Coulter Dry Goods Co. v. Wentworth

153 P. 939, 171 Cal. 500, 1915 Cal. LEXIS 657
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1915
DocketL. A. No. 3783.
StatusPublished
Cited by37 cases

This text of 153 P. 939 (Coulter Dry Goods Co. v. Wentworth) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Coulter Dry Goods Co. v. Wentworth, 153 P. 939, 171 Cal. 500, 1915 Cal. LEXIS 657 (Cal. 1915).

Opinions

A rehearing of the appeals in this cause was ordered after a decision by the court in Bank. The opinion heretofore filed was prepared by Mr. Justice Lorigan, and read, in part, as follows:

"Plaintiff brought this action against the defendants as stockholders in the Wentworth Hotel Company, an Arizona corporation, which had a place of business and transacted business in this state, to recover from each of them a certain proportion of an indebtedness incurred by the said corporation in favor of the plaintiff.

"It appears from the evidence that in June, 1906, a contract was made between the plaintiff and the Wentworth Hotel Company whereby plaintiff agreed to sell and deliver certain goods, wares, and merchandise specifically described, at prices — net cash — then determined and fixed on, the hotel company agreeing to accept said goods and pay the specified prices therefor on delivery. The goods embraced in the contract were hotel furnishings, and the prices to be paid therefor agreed on by the plaintiff and the hotel company when the contract was made aggregating some thirteen thousand dollars. At the time this contract was made the respondents were not stockholders in the corporation. The goods specified in the contract were pursuant to it delivered to the hotel company in the latter part of 1906 and the early part of 1907, and accepted by it but never paid for. Shortly prior to the time when all of such deliveries were made the respondents had become, and were at that time, stockholders in the hotel corporation.

"The principal question under this evidence in the trial court was, and is here, whether the liability of stockholders provided for by our state constitution — article XII, section 3 — and by the Civil Code — section 322 — attached to the stockholders owning stock in the hotel corporation at the time when the contract was made in June, 1906, or whether it *Page 502 applied solely to those who were stockholders at the time the goods were later delivered to the hotel company.

"The trial court concluded that the liability of said stockholders for the indebtedness of the hotel company arising on the delivery of the goods attached at the time of the making of the contract of June, 1906, and not at the dates of delivery of the goods, and that as the defendants and respondents here were not stockholders when that contract was made, they were not liable and gave judgment accordingly in their favor.

"Plaintiff appeals from the judgment and from an order denying its motion for a new trial.

"The sections of the constitution and, of the Civil Code referred to provide that each stockholder of a corporation shall be individually liable for such proportion of all of its 'debts and liabilities contracted or incurred during the time he was a stockholder' as the amount of stock owned by him bears to the whole subscribed capital stock of the corporation. It will be observed that under these provisions a stockholder is made liable for not only the 'debts,' but 'all liabilities,' contracted at the time he is a stockholder, and keeping in mind the distinction between a 'debt' and a 'liability' as the section makes it, less difficulty in solving the question under consideration is presented. This court in Hunt v. Ward, 99 Cal. 612, [37 Am. St. Rep. 87, 34 P. 335], referring to section359 of the Code of Civil Procedure, which fixes the time within which actions of this kind must be brought after the liability was created, and expressing the opinion of the meaning of the word 'liability' as used in that section, said: 'Of course, there is a clear and wide distinction between the creation of a liability and the accruing of a cause of action thereon; and section 359, ex industria, emphasizes that distinction. A liability may be absolute or contingent; it may be unconditional or limited; it may be presently enforceable by action, or there may be time given for its performance; but, whatever its character, it is created by the consummation of the contract, act, or omission by which the liability is incurred.'

"In Rapalje's Law Dictionary, in speaking of 'liability' in contradistinction to 'debt,' it is said that 'liability is the condition of being actually or potentially subject to an obligation; is used either generally as including every kind of *Page 503 obligation or in a more special sense to denote inchoate, uncertain or imperfect obligations as opposed to debts, the essence of which is that they are ascertained and certain.' Within these definitions it is quite apparent that the word 'liability' was used in our constitution and section of the code in a much more comprehensive sense than the word 'debt.' While, in a comprehensive sense, 'liability' would include a debt, it is quite clear that this is not the sense in which it was used in the provision of the constitution and section of the code. The 'liability' referred to there was not such as would arise from the existence of obligations of a corporation which were then due and payable or presently enforceable — 'debts contracted' — but to such legal obligations or 'liabilities' as might be 'incurred' by the corporation, although such liabilities might not be capable of enforcement except upon some contingency or in the future. Such liability may of course exist without right of immediate enforcement against the corporation. Within this view of what constitutes 'liability' as distinguishable from the creation of a 'debt,' it is apparent that under the provisions of the constitution and section a 'liability' is created when a contract binding on it is made by a corporation and independent of any question as to whether that 'liability' is absolute or contingent or as to when the right to enforce it may accrue; and therefore that those who are stockholders when the 'liability' is created or incurred are alone liable in any actions arising from its breach. Testing by this rule the contract entered into between the corporation and the plaintiff made in June, 1906, whereby the corporation bound itself to receive and pay for the goods which the latter contracted to deliver to it, there can be no question but that the making of this contract created a 'liability' on the part of the corporation to perform its part of it. It is true that no debt would exist against the corporation until the goods were delivered. But the responsibility of stockholders is by the provisions of our law made broader than a responsibility for debts. It embraces all 'liabilities' as well. When the plaintiff, pursuant to the terms of the contract, delivered and the corporation accepted the goods, an indebtedness arose in favor of the plaintiff enforceable in an action. But this was simply the accrual to plaintiff of a right to enforce payment on compliance by it with the terms of the contract previously *Page 504 entered into between the parties under which the corporation then obligated itself and incurred the liability to do so. The making of the contract would necessarily have to be relied on and proven in any action proceeding from an alleged breach of it. The right of action for a failure to perform according to its terms would result from the obligation or liability to perform which was created and incurred at the time when the contract was entered into. In the instant case the breach of the contract arose from a failure of the corporation to pay for the goods when delivered, and this gave a cause of action to the plaintiff under the contract for the debt.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
153 P. 939, 171 Cal. 500, 1915 Cal. LEXIS 657, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/coulter-dry-goods-co-v-wentworth-cal-1915.