Emanuel v. Barnard

99 N.W. 666, 71 Neb. 756, 1904 Neb. LEXIS 110
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedMay 5, 1904
DocketNo. 12,757
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 99 N.W. 666 (Emanuel v. Barnard) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Emanuel v. Barnard, 99 N.W. 666, 71 Neb. 756, 1904 Neb. LEXIS 110 (Neb. 1904).

Opinion

Barnes, J.

This was an action at lav/ brought by the. plaintiff, an individual creditor of an insolvent corporation, in the district court for Dodge county, against the defendants who were respectively the president, secretary and general manager, as well. as . directors and a part of the stockholders of the corporation. The plaintiff was the owner of two judgments against the association, upon which executions had been issued and returned unsatisfied, and these judgments are the basis of the action which was brought against the defendants jointly. After the issues were joined and the cause had been pending for some considerable time, a stipulation was entered into by the parties, on which, together with the pleadings, the cause was submitted to the court. Thereupon the defendants, Barnard and Hinman, moved for a judgment in their favor on the pleadings and stipulation. The attorney for defendant Huette refused to join or participate in the motion. .After the argument and submission of the case, the defendant Hinman was granted leave to, and did, withdraw the motion on his part. The court thereupon sustained the motion of defendant Barnard, and rendered a judgment in his favor dismissing the plaintiff’s cause of action. A motion for a new trial was filed and overruled, and thereupon the plaintiff prosecuted error.

[758]*758Two distinct theories are advanced in support of the plaintiff’s right to recover. The first one is based on the following facts: It appears that, on the 28th day of July, 1896¿ the corporation was justly indebted to two creditors, Hall and Chase, on certain promissory notes, then past due, which it was unable to pay by reason of its insolvency. The defendants Barnard and Hinman had guaranteed the payment of these notes, and it is alleged that the defendant Hnette had agreed to share their responsibility. It is alleged in the petition:

“The defendants fraudulently and wrongfully procured the said Hall and the said Chase to commence suits on said notes, so made to and held by them, in the district court for Dodge county, Nebraska, and to attach, in said suits, all the property and assets of every kind belonging to said corporation, and to have all of said property and assets sold under said attachment, and the proceeds thereof entirely applied toward the payment of said three several notes, themselves agreeing to and paying all the costs and expenses of said proceedings; and all of the property and assets of the said corporation were sold by the sheriff of said county, upon orders of sale issued in said attachment suits, on the first day of February, 1897, and on the 16th day of February, 1897, for the sum total of $6,259.50, and the proceeds of said sales were applied to the payment of said notes for $3,000 and $2,000 to said Hall, and the part payment of said note for $5,000 to said Chase.”

It was admitted by the defendants that the debts due the attaching creditors existed and were guaranteed; that the attachment proceedings were had, the property sold and the proceeds applied as stated; but the allegation that the defendants procured the attachment proceedings to he commenced was denied; and the defendant Huette denied any liability for the debts. The contention of the plaintiff is that, because the defendants were officers of the corporation and were liable for the debts which Avere the foundation of the attachment proceedings, and because the entire property of the corporation was, by [759]*759sale under such proceedings, applied to tbe debts for wbicb tbe defendants were so liable, by procuring tbe attachments to be sued out, they misappropriated tbe property of tbe corporation and rendered themselves liable to him in an action at law for tbe entire amount of bis claim.

This action can not be maintained as one for tbe misappropriation of tbe funds of tbe corporation, because every dollar of such funds Avent to pay its just debts, and no stockholder or party directly interested in tbe corporation has cause to complain. Tbe defendants did not convert any of the corporate property to their own use; there is no pretense that tbe attachments Avere not regularly issued, or that tbe debts upon Avhich the property Avas applied Avere not genuine; nor is it contended that tbe attaching creditors were Avrongdoers in any sense, or that they did anything they bad not a legal right to do. It is true that they exercised their unquestioned legal right in a manner that relieved tbe defendants of a portion of their liability for tbe debts of tbe corporation; but tbe mere fact that tbe defendants requested, and thus induced, tbe creditors to take this course does not render them liable to tbe plaintiff, even in a suit in equity. There is no property or assets of tbe corporation in their bands Avhich tbe plaintiff can reach, and they have received no payment upon any debts owed to them, as tbe result of their action as officers of tbe corporation. If tbe plaintiff has any cause of action against tbe deféndants, it is an action at law sounding in tort. Tbe facts alleged are not sufficient to give tbe plaintiff tbe right to maintain such an action, tbe petition does not charge tbe defendants Avith conspiracy with tbe attaching creditors; and such creditors are not parties to this suit. It has been well said that there can be no conspiracy to do that wbicb is lawful, in a lawful manner. Porter v. Mack & Boren, 50 W. Va. 581, 40 S. E. 549. It is lawful for a diligent creditor to secure the payment of bis debt from an insolvent corporation, and there is no pretense in this case [760]*760that such act was done in an unlawful way. Unless an act is wrongful in the sense of being unlawful, it will not sustain an action for damages. In tlie case at bar, the action of the defendants conferred no new right on the attaching creditors, and gave them no advantage over the other creditors which they did not already possess. No liability is created against one for procuring a third person to do an act which may lawfully be done. In 1 Cooley, Torts (3d ed.), sec. 93, it is said: “That which is right and lawful for one man to do can not furnish the foundation for an action in favor of another.” We are of the opinion that one is not liable in an action for damages because he procures another to do that which is neither legally nor morally wrong. That the defendants paid the costs of the attachment proceedings is no cause for complaint on the part of the plaintiff. If it is true that they were guarantors of the debts due the creditors, which were the basis of the attachment proceedings, they were liable for the costs made in collecting these debts. Their guaranty upon the notes in question was an express agreement to pay all costs and expenses paid or incurred in collecting the same. None of the cases relied on by the plaintiff sustain his contention. A careful examination discloses that, in a part of them, the officers themselves had taken the assets to pay debts due them from the corporation, thus giving themselves a preference over the other creditors; and that, in the others, they had, by some action of their own, turned over the assets of the corporation for the payment of debts on which they themselves were liable. As before stated, the defendants in this case had taken no action by which any property of the insolvent corporation was misapplied. We fail to find a single case supporting the plaintiff’s- first theory; and we hold that the judgment of the district court was correct on this point.

The plaintiff’s second contention is that the defendants were liable as stockholders for the failure of the corporation to give the notice required by section 136, chapter

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
99 N.W. 666, 71 Neb. 756, 1904 Neb. LEXIS 110, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/emanuel-v-barnard-neb-1904.