Case ID: ad_118/html/0605-01.html
Source: Caselaw Access Project
Author: {"author": "Spring, J.:", "license": "Public Domain", "url": "https://static.case.law/"}
Date Created: 2024-08-24T03:29:51.129683

John W. Ford, Suing in His Own Behalf and in Behalf of All Other Creditors of the Rochester-Mexican Plantation Company, Respondent, v. Benjamin E. Chase and Others, Appellants, Impleaded with Frank A. Underwood and Others, Defendants.
    Fourth Department,
    March 6, 1907.
    Debtor and creditor — suit in equity by creditor against stockholders for unpaid subscriptions — defaulting subscribers not necessary parties — sufficient allegation of promise to pay for stock —when debt of corporation payable within two years — failure to bring suit excused by injunction — when legal action not prerequisite to suit in equity.
    In a creditor’s action against stockholders of an insolvent corporation to recover sums unpaid upon their stock subscriptions, subscribers who never paid the ten per cent essential to make them stockholders are not necessary parties.
    neither is it necessary to join subscribers whose subscriptions have been declared forfeited by resolution of the board of directors.
    A complaint excusing the j cinder of parties whose subscriptions are forfeited need not allege the details essential to the declaration of forfeiture by the directors pursuant to section 43 -of the Stock Corporation Law, such facts being merely evidential.
    When the creditor alleges that the entire capital stock was subscribed and that the several defendants named subscribed for and agreed to take shares of capital stock as specifically set forth and that certain specified sums on the subscription are due and unpaid by each defendant respectively, there is' a sufficient allegation of an agreement to pay, and the complaint is not open to the objection that part of the stock may have been paid for in property or labor.
    When a corporation assumes the contract of a vendee of lands and agz’ees to pay the consideration to the vendor, it assumes the debt and becomes the debtor of the vendor within the purview o£ section 54 of the Stock Corporation Law.
    Although by section 55 of the Stock Corporation Law a stockholder is not personally liable for debts of a corporation not payable within two years from the time contracted, nor unless an action for collection shall be brought within two years after the debt becomes due, yet when in 1903 a corporation assumed the obligations of a vendee under a contract to sell lands made in 1903, the consideration to be paid in 1904, the liability of the corporation for the debt matures within the statutory period, for the agreement assuming the debt is an independent agreement creating a new obligation. The purpose of the statute is to prevent the extension of credit to a corporation for a longer period than two years and should not be so construed as to include the time a debt was running preceding, the date when the corporation assumed it.
    A failure to bz'ing suit against stockholdez's within two years as required by said section 55 is excused when all actions were enjoined on the appointment of a receiver.
    
      When a complaint in a creditor’s action alleges the insolvency of the corporation, its dissolution, the conversion of its assets into money and the inadequacy of the same to pay the debts, it is -not necessary for the creditor to exhaust his legal remedy against the corporation.
    McLennan, P. J., dissented.
    Appeal by the defendants, Benjamin E. Chase,and others, from an interlocutory judgment of the Supreme Court in favor of 'the plaintiff, entered'in the office of the clerk of the county of Monroe on the 1st day of September, 1906, upon the decision of the court, rendered after a trial at the Monroe Special Term, overruling the said defendants’ demurrers to the complaint.-
    
      M. H. McMath, for the appellants Perkins and others.
    
      John P. Bowman, for the appellants Chase and others.
    
      William N. Cogswell, for the appellants Devine and McPhail.
    
      Edward Lynn, for the respondent.
   Spring, J.:

The action is commenced by the plaintiff in his own behalf and all others similarly situated as creditors of the Boclrester-Mexican Plantation Company, a domestic stock corporation, to recover of the stockholders of such corporation sums alleged to be unpaid on their stock. The. action is in equity, and the stockholders and receiver of the corporation are made parties defendant. Section 54 of the Stock Corporation Law (Laws of 1892, chap. 688, as amd. by Laws of 1901, chap. 354), which is -the warrant for the action, so far as pertinent, is as follows: “Every holder of capital stock not fully paid, in any stock corporation, shall be .personally, liable to its creditors, to an amount equal to the amount unpaid on the stock held by him for debts of the corporation contracted while such stock was held by him.” .

