This was an action brought to enforce the constitutional liability of the stockholders in defendant corporation, and appellant stockholders rely on the exception introduced into section 3 of article 10 of the state constitution by the amendment of 1872. The section reads thus: “Each stockholder in any corporation, excepting those organized for the purpose of carrying on any kind of manufacturing or mechanical business, shall be liable to the amount of stock held or owned by him.” If the corporation was a manufacturing concern, within the purview of this exception, this action cannot be maintained. But, if it was not, the order appealed from, overruling a general demurrer to the complaint, must be sustained.
The articles authorized defendant corporation not only to distill and manufacture, but also to buy and sell and deal in liquors. Admitting that distilling and manufacturing may be, and frequently are, carried on by using an alcoholic solution already produced by fermentation, and also by using spirits already distilled, to a degree, and that the purchase of the solution and the distilled spirits for use in this way is necessarily connected with and is properly incidental to the manufacturing business, is it not evident that this corporation could have transacted a mercantile as well as a manufacturing business? It could have bought and sold and dealt in unlimited quantities of ardent spirits without distilling or manufacturing a single particle, and without being open to the charge that such buying and selling and dealing were ultra vires. Counsel claim that the Anal
Order affirmed.