Corning & Horner v. McCullough

1 N.Y. 47
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 5, 1847
StatusPublished
Cited by56 cases

This text of 1 N.Y. 47 (Corning & Horner v. McCullough) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Corning & Horner v. McCullough, 1 N.Y. 47 (N.Y. 1847).

Opinions

Jones, J.

delivered the opinion of the Court:

Corning and Horner, the plaintiffs in error, made a sale of merchandize to the Rossie Galena Company, wherein the defendant in error was a stockholder, and after obtaining a judgment against the Company for the amount thereof, and after *52 an execution, issued on the said judgment, had been returned unsatisfied, brought this action against the defendant in error as being a stockholder and member of the Company, and personally liable for the debt. The defendant, pleaded in bar of the action that the cause of action did not accrue to the plaintiffs within three years next before the commencement of the suit. To this plea the-plaintiffs demurred, and the Supreme Court gave judgment against them. That judgment is now before this Court for review. The question is, whether the" statute limitation of three years for the commencement of actions on statutes for a forfeiture or cause, the benefit and suit whereof is limited to the party aggrieved, or to such party and the people of the State applies to this case, and bars the plaintiffs’ action. The Eeyised Statutes contain a general provision limiting the time to six years within which actions of account, assumpsit, or on the case, founded on any contract or liability, express or implied, are to be commenced, as expressed in the 4th subdivision of section 18 of the 2d article of title 2d of the chapter entitled, “ of actions and the times of commencing them,” which the plaintiffs suppose to apply to this action. And those statutes also contain a special provision declaring that all actions upon any statute, made or to be made, for any forfeiture or cause, the benefit and suit whereof is limited to the party aggrieved, or to such party and the people of this State, shall be commenced within three years after the offence committed, or the cause of action accrued, and not after, as expressed in section 31, in the 3d article of said title and chapter; and within this provision the defendant claims the present suit to come. To which of these classes does this action properly belong ?

It was the manifest intention of the Legislature in framing the provisions, of the statute for limiting the times for the commencement of actions, to seperate and distinguish actions on contract, and for causes founded on good and valuable considerations, from actions on statutes for forfeitures and causes in affinity with them, and to apply to the latter class shorter neriods of limitation than to the former. In accordance with *53 this principle, and with intent to secure to all actions for causes on meritorious consideration, the benefit and privilege of the longest time of limitation, the 4th subdivision of the 18th section is conceived in the most comprehensive terms, extending to and embracing all actions on the case, founded on any contract or liability, express or implied;. aqd to it this action, being on the case, for the price or value of merchandize sold and delivered by the plaintiffs to the Rossie Galena Company, of which the defendant was a stockholder, on the ground of his personal liability for the debt, must belong, unless the cause of action against the defendant was in fact created or accrued to the plaintiffs by the statutes for the incorporation of the Company, or the action itself is necessarily upon the statute. Was the debt contracted to these plaintiffs by the purchase of the merchandize sold to the Company, the debt of the corporate body exclusively ? or is this suit against the defendant personally, for it, strictly and technically an action on the statute of incorporation ?

The ground of the action is the individual liability of the defendant to pay for merchandize sold and delivered to a company of which he was at the time a member. If that Company had been a voluntary unincorporated association of individuals, using the name of the Rossie Galena Company in its operations, his liability for its engagements would have been clear, and his defence in point of form to an action against him solely for a debt of the Company, would have been the nonjoinder of his associates with him in the action. How has the act of incorporation in this case shielded the stockholders from that" responsibility for the debts of the company, which, acting without it, they would have incurred? It is not a general unqualified incorporation of the company imparting .to the stockholders and members composing it as a legal consequence an exemption from personal liability for the debts and engagements of the body corporate. It is a legislative grant of a special qualified corporate capacity, with adequate plenary powers for the purposes of its institution, but with the personal liability of the stockholders for the debts the company shall *54 contract, and the liabilities they shall incur. The statute, at the same time that it incorporates the company, and thereby enables them to contract debts in their corporate names, provides that the stockholders who compose the company, and for who'se use and benefit purchases .are made and debts contracted, in their corporate na,me shall, notwithstanding their incorporation, be jointly and severally personally liable for the payment of all debts or demands contracted by the company, and that any person having any demand against the corporation, may sue any stockholder, director or directors, in any Court having cognizance. thereof, and recover the same with costs. The Legislature thus concurrently with the creation of the body corporate, and in the same statute which creates it,, enacting and providing that it shall not possess the capacity nor have the legal effect and operation which an unqualified act of incorporation would possess and have of imparting to its stock-' holders irresponsibility for its debts, or of contracting debts in its corporate name on the responsibility of the corporation, solely and so as to exempt its stockholders from personal liability therefor. If then the incorporation of this company does not shield or exempt its corporators and members from individual responsibility for the debts and engagements of the company, but leaves them, under- the common law liability, as partners or joint debtors for those debts and engagements, must it not follow'that the defendant, McCullough, he being a stockholder in the Rossie Galena Company at the time the debt of that company to these plaintiffs was contracted, became, on the consummation of the contract by the delivery of the goods to. the company, liable for the payment of the debt contracted thereby ? The act of incorporation affording him no protection therefrom, and not only leaving him personally liable therefor, but in express terms recognizing and affirming such liability, what defence could he make to an action charging him as a partner or joint debtor on the contract of the company"? The personal liability of the stockholders to creditors under this charter, for the debts of the company, is an- element of the incorporation which wholly excludes all claim of *55 any stockholder to treat those debts as debts of the corporate body solely, which he did not contract and is not bound to pay. The stockholders all stand under this act of incorporation on the same ground, and under the same responsibility as respects creditors, as they would if unincorporated have stood. This liability the stockholders voluntarily assumed, and it could not have been misunderstood by them. It is fully and dearly expressed in the act of incorporation.

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Bluebook (online)
1 N.Y. 47, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/corning-horner-v-mccullough-ny-1847.