Adamant Manufacturing Co. of America v. Wallace

48 P. 415, 16 Wash. 614, 1897 Wash. LEXIS 368
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 18, 1897
DocketNo. 2479
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 48 P. 415 (Adamant Manufacturing Co. of America v. Wallace) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Adamant Manufacturing Co. of America v. Wallace, 48 P. 415, 16 Wash. 614, 1897 Wash. LEXIS 368 (Wash. 1897).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Dunbar, J.

This is a suit in equity brought by a [615]*615judgment creditor of an insolvent corporation, to obtain payment for its debts, from certain of the stockholders, upon the ground that the stock subscribed by them had not been fully paid. We say an “insolvent” corporation, although this is one of the questions in controversy; but we are satisfied from an investigation of the record that the corporation was insolvent, so that it will not be necessary to discuss that question further on.. The defendant corporation, the Adamant Plaster Manufacturing Company, was organized in April, 1889, with a capital stock of $100,-000, divided into one thousand shares of $100 each. $45,000 of stock was subscribed by one Holbrook, and was paid for by him by turning over to the company a certain contract for patent rights for the manufacture of adamant. The defendants in this action, the other stockholders, subscribed for the other $55,000 worth of shares, and an agreement was entered into between themselves that this stock should be issued to them as paid up stock, upon their building a factory and equipping it for the manufacture of adamant, upon their paying into the corporation $5,000 as a working capital, and upon the purchase of certain real estate in Tacoma as a site for the factory; and the stock was so issued.

It is the contention of the appellant that the property turned over to the corporation in consideration of these shares was not worth the face value of the shares, and that a fraud was thereby perpetrated upon the creditors, one of whom is the plaintiff in this action. It might be well to state here that the plaintiff corporation had obtained judgment against the defendant corporation, execution had issued and a writ of nulla bona returned, which return was the basis of this action against the stockholders to compel them to pay [616]*616into the corporation sufficient to liquidate its debt. The defendants demurred to the plaintiff’s complaint, on the ground that it did not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action, which demurrer we think was properly overruled.

The first ground of objection to the complaint is that it shows on its face that the capital stock of the defendant corporation consisted of one thousand shares, but it nowhere appears in the complaint that all of said shares were subscribed. In support of the contention that this is a necessary averment, respondent cites Denny Hotel v. Schram, 6 Wash. 134 (32 Pac. 1002, 36 Am. St. Rep. 137). This case is easily distinguished from that one. In that case the action was brought by the corporation itself, while in the case at bar the action is brought by a creditor, and another rule prevails. However, this question was squarely decided by this court in opposition to respondent’s contention in McKay v. Elwood, 12 Wash. 579 (41 Pac. 919), where it was held that in an action by a corporation upon an unpaid stock subscription, the complaint was not demurrable on the ground that it failed to allege that the capital stock of the corporation had been subscribed, when the complaint otherwise alleged that plaintiff was and had been a duly organized and existing corporation during all the time referred to in the complaint.

The next objection was that there was no allegation in the complaint that any demand or call was ever made by the trustees of the defendant corporation, or otherwise, or at all, upon the individual defendants, or upon any of them, for the sums respectively subscribed by them and alleged by the complaint not to have been paid, citing Elderkin v. Peterson, 8 Wash. 674 (36 Pac. 1089), which case was also an action by a [617]*617receiver against a stockholder, and is therefore not in point. The creditor has no control over the corporation or its business; is not supposed to know whether calls have been regularly made, or made at all. So it will be readily seen that while this may be a duty of the corporation itself in suing one of its members over whom it has control, the duty should not be imposed upon a creditor. That no calls are necessary before an action can be commenced by a creditor against the stockholder, see 2 Morawetz on Private Corporations, § 821, where the distinctions above referred to are commented on at length. We think the complaint in all respects was sufficient.

It is not necessary in discussing the merits of this case to set out in full the answer of the defendants, for the real contention must be whether or not the stock subscribed for was paid for in cash or its equivalent. The doctrine that the stock of a corporation is a trust fund for the benefit of creditors is one which is founded in equity and fair dealing, and in any event has become so well established in this country that it can no longer be gainsaid. This doctrine was announced by Chancellor Kent, as early as 1824, in Wood v. Dummer, 3 Mason, 309, and since that time has become the established law of this country and is termed the “American doctrine,” although, as shown in the case above referred to, the same doctrine had long been established in England; and so universally has this doctrine been accepted, in America especially, that the citation of authorities seems a work of supererogation. We will, however, quote from 2 Morawetz on Private Corporations, § 820, the rule which is announced as follows:

“Debts due a corporation are equitable assets, and may be reached by creditors through the aid of a [618]*618court of chancery, if the legal assets which can be reached by execution prove insufficient. The liability of the shareholders to contribute the amount of their shares as capital is treated in equity as assets, like other legal claims belonging to the corporation. This liability, together with the capital actually contributed,, constitutes the trust fund which in equity is deemed pledged for the payment of the corporate debts.”

This being true, then it must necessarily follow, for the protection of creditors who dealt with these corporations, that the stock subscribed for must be paid in cash or in property of an equivalent value. In other words, the corporation must be in the actual condition which it represents itself to be in financially. If it were allowed to hold itself out as having a capital stock of $100,000, when in reality the capital stock, which is and must be, under the theory of the law, assets in the hands of the corporation, is worth only one-half that amount, the corporation is to that extent doing business under false colors, and is obtaining credit upon the faith of an asserted estate which is purely fictitious. And where, by any arrangement between the shareholders and the corporation, the stock is issued as fully paid up, when in fact it has not been paid to the full amount of its face value, but has been paid in property of a fictitious or inflated value, a court of equity will compel a payment by the stockholder for the benefit of the creditor who has dealt with the corporation relying upon the asserted value of its assets to the full amount or face value of the stock. Such is almost the universal holding of the courts of the present day. See First National Bank v. Gustin, etc., Mining Co., 42 Minn. 327 (44 N. W. 198, 18 Am. St. Rep. 510); Taylor, Private Corporations, § 702.

[619]*619The latter authority lays down the rule as follows:

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Bluebook (online)
48 P. 415, 16 Wash. 614, 1897 Wash. LEXIS 368, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/adamant-manufacturing-co-of-america-v-wallace-wash-1897.