63 P. 74 | Cal. | 1900
Action to recover from the stockholders of defendant corporation the unpaid balance of their subserip
The action was originally brought by plaintiff Richardson, as a judgment creditor of defendant corporation, against seventeen defendants, among them Fortin; but the action was dismissed as to him, and he became, by order of the court, a coplaintiff. Judgment was afterward entered by stipulation in favor of Richardson against the defendants severally excepting Lieb and Buttenbaeh (as to whom the action had been dismissed), and Fortin became the sole plaintiff, whose complaint was similar to that of Richardson. After Fortin had filed his complaint as coplaintiff, the defendants obtained leave of court to file, and did file, a cross-bill with the object of bringing in some forty-one parties as codefendants, who, it was alleged, were subscribers to the capital stock of defendant corporation, but had not been made defendants at the commencement of the action. The prayer of this cross-complaint was that the persons named therein as codefendants “be compelled to pay to these defendants filing this cross-complaint, by way of contribution, such proportion of any judgment or judgments in favor of said Thomas Richardson or said V. L. Fortin which have been or may be recovered in this action as may be just and equitable in the action,” and for further relief, etc. This cross-complaint was served on thirty-odd of such new parties, three of whom defaulted; the others answered severally. Fortin’s complaint was answered by the original defendants, but the cross-bill of the fourteen defendants was not served on Fortin, nor was it answered by him.
The court, found the number of shares subscribed by each of the fourteen original defendants (the action having been dismissed as to defendants Fortin, Lieb and Buttenbaeh); that said defendants had subscribed to the stock with the agreement among all the said original seventeen, including Fortin, with the corporation, that each of them should be liable to pay $50 per share, and no more, on shares of the par value of $100, and that said subscribed shares should be deemed fully paid up when said $50 per share had been paid thereon; that said agreement was well known to Fortin at the time he became a creditor of the corporation for the goods and merchandise and labor, the subject of his action, and that
1. Assuming the validity of the agreement under which the stock was issued, and that it was binding on the stockholders who received shares under it, as between themselves, and that upon payment of fifty per cent by a stockholder his
2. In the cross-bill filed with the answers of the fourteen original defendants certain thirty-odd other stockholders were brought into the action, and most of them were served, and 'appeared by answer; and it was alleged in the cross-bill that they were solvent, and able to contribute their share of any judgment rendered. This cross-bill was not served on Fortin, the coplaintiff, nor was it answered by him. But he claims that the parties were before the court, and the issues presented by their pleadings were there also; and that, as the avowed object of the pleadings was to have an adjudication of the liability of these new parties, and to compel them to bear their just proportion of any relief to which the original complainant should be found to be entitled, the court should have found upon these issues. The fourteen defendants having, as they supposed, fully discharged their liability by paying Richardson (in which they each paid substantially fifty per
3. Appellant makes the point that, as the court found that he has never paid anything to the corporation for his shares, the stock was, therefore, void, and he was not liable thereon. Appellant relies on section 359 of the Civil Code, which provides that “no corporation shall issue stock or bonds except for money paid, labor done, or property actually received.” The court did not find that Fortin was to receive these shares as a gratuity. It found that he, as did all other stockholders, subscribed for certain shares, and agreed to pay therefor $50 per share, but had not paid. He became creditor of the corporation beyond the amount he owed it as a subscriber, about the time he subscribed, and it may have been for this reason that he was not called upon to pay at the time he subscribed, or at all. Whatever the reason was, he entered into the agreement with his fellow-stockholders, and he furnished merchandise and labor to the corporation with knowledge of the agreement, and became,indebted to the corporation for his shares as the others did. Under the circumstances he cannot be heard to question his liability as one of the original promoters of the enterprise which the corporation was formed to carry out. Fortin is in the same position as the stockholders whom he sues. They had not paid, nor had he. To obtain a judgment against them, he assumes that they are liable on their subscriptions, but for his subscription, made under the same circumstances as theirs, he is not liable. If the position be sound, he is “hoist with his own petard,”
4. It is not necessary to pass upon the motion to dismiss the appeal from the judgment. The errors ■ complained of are reviewable on the appeal from the order, and hence the alleged defective appeal from the judgment is immaterial. Nor is it necessary to decide whether an agreement may be made among all the stockholders that the shares shall be deemed fully paid by payment of an agreed amount less than the par value. Such an agreement has been held to be good among the stockholders under circumstances when not conclusive as to creditors: See Thompson v. Bank, supra, note. Appellant, as a stockholder, was party to the agreement in the present case, and cannot avoid its consequences as a creditor. The judgment and order are reversed and the cause remanded for a new trial.