The charge is that several stockholders have failed to pay in full their capital stock, and the complaint asks for judgment decreeing payment by these delinquent stockholders, and for the adjustment •of the claims'of the creditors of the corporation and for the payment of the same in full, or ratably if the fund thus created is inadequate to pay them in full. - ■

In this form of action and under the amended statute (supra) ail the stockholders should he made parties (Lang v. Luts, 180 N. T. 254, 259, affg. 83 App. Div. 534), and the judgment inures to the benefit of all other creditors who prove their claims and contribute their proportion to the expenses of the litigation. (Matter of Ziegler, 98 App. Div. 117.)

The stock subscribed and issued is the fund to meet the obligations of the company and in equity is subject to the lien of the creditors; “ unpaid stock is as much a part of this pledge and as much a part of the assets of the company as. the cash which has been paid in upon it.” (Stoddard Lum, 159 N. T. 265, 273.)

Demurrers to the complaint were interposed by all the defendants served, alleging that there is a defect of parties and that a cause of action is not set forth.

We will briefly analyze the chief features of the complaint.

The Rochester-Mexican Plantation Company was organized in November, 1901, for the purpose of buying, selling and operating plantations in tire Republic of Mexico, with an authorized capital of $60,000, divided into shares of the par value of $25 each. At the time of the organization of said corporation the plaintiff owned a tract of land in the State of Vera Cruz in said Republic, and on the 8th day of March, 1902, sold the same to one Zeeveld who agreed to pay the plaintiff as part of the purchase price $9,000 in American gold, with interest, on the 8th day of March, 1904. The corporation, it seems, assumed possession of these premises at the time of the purchase by Zeeveld, who was one of the original subscribers for the stock of said company. On the 6th day of February, 1903, Zeeveld sold the premises to the plantation company, and as a part of the purchase price it assumed and agreed to pay the said indebtedness of $9,000 to the plaintiff. The complaint alleges that the defendant stockholders have failed and omitted to pay in .full for the stock severally subscribed for and taken by them, and the extent of the delinquency of each shareholder is set out in the complaint and nothing has been paid to the plaintiff on the assumption agreement.

One criticism of the pleading is that certain of the original subscribers to the stock are not made parties. The complaint in excuse for this alleged failure avers that while these stockholders subscribed' for the stock they never paid the ten per cent thereof essential to make them stockholders. (Stock Corp. Law, § 41.)

They are not necessary parties. (Perry v. Iloadley, 19 Abb. FT. C. 76; Blade Biver <& Utica B. B. Go. v. Glarlte, 25 FT. T. 208, 210.)

Four of the stockholders who subscribed for $250 each of the capital stock are not.made parties. In explanation of this omission the complaint alleges that these stockholders “ released The Rochester-Mexican Plantation Company from all obligations on account of said stock subscription and the payment of the said sum of Two Hundred and Fifty Dollars, and by a resolution of the board of directors of the said The Rochester-Mexican Plantation Company the stock of the said Frederick P. Allen, Josiah Anstice, E. Frank Brewster, and Edward Gr. Miner, Jr., was declared duly forfeited.”

The sufficiency of this allegation is challenged on the ground that it does not recite the details essential to the declaration of forfeiture by the directors pursuant to section 43 of the Stock Corporation Law. (Laws of 1892, chap. 688.) This is not necessary. The general fact is stated denoting the cause for the omission to make these people parties defendant, and the gist of the statute is embodied in this recital. If not sufficiently explicit the remed) is by motion to make the averment more definite and certain, rather than by demurrer. It is not necessary to plead evidentiary facts leading up to the resolution declaring the stock forfeited. (Bochester B. Go. v. Bobinson, 133 FT. T. 242.)

The subscribers whose shares of stock were forfeited ceased to be stockholders. {Mills v. Stewart, 41 FLY. 384; Wheeler v. Millar, 90 id. 353, 358.)

It is also claimed that the foundation of the stockholders’ liability to pay the unpaid stock rests in the agreement to pay, and that there is no allegation of a promise to pay beyond the sums already contributed. We think the complaint is ample in this respect. It first alleges that the. entire capital stock was subscribed for in shares of twenty-five dollars each. It then chargés that “the several defendants herein named * * * subscribed for and

agreed to take shares of the capital stock of said The Rochester-Mexican Plantation Company, as follows: Benjamin E. Chase, forty shares thereof, of the par value of One thousand dollars;” and a like statement as to the number of shares subscribed for and, agreed to he taken by each defendant. It then recites the sum paid by each shareholder “ on account of said shares of stock subscribed for as above set forth the sum of (stating amount) due and unpaid of the par value of said stock of each of said defendants respectively.”

