Court Opinion

ID: 3269643
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-05 16:38:02.395372+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T07:41:20.365496
License: Public Domain

The Independent Gin Company was a corporation organized under the laws of this State and domiciled in Greene County. During the calendar year 1918 Eugene Nettles was the president of the company, and from January 1, 1918, to May 4, 1918, J. W. Alexander was the secretary. On May 4, 1918, C.A. Mack was elected secretary and served as such until January 1, 1919. *Page 381 
On December 20, 1918, the gin company borrowed a sum of money from a bank in Paragould, which it did not repay, and the bank sued Nettles as the president of the corporation and recovered a judgment against him for this debt. In this suit it was alleged that the president and secretary of the corporation were in default in failing to file the corporate report required by 1715, C.  M. Digest. At the trial of this suit it developed that Nettles, as president, and Alexander, as secretary, had filed a report as required by this section, but had neglected to verify it as required by the statute, and the court held, on the authority of Galloway v. Stallings, 154 Ark. 16, that it was not a sufficient compliance with the statute to relieve him from personal liability for the debts of the corporation contracted during the period of the default, and judgment was rendered against Nettles for the amount of the debt due the bank.
Nettles paid this judgment, and then sued Alexander and Mack for contribution, and in his complaint he alleged that the duty to verify the report rested upon them as well as upon himself but that he and they had innocently and ignorantly omitted to verify said report, but they all believed they had complied with the law, and that morally all were blameless.
Separate demurrers were filed to the complaint by both Alexander and Mack, and these demurrers were sustained and the cause dismissed as to each of them and Nettles has appealed.
Appellant has reviewed our cases construing the statute under which the liability against him was enforced by the bank, and also cases from other States construing similar statutes, and insists that this liability is in its nature quasi ex contractu and that the right to contribution therefore exists. Appellant further insists that if it where held that the liability enforced against him was not contractual or quasi contractual, but sounded in tort, the right of contribution would still exist, for the reason that no moral turpitude was involved in the failure to make the affidavit, and that this omission was an act of *Page 382 
simple negligence in which the defendants participated. It may be said that counsel have cited cases of the highest authority sustaining their position. We do not review these cases, nor do we decide whether they should be followed by us, for the reason that, although our statute has been designated as remedial, it has become, by the amendment enacted May 6, 1909 (Acts 1909, p. 643), a criminal statute as well. The effect of this amendment which appears in 1726, C.  M. Digest was to impose, in addition to the existing civil liability to creditors, a fine not exceeding $500 for such neglect, and each day during which the president and secretary failed to file the required report, properly verified, was made a separate offense.
It appears therefore, under our statute, that, in stating his cause of action, Nettles must show, not merely the discharge of the quasi contractual liability resting alike upon himself and the secretary of the corporation, or a mere tort involving no turpitude, but also a violation of the criminal law of the State. In other words, his cause of action is predicated upon a violation of the criminal laws of this State, and his right to contribution must fail on that account.
In the case of Carter v. Bradley County Road Imp. Dist., 155 Ark. 288, the right to recover on a contract was denied because the contract was made in violation of public policy. In that case we held that where the plaintiff, to recover, would be required to prove a contract which contravened public policy, the courts of the State would decline to render aid in the enforcement of the contract. So here the courts cannot aid Nettles in enforcing the asserted demand because, in stating his cause of action, he must prove his own violation of a criminal law of the State, and it profits him nothing to stay that the defendants, the secretaries of the corporation, were as guilty as he was.
It follows that the demurrers were properly sustained, and the decree of the court below is affirmed. *Page 383