisions rendered prior to the handing down of the opinion in Farmers Loan & Trust Co. v. Funk, 49 Neb. 353, was it decided that an individual creditor of a corporation could maintain an action for his own' benefit alone against a single stockholder to enforce the constitutional liability of stockholders for the debts of the corporation.
The present action must fail because all the stockholders of the Commercial and Savings Bank within the jurisdiction of the court were not made parties defendant.
Reversed and remanded.
For counsel’s citations to sustain the contention that liability of a stockholder may be enforced in a suit against him alone by a single creditor, see Hastings v. Barnd, 55 Neb. 94.