180 Mass. 513 | Mass. | 1902
This is an action upon two promissory notes made by the defendant, a corporation organized under Pub. Sts. c. 106. At the date of the writ its debts exceeded its capital. The defendant has obtained a discharge in bankruptcy, and the only question before us is whether the Superior Court should have entered some form of judgment against it, notwithstanding the discharge, for the purpose of enforcing the liability of the directors under Pub. Sts. c. 106, § 60.
We shall not go into disputes of nomenclature and consider whether the liability of the directors is to be regarded as penal, and we shall assume for the purposes of the case that a special judgment might be framed by the court without more specific authority, if necessary to carry out the meaning of the act. Davenport v. Tilton, 10 Met. 320, 330. But the liability is a statutory liability, and we perceive no clear indication of policy that should carry it beyond the conditions precedent in the form in which they are expressed. In case of bonds given to dissolve attachments, if the defendant was discharged in insolvency or bankruptcy, the court constantly refused to enter a special judgment for the purpose of charging the sureties until such a judgment was authorized by statute. Loring v. Eager, 3 Cush. 188.
We do not regard the case as one which it would be impossible to decide the other way, but we see no sufficient reason for enlarging the words of the statute beyond their obvious meaning.
Judgment for the defendant.