Adams v. Wallace

81 N.Y.S. 848

This text of 81 N.Y.S. 848 (Adams v. Wallace) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Adams v. Wallace, 81 N.Y.S. 848 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1903).

Opinion

PATTERSON, J.

This appeal is from an interlocutory judgment sustaining a demurrer to defenses set up in the answer of the defendant Wallace. The question in the case is: Does the limitation of time within which an action must be brought, as provided in section 55 of the stock corporation law, apply to a full liability business corporation ? There are three statutes affecting this question, and which must be considered in deciding it. They are the general corporation law (chapter 35, p. 2850, Heydecker’s Gen. Laws), the stock corporation law (chapter 36, p. 2900, Id.), and the business corporation law (chapter 41, p. 3500, Id.). The defendant Wallace was a stockholder of the Morton Boarding Stables, a business corporation with full liability, created under chapter 691, p. 2042, of the Laws of 1892, known as the “Business Corporation Law.” This action was brought against him and other persons, as stockholders of the corporation, to enforce their full liability as such stockholders, the complaint alleging the plaintiff's ownership of promissory notes made by the corporation, their nonpayment and protest at maturity, the bringing of actions upon such notes against the maker, the recovery of judgments thereon, the issuance of an execution on each of the judgments, and the return of such executions unsatisfied. In the defenses to which this demurrer applies, it is set up that the debt or consideration for which the notes in suit were given was contracted by the Morton Boarding Stables prior to the 1st of January, 1898, and became due and payable prior to the 1st of [850]*850January, igoo, and that the notes sued on were given and accepted by the plaintiff more than two years after the debt became due and payable, and that the action against the Morton Boarding Stables was brought more than two years after January i, igoo, the time at which the indebtedness accrued and became due and payable, and no action was commenced for the collection • of such indebtedness within two years.

By section 6 of the business corporation law it is provided that every corporation formed under it may be or become a full liability'corporation, and, if it is such, “all the stockholders of the corporation shall be severally and individually liable to its creditors for all its debts and liabilities and may be joined as defendants in any action against it,” and, further, that “no execution shall issue against any stockholder individually until execution has been issued against the corporation and returned unsatisfied, and all the stockholders shall contribute a proportionate share, according to the number of shares of stock owned by each, of the amount paid by any stockholder on a judgment recovered against him individually for a debt of the corporation.”

It is provided by section 54 of the stock corporation law that every holder of capital stock not fully paid in 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 the debts of the corporation contracted while such stock was so held. By this same section it is provided that every stockholder shall be jointly and severally liable for all debts due and owing to any of the corporation’s laborers, servants, and employés, other than contractors, for services performed by them for such corporation; but, before a stockholder can be charged in such an action, 30 days’ notice of intention to hold the stockholder liable must be given, and the action commenced within 30 days after the return of an execution unsatisfied against the corporation for a judgment recovered against it for services.

By section 55 of the stock corporation law it is enacted that no action shall be brought against a stockholder for any debt of the corporation until judgment therefor has been recovered against the corporation and an execution thereon has been returned unsatisfied in whole or in part, and the amount due on such execution shall be the amount recoverable, with costs, against the stockholder. No 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, and no action shall be brought against a stockholder, after he shall have ceased to be a stockholder, for any debt of the corporation, unless brought within two years from the time he shall have ceased to be a stockholder.

By section 2 of the general corporation law corporations are classified, and a stock corporation is declared to be either a moneyed, a transportation, or a business corporation.

By section 33 of the general corporation law it is enacted that “if in any corporate law there is or shall be any provision in conflict with any of the provisions of this chapter or of the stock corporation law, the provision so conflicting shall prevail, and the provision of [851]*851this chapter or of the stock corporation law with which it conflicts shall not apply in such a case.”

It is thus seen that by section 54 of the stock corporation law the liability of a stockholder in a stock corporation, the capital of which is not fully paid in, is a personal one, to a certain amount and for debts contracted while such stockholder holds his shares, with an absolute liability to laborers, servants, and employes, under a special limitation of time within which suit must be brought by such laborers, servants and employés. By section 6 of the business corporation law, all the stockholders of a full liability corporation are severally and individually liable to its creditors for all its debts. These sections of the two statutes are in one respect in conflict. The liability of a stockholder created by each of those sections is of a different character. Section 55 of the stock corporation law also conflicts with section 6 of the business corporation law. The former relates to the liability of a stockholder based upon a prior action pursued to judgment against a corporation; but, by section 6 of the business corporation law, the stockholder is made directly liable for debts. An action against the corporation is not required as a prerequisite to the institution of a suit against the stockholder. The provision relates only to the enforcement of a judgment by execution. Under section 6 of the business corporation law, a stockholder may be sued before an action against the corporation is carried on to judgment, the creditor’s right to execution being suspended until that process has been returned unsatisfied against the corporation. Walton v. Coe, 110 N. Y. 109, 17 N. E. 676.

There is, therefore, so far as the basis of liability is concerned, a radical difference and conflict in the sections considered of the two statutes; but section 55 of the stock corporation law is a statute of limitations. So far as that feature is concerned, there is no conflict between that section 55 of the stock corporation law and section 6 of the business corporation law, for the latter law contains no provision in the nature of a limitation, except as to laborers, etc. If the provisions of section 55 of the stock corporation law are to be construed as relating only to the liability declared in section 54 of that act, that is, of stockholders in corporations the capital of which has not been fully paid in, then the argument is at an end. But we can find nothing in section 55 which limits the liability of a stockholder in a stock corporation simply to corporations the particular situation of which, as to the condition of capital, is referred to in section 54.

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Related

Walton v. . Coe
17 N.E. 676 (New York Court of Appeals, 1888)

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Bluebook (online)
81 N.Y.S. 848, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/adams-v-wallace-nyappdiv-1903.