Chatham v. . Realty Co.

105 S.E. 329, 180 N.C. 500, 1920 N.C. LEXIS 122
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedDecember 8, 1920
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 105 S.E. 329 (Chatham v. . Realty Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chatham v. . Realty Co., 105 S.E. 329, 180 N.C. 500, 1920 N.C. LEXIS 122 (N.C. 1920).

Opinion

ALLEN, J., dissenting; BROWN, J., concurring in the dissenting opinion. At February Term, 1917, of Mecklenburg, Paul Chatham and the Charlotte Rapid Transit obtained judgment against the defendant, the Mecklenburg Realty Company, for $10,000 and interest from date of judgment. On appeal, this was affirmed with modification that the judgment should bear interest from 19 May, 1913, the date of the contract sued upon, and not from the first day of the trial term as in actions for tort, where the verdict does not expressly allow interest. A petition *Page 501 to rehear was denied. Execution upon the judgment was issued 14 March, 1918, and was returned 2 April, 1918, "nulla bona." Thereupon plaintiffs made demand upon the officers and directors of the Mecklenburg Realty Company to pay in sufficient funds from the assets of the company which had been distributed among the stockholders to liquidate said judgment, which was refused.

This action was begun 2 April, 1918, against the directors and stockholders of the Mecklenburg Realty Company to enforce payment of said judgment, and upon an order for examination, made in this cause, by the officers of the Mecklenburg Realty Company, it was ascertained that its entire assets and capital had been distributed among the stockholders. On 17 August, 1917, the plaintiffs in the judgment assigned to E. T. Cansler and H. L. Taylor one-fifth interest in the proceeds as security for payment of fees for legal services rendered, and to be rendered in said case. On 2 January, 1918, the plaintiffs in the judgment assigned to H. L. Taylor $2,305 in said judgment as security for debts due him, but for which he held other security amply sufficient to secure said debts. On 2 January, 1918, the same plaintiffs assigned to Margaret Kavanaugh as security for certain debts due her the balance arising from the proceeds from said judgment.

The Mecklenburg Realty Company, on 7 December, 1916, filed a certificate of voluntary dissolution, and thus attempted to dissolve. The summons in the original action in this case had been served upon said realty company theretofore on 12 August, 1914.

When this cause came on for trial at September Term, 1919, of Mecklenburg, both parties, by consent, entered on the minutes of the court, waived trial by jury, and consented that the issues of fact be tried by the court, who heard the evidence and rendered the findings of fact and judgment holding that the assignees of an interest in judgment were not necessary parties in the said action; that plaintiffs' cause of action against the stockholders of the Mecklenburg Realty Company was barred by the three-year statute of limitations; and that plaintiffs could only recover against said stockholders to the extent of the assets and capital of said company, which had been distributed among them within said three years, but that plaintiffs' cause of action against the directors of said company was not barred by the statute of limitations. Both parties appealed. At Spring Term of this Court, 1920, a per curiam order was entered that the assignees of interests in the judgment should be made parties in the Superior Court, with leave to them to file pleadings and to the other parties to except, and that the action taken should be certified to this Court, the case being retained here for further orders, but the order of this Court was "not to be taken as conclusive upon the parties who might except thereto, and they could take such course in the *Page 502 Superior Court, or in this Court, to protect their rights as they may be advised." The pleadings had below in pursuance to said order have been certified to this Court, and are now a part of the record of this case. Though the assignments were absolute in form, the judge finds as a fact from the evidence that they were made as a security for debts for legal services and other indebtedness. H. L. Taylor testified that the assignment to himself and to Mr. Cansler was as security for the payment of fees due them as counsel, and that at his suggestion a further assignment was made of an interest in judgment to secure an indebtedness due his client, Mrs. Kavanaugh. She was not at the time aware of this provision for her benefit, but has since then accepted it, and has filed her pleas in this Court, as well as Cansler and Taylor, claiming their beneficial interests in the proceeds of the judgment.

"The Court finds as a fact that plaintiffs have such an interest in said judgment, as gives them the right to prosecute this action in their own name, in behalf of themselves and all other creditors having an interest." The above assignees of a beneficial interest in said judgment have been made parties and filed pleadings in behalf of such beneficial interests. Thus all parties interested in the judgment are before the court. The original owners of the judgment could thus maintain the action in their own behalf, and for the benefit of their assignees as trustees of an express trust under the terms of said assignments, and can prosecute this action. "An executor or administrator, a trustee of an express trust, or a person expressly authorized by statute, may sue without joining with him the person for whose benefit the action is prosecuted. A trustee of an express trust, within the meaning of this section, shall be construed to include a person with whom or in whose name a contract is made for the benefit of another." C. S., 449.

It was proper, though not necessary, that such assignees should be made parties, which has been done, and they have filed their supplemental pleadings. The exception that the owners and plaintiffs in the judgment could not bring this action was properly overruled.

The proceedings to recover the assets and capital which has been distributed among the shareholders and against the officers and directors was in the equitable jurisdiction of this Court. The statute is simply a cumulative legal remedy. Barnawell v. Threadgill, 40 N.C. 89; Oliveira v.University of N.C. 62 N.C. 70; Humphrey v. Wade, 70 N.C. 281. *Page 503

In Settle v. Settle, 141 N.C. 563, the Court affirmed the above principle from which it is clear that the statute declaring the liability of directors and stockholders to creditors, upon the admitted facts of this case, merely extended the equitable powers of the court to obtain possession of the assets of the corporation and administer them in accordance with the principles of equity, and does not substitute the statutory remedy to the exclusion of the equitable remedy heretofore existing. The intent of the Legislature was to make the remedy of creditors swifter and more efficacious, and the statutory remedy does not restrict the right of the creditors by shortening the time within which those rights could have been enforced in an equitable proceeding.

A creditor who has obtained a judgment against a corporation can maintain such action when the execution has been returned nulla bona. InGuilford v. Georgia Co., 112 N.C. 36, the Court said: "There being no distinction between actions at law and suits in equity in this State, any proper relief can be granted in a civil action. A creditor's suit is of itself a very comprehensive and liberal action. It is not demurrable, because the remedy might have been had by supplemental proceedings. Bronsonv. Ins. Co., 85 N.C. 411; Hughes v. Whitaker, 84 N.C. 640. It is not demurrable because the cause of action is dormant. Bacon v.

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Bluebook (online)
105 S.E. 329, 180 N.C. 500, 1920 N.C. LEXIS 122, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chatham-v-realty-co-nc-1920.