131 N.Y. 490 | NY | 1892
This action was brought to enforce the liability of the defendant as trustee of a club incorporated under the law of 1865 (Chap. 368). Section 7 of that act provides that such trustees shall be liable "for all debts due from said company or corporation contracted while they are trustees, provided said debts are payable within one year from the time they shall have been contracted, and provided a suit for the collection of the same shall be brought within one year after the debt shall become due and payable." The complaint contained appropriate allegations to establish the defendant's liability under that statute, and was duly verified. The defendant served an unverified answer which his adversary refused to accept. The defendant thereupon moved for an order requiring the plaintiff to accept the answer and the Special Term granted the motion upon the ground that the action was penal in its character, and upon the authority ofHall v. Siegel (7 Lansing, 206), affirmed in this court without an opinion (
The opinion of the General Term shows very clearly the analogy between such a cause of action as was here pleaded, *492
and that arising under the usual corporate acts which make the stockholders liable for debts of the company until the capital has been fully paid in. It shows that in such case the liability is not so much created by the statute as retained and preserved under the corporate form; that but for the latter the stockholders would have been liable as partners, and the statute continued that primary and original liability until the requisites of a corporate exemption were fully supplied. (Corning v. McCullough,
We have given attention to the argument made in answer to the conclusion of the General Term. One test which the appellant proposes is the inquiry whether the liability incurred is in the nature of that of a surety and requires that the creditor shall first exhaust his remedy against the corporate assets. He argues that if the liability is on contract, it always has that character and depends upon that condition, which exists even when not in terms imposed by the statute, while if the liability is in tort it is primary and may exist without such condition. But the condition may be attached by the legislature *493
as well to the penal liability as to that arising on contract, and I am not prepared to admit that the courts may attach it when the legislature does not. (Manfg. Co. v. Bradley,
Our affirmance of Hall v. Siegel (supra) without an opinion made us responsible only for the point decided, and did not make us guarantors of all the reasons given or opinions expressed. It was not essential to the decision that the question whether the action was or was not for a penalty should be determined, and our affirmance did not require an approval of the opinion expressed upon that subject. The sole question involved was the construction of the statute upon the point whether the condition imposed upon the creditor of bringing an action upon his demand within one year, meant an action against the corporation or one against the trustee sought to be made liable. The court held the latter and we affirmed the decision. It stood upon the language and purpose of the act, and we are still able to approve it although at the end of many good reasons an incorrect one was needlessly added.
We think, therefore, that the order of the General Term was right and should be affirmed with costs.
All concur.
Order affirmed. *494