78 Neb. 795 | Neb. | 1907
The plaintiff sued the Harding Creamery Company and the appellee, the Nebraska-Iowa Creamery Company,
The questions presented by the appeal are all involved in the action of the trial court in sustaining the demurrer of the Nebraska-Iowa Creamery Company to the plaintiff’s petition. The allegations of the petition are, in substance : That the Harding Creamery Company made, executed and delivered to the plaintiff two certain promissory notes, which were unpaid. At the time the indebtedness was contracted and the notes given, Robert A. Stewart was a stockholder, director and president of the Harding company; that he owned and controlled more than one-half of the stock of that company; that he knew of the indebtedness to the plaintiff; that when the notes became due the Harding company was' insolvent; that it owned certain real estate in the city of Norfolk of the value of $20,000; that .the property was equipped with machinery and appliances for conducting a creamery business, and was occupied and used for that purpose by the Harding company. That Stewart, being president of the company and owning a controlling interest, became a promoter and participant in the formation of the Nebraska-Iowa Creamery Company for the purpose of taking and continuing the property, both real and personal, assets and business of the Harding company, and other similar corporations and copartnerships located in Nebraska and Iowa, thereafter conducting the business previously conducted by the Harding company and other companies, and Avith the further purpose of thereby hindering and delaying the creditors of the Harding company, including the plaintiff, in the collection of their demands against the Harding company; that, pursuant to the plan, the Harding company
It is urged that the facts stated show the consolidation of several corporations and copartnerships, thereby constituting a new coi’poration, the successor of the old and liable for its debts,' and that the facts stated show a fraud as against the creditors of the Harding company, such as to render the Nebraska-Iowa company liable in an action at law. If the Nebraska-Iowa company is shown by the petition to be a mere successor to the Harding company, then doubtless the plaintiff might maintain an action at law for the collection of the debt due from the Harding company, but we do not think the allegations of the petition sufficient to show that condition. The stockholders are not shown to be the same, in fact none of the stockholders of any of the old corporations, qt partnerships, other than Stewart, are shown to be stockholders in the new corporation, and we think it clearly apparent from the facts stated in the petition that it is an independent and distinct corporation, and should in no sense be treated as the successor of the Harding company, or the same corporation in fact.
Where a new corporation acquires all of the assets of an old corporation, without other consideration than the issuance of stock to the stockholders of the old corporation, and the new corporation is in fact a mere continuance of the old, it would be liable to the creditors of the old corporation in an action at law; but where, as in this
The case is to be distinguished from Douglas Printing Co. v. Over, 69 Neb. 320. In that case a recovery was permitted in an action at law because it was held that the new corporation was in fact a continuance of the old.
It is recommended that the judgment of the district court be affirmed.
By the Court: For the reasons stated in the foregoing opinion, the judgment of the district court is
Affirmed.