Continental Oil Co. v. Montana Concrete Co.

207 P. 116, 63 Mont. 223, 1922 Mont. LEXIS 94
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedMay 1, 1922
DocketNo. 5,043
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 207 P. 116 (Continental Oil Co. v. Montana Concrete Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Continental Oil Co. v. Montana Concrete Co., 207 P. 116, 63 Mont. 223, 1922 Mont. LEXIS 94 (Mo. 1922).

Opinion

MR. JUSTICE HOLLOWAY

delivered the opinion of the court.

In an action pending in the district court of Silver Bow county, wherein the Continental Oil Company is plaintiff and the Montana Concrete Company, a corporation,' is defendant, an affidavit was filed on behalf of the plaintiff which recites that on March 9, 1918, plaintiff recovered a judgment against the defendant for $367.81 and costs; that no part thereof has [227]*227been paid; that execution has been issued and returned unsatisfied; that between January 1, 1916, and December 31, 1918, tbe directors of tbe defendant corporation, J. D. Slemons, James TI. King and D. A. Morrison, incurred debts on behalf of the corporation, including the debt due to plaintiff, exceeding the subscribed capital stock of the corporation by more than $25,000. Upon this affidavit an application was made to the court for the appointment of a receiver for the defendant, to the end that its right of action against the directors may be prosecuted, the amount of their liability recovered, and plaintiff’s judgment satisfied. After a hearing upon an order to show cause, the application was denied, and plaintiff appealed from the order.

During the period when the indebtedness constituting the excess was incurred, section 3837, Revised Codes of 1907, was in force. It provided: “The directors of corporations must not make dividends, except from the surplus profits arising from the business thereof; nor must they divide, withdraw or pay to the stockholders, or any of them, any part of the capital stock; nor must they create debts beyond their siibscribed capital stock, or reduce or increase the capital stock, except as hereinafter specially provided. For a violation of the provisions of this section, the directors under whose administration the same may have happened (except those who may have caused their dissent therefrom to be entered at large in the minutes of the directors at the time, or were not present when the same did happen) are, in their individual and private capacity, jointly and severally liable to the corporation and to the creditors thereof in the event of its dissolution, to the full amount of the capital stock so divided, withdrawn, paid out or reduced, or debt contracted,” etc.

On February 21, 1919, section 3837 was amended by elimi nating the words in italics (Chap. 37, Laws 1919; see. 5939, Rev. Codes 1921), and the question is now presented: Did this amendment operate to destroy the right of action which the defendant corporation had against its directors? [228]*228A statute very similar to section 3837 was enacted in California in 1850 (Stats. 1850, p. 348, see. 13) and with slight changes was carried into the Civil Code of 1872 as section 309. In 1863 the Act of 1850 was construed by the supreme court of California, and it Aas then said: “This statute provides for making one person individually liable for the debts of another, and prescribes how and under what circumstances he shall be held thus liable. Like other statutes which create a forfeiture or impose a penalty, it is to be strictly construed; and every intendment and presumption is in favor of the defendant in such eases.” (Irvine v. McKeon, 23 Cal. 472.) In 1889 section 309 of the Civil Code became the subject of consideration by the same court, and the language quoted above from Irvine v. McKeon was approved and adopted. (Moore v. Lent, 81 Cal. 502, 22 Pac. 875.) When the commissioners appointed to codify the laws of Montana completed the original draft of each of the four proposed Codes, they submitted a report in which, among other things, it is said: “This [Civil] Code is almost entirely taken from the Civil Code prepared by the Hon. David Dudley Field for the Legislature of the State of New York, and the Civil Code adopted by the state of California. ’ ’ Section' 309 of the California Civil Code was appropriated by our commissioners without change and in that form was adopted by the legislature and became section 438 of our Civil Code of 1895 and was continued without amendment and incorporated in the Revised Codes of 1907 as section 3837 above. It will be seen that we borrowed section 3837 from California after its character had been determined by the highest court of that state, and, under the familiar rule applicable in such cases, we must indulge the presumption that our legislative assembly adopted the construction as well as the text, and intended that the liability imposed upon the offending directors should be treated as a penalty for their violation of the law. (Moreland v. Monarch Min. Co., 55 Mont. 419, 178 Pac. 175; State ex rel. Rankin v. State Board of Examiners, 59 Mont. 557, 197 Pac. 988.)

[229]*229In principle, there is not any distinction between the liability imposed by section 3837 and that imposed by the companion section (sec. 451, Civ. Code 1895,- sec. 3850, Rev. Codes 1907; sec. 6003, Rev. Codes 1921) for the failure of the directors to file the required annual report, and beginning with Gans v. Switzer, 9 Mont. 408, 24 Pac. 18, this court has held consistently that the latter provision is penal in character; that it establishes a new rule of private right unknown to the common law; and that the liability is neither created by contract nor given as compensation for a direct and immediate wrong done by the directors to the creditors. The most recent case affirming the rule is Butler v. Peters, 62 Mont. 381, 205 Pac. 247. The same reason which prompted .the decision in each of the last class of cases compels the conclusion that the liability imposed by section 3837 is purely statutory and is in the nature of a penalty for failure to obey the mandate of the law, and this is in harmony with the decided weight of authority. (Moss v. Smith, 171 Cal. 777, 155 Pac. 90; Chase v. Curtis, 113 U. S. 452, 28 L. Ed. 1038, 5 Sup. Ct. Rep. 554 [see, also, Rose’s U. S. Notes]; Park Bank v. Remsen, 158 U. S. 337, 39 L. Ed. 1008, 15 Sup. Ct. Rep. 891; Savage v. Shaw, 195 Mass. 571, 122 Am. St. Rep. 272, 12 Ann. Cas. 806, 81 N. E. 303; Mitchell v. Hotchkiss, 48 Conn. 9, 40 Am. Rep. 146; Leighton v. Campbell, 17 R. I. 51, 9 L. R. A. 187, 20 Atl. 14; Steck v. Prentice, 43 Colo. 17, 95 Pac. 552; Sturges v. Burton, 8 Ohio St. 215, 72 Am. Dec. 582; 4 Fletcher’s Cyclopedia Corporations, see. 2597; 14A C. J. 197.)

Chapter 37, Laws of 1919, provides: “That section 3837 of the Revised Codes of the State of Montana of 1907 be, and the same is hereby amended to read as follows, to-wit”: Then follows the section as amended and the conclusion: “All Acts and parts of Acts in conflict herewith are hereby repealed.”

It is the rule in this state, and elsewhere generally, that whenever the legislature declares that an existing statute [230]*230is to be amended “to read as follows,” etc., it thereby evinces an intention to make the new Act a substitute for the old one and that so much only of the original Act as is repeated in the new one is continued in force, and all portions omitted from the new Act are repealed. (City of Helena v. Rogan, 27 Mont. 135, 69 Pac. 709; State ex rel. Jacobson v. Board, 47 Mont. 531, 134 Pac. 291; State ex rel. Paige v.

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Bluebook (online)
207 P. 116, 63 Mont. 223, 1922 Mont. LEXIS 94, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/continental-oil-co-v-montana-concrete-co-mont-1922.