130 N.Y.S. 748 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1911
Lead Opinion
The plaintiff sues in equity in behalf of all creditors of the defendant corporation, the Moore Blind Stitcher and Overseaxner Company, which was incorporated in 1906 under the Business Corporations Law of New York, to enforce the liability of stockholders for unpaid subscriptions to capital stock. Section 59 of the Stock Corporation Law requires, as a condition precedent to the enforcement of such liability when based on section 56 of the Stock Corporation Law, that a judgment be first recov- ' ered against the corporation. The rule in equity aside from any statute is to thé same effect. (National Bank v. Dillingham, 147 N. Y. 603, 608.) This requirement was complied . with by the recovery of a judgment in favor of the plaintiff against the corporation for $7,087.50 on the 1st day of November, 1907. The. plaintiff alleges that at the time the debt upon which the action is founded was contracted the defendants were the holders and owners of capital stock of the corporation, which had not been fully paid; and further that “ the defendants above named are all the holders of capital stock of the defendant corporation, not fully paid, as aforesaid.” The allegation that the defendants are all the holders of capital stock upon which the subscriptions are not fully paid was denied, and on the trial evidence was offered and received which shows that some of the defendants whose subscriptions to capital stock have not been fully paid were not served and that other subscribers to capital stock and holders and owners of capital stock at the time the contract was made were not made parties defendant, and the court has so found. Many propositions are advanced by the learned counsel for the respondents upon which it is claimed that the judgment may be sustained; . but we are of opinion that the objection that all stockholders of the company who are liable under the statute have not been brought before the court is well taken, and it is, therefore, unnecessary to consider the other questions.
Section 10 of chapter 40 of the Laws of 1848, entitled “An act to authorize the formation of corporations for manufacturing, mining, mechanical or chemical purposes,” provided that the stockholders of a corporation incorporated thereunder should be “ severally individually liable to the creditors of the
The Stock Corporation Law of 1890 was amended and re-enacted in 1892 (Laws of 1892, chap. 688), and the provision of section 57 above quoted is found in section 54 of the Stock Corporation Law of 1892, by which it is changed to read as follows: “ The stockholders of. every stock corporation shall, jointly and severally, be personally liable to its "'creditors to an amount equal to the amount of the , stock held by them respectively, for every debt of the corporation until the whole amount of its capital stock issued and outstanding at the time such debt was incurred shall have been fully paid.” '
It will be observed that in these provisions the Legislature in express terms imposed a joint ancl several liability, and the" statute has been so construed by the Court of Appeals. (Lang v. Lutz, 180 N. Y. 254.) Those statutory provisions, however, did not relate to the original liability of the stockholders as subscribers, or to the transferees of stock on which the sub
In Lang v. Lutz (supra), Judge Gray, writing for the court and discussing the effect of the amendment made in 1901, which was not necessarily before the court for decision, said: “As to ah cases, which might arise thereafter, I assume that it prescribes a new rule of liability under which the remedy available to a creditor is intended to be by way of an equitable action, or proceeding; wherein all the stockholders of the corporation should be made equally and ratably responsible for the payment of corporate debts.”
That dictum has been since followed in a case affirmed by by the Court of Appeals (Ford v; Chase, 118 App. Div. 605; affd., 189 N. Y. 504); but it is not entirely clear from the questions certified that the point was involved in the appeal to the Court of Appeals. With all due deference to the expression of opinion by the Court of Appeals and to the decision in Ford v. Chase (supra), unless the statute in the' amended form still imposes a several, liability on the. stockholders to particular judgment creditors of the corporation in an action at law, it creates no new liability and provides no new remedy not existing at common law; and in fact prescribes a liability and remedy less extensive and adequate than existed at common law, for at common law any judgment creditor had a remedy in
Those statutory provisions are not distinguishable in phraseology from section 56 of the Stock Corporation Law. The question before the court for decision in that case was whether, in an action against a .stockholder, the judgment against the corporation in favor of the creditor was competent evidence to show the plaintiff’s status as a creditor of the corporation, and of the amount due: The court, in holding that the judgment was competent evidence on those points, said: “The liability of the stockholder is not created or enlarged by the statute. It rests upon his contract with the corporation, and the creditor is simply ■ subrogated to the claim of the corporation against its debtor, in case he avails himself of his right under the statute to pursue the stockholder as such debtor" to the corporation. A payment by the stockholder to the creditor, upon a recovery by him under the statute, will discharge the stockholder pro tanto from his indebtedness to the corporation. The creditor thus claims through the corporation, and to entitle bi-m to this statutory subrogation or transfer, he need only show that he is a creditor.”