In the 11th paragraph it is alleged, “ That the several defendants herein (other than the defendant Fanning) and said W. A. Nason and T. J. Oliver held and owned said stock at the time the debt to plaintiff on which this action is brought was contracted and up to and at the time of the final dissolution of said The Rochester-Mexican Plantation Company, and held and owned such stock at the time of the commencement of this action.” And further it sets forth the names of the stockholders claimed to be derelict, with the number of shares and the balance remaining unpaid.

The general allegation is contained in the complaint that “ no other person or persons held capital stock of the said The Rochester-Mexican Plantation Company which was not fully paid at the time of the final dissolution of said corporation, who held such stock at the time the debt to plaintiff on which this action is brought, was contracted.”

These allegations, if true, show the subscription for and the ownership of the stock and the agreement to pay twenty-five dollars for each share subscribed for. A fair construction of the complaint negatives the suggestion that a part of the stock may have been paid for in property or labor.

It is urged with much earnestness that the assumption of the purchase price of $9,000 for these premises due from Zeeveld was not a debt within the purview of section 54. The plaintiff was a creditor of Zeeveld. The latter did not give back a mortgage to secure the purchase price of this land, but gave his individual obligation to pay, thus creating the relation of debtor and creditor. When the corporation assumed and agreed to pay this debt it became the debtor of the plaintiff. He could enforce the payment of this debt by action against the company, and it'was like any other obligation, and the land purchased was an asset of the company denoting the consideration for the indebtedness.

Section 55 of the Stock Corporation Law contains the following provisions“Ho stockholder shall be personally liable for any debt of the corporation not payable within two years from the time it is contracted, nor unless an action for its collection shall be brought against the corporation within two years after the debt becomes due.”

The agreement between Zee veld and the plaintiff was made March 8, 1902, and the $9,000 were to be paid March 8,1904., The agrees ment whereby the plantation company purchased the premises and undertook to pay the debt bears date February 6, 1903. It is claimed that inasmuch as the original debt ran for a longer. period than two years (Aultman & Taylor Oo. v. Syme, 163 H. Y. 54 ; liyer v. Prudential Ins. Go., 185 id. 6; Vose v. Kuhn, 45 Mise. Ecp. 455), the corporation was not liable to pay the debt at all. The corporation did not become bound until February, 1903. It was not the corporate debt until then, and it matured within fourteen months # from the time the company became chargeable with the payment. The purpose of the statute is to prevent the extension of a credit to a corporation for a longer period than two years. The rule was not transgressed in the assumption of this debt. The contract with the corporation was an independent agreement, creating a new obligation on its part.

If the assumption had been after the debt had accrued there would have been no liability at all, within the rule sought to be applied by the counsel for the appellants, on the part of the corporation by its assumption of the debt. We think the policy of the statute is tó limit the two years’ restriction to the time from which the corporation can be held liable, and not to include the time when the debt was running preceding the date when the corporation became the debtor. The '.counsel for the appellants cites cases like Kard'man- v. Sage (124 H. Y. 25), where the time of credit was extended beyond two years by promissory notes given by the corporation, and the court held that the claim of the creditor could not be charged against the stockholder. In those cases more than the limited period ran against the corporation. In the' present case there was no debt of the corporation which extended beyond the two. years.

The action was commenced in January, 1906, so that more than two years elapsed after the assumption agreement and the commencement of the action. The complaint alleges that on the 18th of January, 1905, and within two years from the date of the liability of the company, a petition of the directors of the corporation was presented to the court for its dissolution, and an injunction order was granted that day enjoining all creditors from bringing any action against the company, and a temporary receiver was then appointed. The temporary injunction remained operative until July, 1905, when the company was declared insolvent and its dissolution was ordered and a permanent receiver appointed to wind up its affairs, and the creditors were permanently restrained from commencing any action, which order continued effective until the commencement of the present action.. These facts sufficiently excuse the failure to commence the action within the two years from the inception of the liability of the corporation.

The complaint alleges, as already noted, the insolvency of the company, the dissolution proceedings, and also the conversion of its assets into - money, the inadequacy of the same to pay its debts so that the recovery of a judgment against the corporation would have been fruitless, and was not a prerequisite to the maintenance of the action. (Lang v. Lutz, 180 N. Y. 254-, 256.)

The interlocutory judgment should be affirmed, with one bill of costs to the respondent.

All concurred, except McLennan, P. J., who dissented.

Interlocutory judgment affirmed, with costs, with leave to the defendant to plead over upon payment of the costs of the demurrer and of this appeal.