Bettendorf Axle Co. v. Field

79 A. 724, 114 Md. 487, 1911 Md. LEXIS 16
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJanuary 11, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 79 A. 724 (Bettendorf Axle Co. v. Field) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bettendorf Axle Co. v. Field, 79 A. 724, 114 Md. 487, 1911 Md. LEXIS 16 (Md. 1911).

Opinion

Briscoe, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is a submitted’ case, and the appeal is from a judgment, of the Superior Court of Baltimore City in favor of the defendants for costs.

*489 The suit was instituted, by the appellant, as a creditor of the South Baltimore Steel Oar and Foundry Company, a corporation of the State, against the appellees as executors of George A. Von Lingen, a stockholder, of the corporation.

The declaration contains seven counts, six in assumpsit, and the seventh a special count, as follows. And for that the plaintiff is a creditor to the South Baltimore Steel Oar and Foundry Company, a body corporate .of the State of Maryland, organized and existing under the General Laws of the State, in the sum of twenty-four thousand eight hundred and eighty-four dollars and-ninety cents ($24,884,901 ; and that the defendants were prior to, are, and have been, during all the time that the plaintiff has been a creditor of the 'company, original stockholders of the South Baltimore Steel Car and Foundry Company, and as such were prior to, are, and have been, during all of the period the owners and holders of one hundred and eighty (180) shares of the preferred capital stock of the par value of one hundred dollars ($100) per share (the preferred capital stock being -of the class known as ordinary or pure preferred capital stock and was not issued under or in accordance with section 408 of Article- 23 of the Code of Public General Laws of the State of Maryland of 1904), and two hundred and fifteen (215) shares of the common capital stock of the said company of the par. value of one hundred dollars ($100.00) per share, upon which preferred and common stock there is a balance dire and unpaid of nine thousand dollars ($9,000.00) with interest from February 1, 1906; the capital stock so, as aforesaid, held and owned by the defendants, having a par value of thirty-nine thousand, five hundred dollars ($39,-500.00), being nine thousand dollars ($9,000.00) in excess of all suiris paid by the defendants or by any one for or on account of the defendants to the company for the shares; the shares having been acquired by the defendants by subscription or purchase from the South Baltimore Steel Car and *490 Foundry Company, and the defendants are as to the shares original stockholders having had at all times knowledge that the stock was not fully paid and of the extent of the nonpayment.

And the plaintiff claims eighteen thousand dollars ($18,-000.00).

To this declaration, the defendants pleaded the general issue pleas of never indebted as alleged, and never promised as alleged. For a third plea they allege, that the cause of action did not accrue within the three years before the suit. And for a fourth plea, to the seventh count of the declaration, they say, that the alleged indebtedness of the defendants or of their testator to the South Baltimore Steel Car and Foundry Company for the purchase of stock therein, did not accrue within three years before this suit.

And for a fifth plea to the seventh count of the declaration, they say that the one hundred and eighty (180) shares of the preferred capital stock of said South Baltimore Steel Car and Foundry Company, referred to in the count, were issued under and in accordance with section 408 of Article 23 of the Code of Public General Laws of the State of Maryland of 1904, and were full paid and non-assessable shares in accordance with the section of the Code; and that the two hundred and fifteen (215) shares of the common stock of the company, referred to in the count, were also full paid, non-assessable shares in the company, in accordance with the law, and that no sum whatsoever was ever due to. the company thereon by the defendants or their testator, George A. Von Lingen, at and prior to the institution of this suit.

On the 10th day of May, 1910, the defendants, the appellees here, moved' the Court that the suit be declared abated and dismissed, for the following reason. That this is a suit by a creditor of a corporation to enforce the liability of one of its stockholders therein, and that Chapter 305 of Acts of 1908 of the General Assembly of Maryland provides that *491 the exclusive remedy for the enforcement of such rights shall be by bill iu equity, and that the law by its terms became operative as of July 1st, 1907, and further declared that it shall cause the abatement of all actions at law, which should have been brought against stockholders since that date, and that this suit was brought subsequent to July 1st, 1907, and in fact, was brought more than eighteen (18) months after' the passage of the above-named Chapter 305 of the Acts of Assembly of 1908; and after the statute had been in full force and effect; and the action should, therefore, be declared abated.

This motion to abate was granted by the Court below, and on the 10th day of May, 1910, the suit was directed to be abated and dismissed and a judgment entered for the defendants for costs.

The single question then raised on the record and presented for our consideration is the constitutionality of the Acts of 1908,- Chap. 305—that is, first, whether the retrospective provision of the Act of 1908, Chap. 305, is valid, and secondly, if it is valid, then was that Act superseded by Chapter 240 of the Acts of 1908 (the new General Corporation Law), which became effective June 1st, 1908.

By the Act of 1908, Chap. 305, .sec. 64 of Article 23 of the Code of 1888, title “Corporations,” was repealed and reenacted, and a new section known as 64 A was added. This section reads as follows:

“64 A. The exclusive remedy for the enforcement by creditors against stockholders of all rights existing under the preceding section 64, as the same stood prior to the time of the passage of -this Act, and which were declared by said section as amended by this Act not to be affected-by the terms thereof as herein amended, shall be, as against stockholders residing in the State of Maryland, by bill in equity in the nature of a creditor’s bill filed against such stockholders by one or more creditors on behalf of themselves and all other *492 creditors of the corporation who may come in and make themselves parties thereto, in a Court having jurisdiction within the limits of the county or City of Baltimore, in which, as the case may he, the principal office of the corporation is situated at the time of the filing of the bill, or in case any such corporation has, by reason of having been placed in the hands of a receiver, or from any other cause, ceased to have any principal office at the time of the filing of the bill, then the bill shall be filed in a Court having jurisdiction within the limits of the county or the City of Baltimore in which, as the case may be, the said corporation had its last principal place of business; and to any such bill stockholders residing beyond the limits of the State of Maryland may become parties defendant, and upon so becoming parties, shall not be proceeded against in any other State or territory or in the District of Columbia, in respect of any liability imposed by the said section 64, as said section stood before the repeal thereof, and which existed at the time of the passage of this Act hereinbefore referred to.

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Bluebook (online)
79 A. 724, 114 Md. 487, 1911 Md. LEXIS 16, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bettendorf-axle-co-v-field-md-1911.