Filed Date: 1/20/1845
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/14/2024
The original bill was correctly filed against (he corporation. (2 R. S. 463, § 36.) The proceeding under that section may be by bill, as well as by petition.
The case of Morgan v. The New Y'orle and Albany Rail Road Company, before the Chancellor in May, 1843, referred to by the defendants,
I have no doubt that the liability of the stockholders of The Rossie Lead Mining Company, to the payment of the debts of that corporation, may be enforced in equity. The charter permits creditors to sue them “in any court having cognizance thereofand the revised statutes expressly give cognizance of such suits, to this court. (2 R. S. 464, 465, § 43, 44, 45.)
Another objection is urged, that the supplemental bill cannot be maintained to enforce this liability. Also that it cannot be enforced conjointly with a suit against the corporation, because the remedy against the latter must be exhausted, before going against the stockholders.
The reason assigned, holds good in respect of the remedy at law only, which was exhausted before filing the original bill. See section 10, of the charter of this corporation. (Laws of 1837, ch. 396.) To dispose of the objection last mentioned, tho 46th section of the article of the revised statutes relative to these proceedings, pre-supposes that the corporation is to be joined with the stockholders, officers, &c., in a suit under section 45th. The receivers there authorized, are receivers of the corporation, not of the individual parties sought to be charged.
In the case of Mann, Receiver of the Catskill and Canajoharie Rail Road Cornyany v. Pentz, (January 13th, 1845.)
If I were right in that conclusion, there is no difficulty here, because the 43d section enables the creditor to make the stockholders parties to the bill, either on filing it, or subsequently. And where the stockholders were only ascertained by the bill itself, as was the case here, they can properly be made parties by a supplemental bill alone. An amendment of the original bill, for that purpose, would be incongruous.
Assuming however, that the 43d section is not applicable ; the same reason for a supplemental bill exists in a proceeding under section 45th. The creditor having exhausted his legal remedy, came into this court to compel payment of his debt. He sued the corporation in the first instance, and apprehending that remedy would be ineffectual, he sought a discovery of the parties who by the statute, were personally liable for his debt. These parties were liable, irrespective of the result of his suit against the corporation in this court. Having ascertained who they were, I think it was competent for him to enforce that liability by a supplemental bill. The proceeding adds parties who are primarily liable to the demand shown by the original bill, and who were unknown when it was filed. (Lube’s Eq. PI. by Wheeler, 136, note 1, chap. 16, § 1.)
This course was pursued in Judson v. The Rossie Galena Company, 9 Paige, 598, and received the tacit approbation of the court in that case.
I do not think that the remedy under this charter, against the stockholders, is to await the result of the decree mentioned in sections 48, 49 and 50, of the article before cited. The liability is several, as well as joint; is for the whole of the debts, and not restricted to the amount of stock owned by the party; and it is absolute, upon the return of an execution at law against the corporation, unsatisfied.
The defendant, Judson, claims the costs of his answer to the original bill. He was made a party as the secretary of the corporation, in aid of the discovery sought, and it appears by his
The jurisdiction is well settled, to make the officers of a corporation parties in this court for the purposes of discovery; and it is my impression that in such cases, they are deemed a part of the corporation in respect of their costs. (See Dummer v. The Corporation of Chippenham, 14 Ves. 245; Glascott v. The Governor and Company of the Copper Miners of England, 5 Lond. Jur. R. 264; McIntyre v. Trustees of Union College, 6 Paige, 239; Many v. The Beekman Iron Company, 9 Paige, 188.)
' In this case, the complainants did not apply to Judson, before filing their bill; and for this cause, as well as the fact that the discovery is a part of the complainant’s proceeding to enforce his debt, I will direct them to pay the costs of Judson’s answer, and include them in their general bill against the defendants.
There is a small fund in the hands of the receiver, to which all the creditors of the corporation are equally entitled. The complainants can receive only their proportion of this fund.
They are entitled to a decree against the defendants for their debt (exclusive of the costs at law,) with interest and the costs of this suit. There will be a reference to ascertain what poition of the fund in the hands of the receiver, equitably belongs to the complainants, and they may pay their costs at law out of such portion. The residue of their debt, interest and costs, to be specified in the master’s report, may be collected by execution against all of the defendants who were served with process.
And the decree may provide for an application by the defendants to enforce contribution among themselves.
Now reported, 10 Paige, 290.
b) Reported, ante page 257.