In Mills v. Stewart (41 N. Y. 384) two opinions for-affirmance were- written and the majority of the court concurred in the affirmance, but not expressly on either opinion. Judge Grover, in writing one of the opinions construing said section 10 of the Railroad Act of 1850, as amended in 1854, said: “It will
The contract liability on an unpaid subscription for capital stock could be enforced by the corporation the same as a liability arising on any other indebtedness to it (Stoddard v. Lum, 159 N. Y. 265); and there can be no doubt but that the opinion of Judge Grover, from which I have quoted, is sound, for a judgment creditor may, in the right of the corporation, -enforce payment of his judgment by having collected and applied thereon any indebtedness to the corporation. This was recognized in Pfohl v. Simpson (74 N. Y. 137) wherein it was held that an action by a judgment creditor in his own right under the statute would be enjoined in an action in equity
If the statute gives the plaintiff a cause of action, or remedy, in her own right against the stockholders severally, she did not see fit to pursue that remedy; but, on the contrary, elected tc pursue- her common-law remedy as a judgment creditor and to come into a court of equity, and in. so doing she is required .to Conform to the practice in such cases prescribed by the decisions of the courts, which is that the action, being to enforce a limited liability, must be brought against all stockholders who are liable, to the end that they may only be compelled to contribute to the extent necessary pro rata, as well as in the interest of all creditors to the end that they may share in the fund recovered in the same proportion. (Mathez v. Neidig, 72 N. Y. 100; Hallett v. Metropolitan Messenger Co., 69 App. Div. 258; Marsh v. Kaye, 168 N. Y. 196.)
By bringing the action in equity for the benefit of all credit-, ors, the plaintiff conforms to the decisions of the courts, by which it has been held that the remedy is in equity, and necessarily so to insure the satisfaction, of the claims of creditors of the corporation in the same proportion/ provided the fund .aris
It follows that the judgment should be affirmed, with costs.
McLaughlin and Dowling, JJ., concurred.
Concurrence Opinion
(concurring):
I concur with Mr. Justice Laughlin in the conclusion that to enforce section 56 of the Stock Corporation Law (Consol. Laws, chap. 59; Laws of 1909, chap. 61), which, re-enacted section 54 of the former Stock Corporation Law (Gen. Laws, chap. 36; Laws of 1892, chap. 688), as amended by chapter 354 of the Laws of 1901, the action must be in equity, brought on behalf . of all the creditors of the corporation against all the stockholders whose capital stock has not been fully paid in, who are solvent, and who are within the jurisdiction of the court. I assume it would not be essential to make a defendant the owner of stock the -subscription for which, had not been fully paid, if such a holder was insolvent, had become a bankrupt, or was not within the jurisdiction of the court. Under this provision of the statute it would seem that, the unpaid subscriptions to stock are constituted a fund for the benefit of creditors of the corporation, and that upon the corporation becoming insolvent by a proper action this fund could be so realized as to be distributed among the creditors of the corporation. But it would seem that the stockholders and subscribers to the stock would only be liable to an amount sufficient to pay the debts of the corporation and thus all the creditors would have to be before the court and also all the stockholders so that a liability could be imposed which would be sufficient to pay the corporate debts.
I also think that the evidence'fails to Show that there is any subscription for capital stock made by these defendants unpaid. The court has found that the defendants subscribed for certain shares of the capital stock of the corporation and paid into the treasury thereof the par value of such-stock and except as found none of the defendants at any time were either the holders of any part of the capital stock of said defendant company' nor were any of said defendants subscribers to any of the capital stock of the said defendant company, which was unpaid. I think that finding is sustained by the evidence, and for that, reason the court correctly dismissed the complaint.
I concur, therefore, in the affirmance of this judgment.'
Miller, J., concurred.
Judgment affirmed, with costs'..