3 N.Y.S. 764 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1889
The defendant’s intestate died in this state, the owner of' 250 shares of the par value of $100 each of the capital stock of the Illinois, Missouri & Texas Railroad Company, a corporation organized under the laws-of the state of Missouri. The plaintiff is a banking corporation organized under the laws of the same state, and authorized to maintain actions at law for-the purpose of collecting debts due it. The plaintiff, in an action prosecuted in the courts of the state of Missouri, recovered a judgment against the said railroad company for the sum of $33,973, upon which an execution against the-property of the defendant was issued in due form of law, and returned unsatisfied, and the said judgment remained wholly unpaid. This action is prosecuted for the purpose of recovering from the defendant, as the administrator of the estate of John W. Ccmlogue, an amount equal to the par value of .the-stock owned by him at the time of the dissolution of the said corporation, to be applied towards the satisfaction of the plaintiff’s debt represented in and by the said judgment, upon the grounds, as claimed by the plaintiff, that the-shareholders of the said corporation are by the laws of the state of Missouri personally liable to the creditors of such corporation in an amount equal to-the par value of each share of the capital stock owned by them. The defendant denies the alleged liability, and insists if any liability whatever exists against the stockholders in favor of the creditors of said corporation the same-can only be enforced in the courts pf the state of Missouri, by the laws of which state the liability was created.
The questions presented by the demurrer depend for their solution upon the proper construction to be given to the statutes of the state of Missouri relative to the subject; and the plaintiff has set forth in his complaint the provisions thereof on which, as he contends, the stockholders’ liability is-founded. The sections of the statute set forth in the complaint are contained in chapter 37, art. 1, vol. 1, p. 291, Wag. St., of which section 13 is as follows: “If any execution shalf have been issued against the property or effects • of a corporation, and if there cannot be found whereon to levy such execution, then such execution may be issued against any of the stockholders to an extent equal in amount to the amount of stock by him or her owned, together with any amount unpaid thereon: provided, always, that no execution shall issue against any stockholder except upon an order of the court in which the action, suit, or other proceeding shall have been brought or instituted, made-upon motion in open court, after sufficient notice in writing to the person sought to be charged; and upon such motion, such court may order execution to issue accordingly.” Section 22 is as follows: “If any company formed under this act dissolve, leaving debts unpaid, suits may be brought against any-person or persons who were stockholders at the time of such dissolution, without joining the company in such suit; and, if judgment be rendered and. execution satisfied, the defendant or defendants may sue all who were stockholders at the time of the dissolution, for the recovery of the portion of such debt for which they were liable, and the execution upon the judgment shall direct the collection to be made from property of each stockholder, respecti vely; and if any number of stockholders (defendants in the case) shall not have property enough to satisfy his or their portion of the execution, then the amount of the deficiency shall be divided equally amongst all the remaining stockholders, and collection be made accordingly, deducting from the amount a sum in proportion to the amount of the stock owned by the plaintiff at the-time the company dissolved.” We think it is substantially averred in the-complaint that the provisions of these sections are applicable to all railroad corporations organized after their adoption by the legislature of that state, and that the railroad company in which the intestate was a shareholder was-created after the said sections became a law.
On the argument, the learned counsel for the respondent conceded that the remedy given to the judgment creditors of the corporation by the provisions
The provisions of the statute which we deem doubtful and obscure as to their meaning have received an interpretation by the highest courts of the state of Missouri, which we may accept and follow as our guide in declaring the rights of creditors and the obligations of stockholders under the same. In the cases hereafter cited it has been held that under said section 22 a stockholder is liable to the creditors of the corporation to the amount of the par value of his stock, and that such liability may be enforced, after the company has been dissolved, in a suit in the nature of an action at common law, in the name of and for the benefit of an individual creditor against any stockholder who was sucli at the time of the dissolution. Perry v. Turner, 55 Mo. 418; Association v. Kellogg, 63 Mo. 540; Same v. Same, 52 Mo. 583; Donnelly v. Mulhall, 12 Mo. App. 139. It is alleged in the complaint that by the provisions of the statute set forth therein, as defined, construed, administered, and enforced by the courts of the state of Missouri, when any railroad corporation organized under and by virtue of the laws of that state shall have become dissolved, any creditor of such corporation, upon Return of an execution against it unsatisfied, may have an action against any stockholder of such corporation who shall have been such at the time of the dissolution, to collect the par value of such stock so owned by him, and such stockholder and his estate shall be liable to pay the same to the amount unpaid on the judgment recovered against the corporation. This averment as to meaning and purpose of the statute under consideration must be received as true in disposing of the demurrer. The inquiry as to what are the laws of another state presents a question of fact, and, when necessary, may be alleged in the pleadings as a fact. The construction placed upon the statutes of another state by the courts of that state is, as a general rule, controlling, and will be followed by the courts of this state. Jessup v. Carnegie, 80 N. Y. 441. As it is alleged that the highest court of the state of Missouri has given a construction to the statute on which the plaintiff relies as giving him a right of action against the defendant, we are not, under the foregoing rule, permitted to