Fourth Nat. Bank of NY v. Francklyn

120 U.S. 747, 7 S. Ct. 757, 30 L. Ed. 825, 1887 U.S. LEXIS 2013
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMarch 7, 1887
Docket134
StatusPublished
Cited by134 cases

This text of 120 U.S. 747 (Fourth Nat. Bank of NY v. Francklyn) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fourth Nat. Bank of NY v. Francklyn, 120 U.S. 747, 7 S. Ct. 757, 30 L. Ed. 825, 1887 U.S. LEXIS 2013 (1887).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Gbay,

after stating the case as above reported, : delivered the opinion of the court. ■

This was an action "at law, brought in the Circuit Court of the United States for the Southern District of New Yorlc,- by a creditor of a- Rhode Island manufacturing corporation, against the executor of a stockholder in that corporation, to enforce the liability which the statutes of Rhode Island impose upon stockholders in such corporations for the corporate debts.

In the court below, statutes and decisions of Rhode Island were agreed or proved and found as facts, in seeming forget-, fulness of the settled rule that the Circuit Court of the United States, as weíl as this court on appeal or error from that court, takes judicial notice of the laws of every state of the Union. Hanley v. Donoghue, 116 U. S. 1, 6, and cases -there' collected. No reference was made'to the statute of 1877, c. 600, to which the plaintiff has now referred, and which repeals and modifies’ in some respects the statutes agreed and found in the record to be still in force; and it is contended for the defendant that this court should not review a judgment-on a" ground which was not presented to the court below. That is doubtless _the general rule. Klein v. Russell, 19 Wall. 433 ; Badger v. Ranlett, 106 U. S. 255. But it would be unreasonable to apply it when the effect would be to make the rights of the parties depend upon a statute which, as we -know, and are judicially *752 bound to know, is not the statute that governs the case. And under either statute the result is the same, as will appearby a sketch of the history of the legislation and' of its judicial construction, and a consideration of the principles upon which that construction rests.

The statutes of Rhode Island,, upon which the case was ■argued and decided in'the Circuit Court, were sections 1 and 14 of the manufacturing corporation act of 1847, reenacted in the Revised Statutes of 1851, e.' 128, §’§ 1,19, 20, and in the Gem eral Statutes of 1872,'c. 142, §§ 1, 20, 21.

By the first section of each of those statutes, the members of every manufacturing company afterwards incorporated “ shall be jointly, and severally liable for all debts and com tracts made and entered into by such company,” Until, the whole amount'of the stock shall have been paid in, and a cer-' 'tificate thereof made and recorded in-a certain public office; and^by the other sections, when the stockholders; shaü be so liable to pay the debts of the company, or any part thereof, “ their persons and property may be taken therefor, on any Wit of attachment or execution issued against the company for such debt, in the same manner as on writs and executions against them for their individual debts; ” or, the creditor may, instead of such proceedings, have his remedy against the stockholders by bill in equity.

These provisions were substantially copied-from th.e Revised Statutes of Massachusetts of 1836, c. 38, §§ 16, 30, 31, as cleai’ly appears on a comparison of the. statute books of the two states, and as has been expressly recognized by the Supreme Court of Rhode Island. Moies v. Sprague, 9 R. I. 541, 544.

The provisions of the Revised Statutes of Massachusetts, as well as- the similar provisions of the earlier statutes therein embodied and reenacted, were always const "ued by the Su- ' preme Judicial Court of Massachusetts to allow the stockholders to be charged for the debts of the corporation by no other form of proceeding than that given by the statutes themselves.

This was clearly laid down, before the enactment of the statute in Rhode Island,‘in judgments delivered by Chief Justice Shaw, as follow ndividual liability of stock *753 holders, created by the statute of 1808, was of a particular and limited character, and could, only be enforced in the manner pointed out by the statute.” Ripley v. Sampson (1830), 10 Pick. 370, 372. “ The construction uniformly put upon St. 1808, c. 65, § 6, has been, that it was a new remedy, given by statute, and as the mode of pursuing it was specially pointed out, that mode must be pursued; that it did not create a legal liability, to be enforced by an action.” Kelton v. Phillips (1841), 3 Met. 61, 62. “ This liability of an individual to satisfy an execution on a judgment to which he was not a party, and to which he had no opportunity to answer, is created and regulated by statute, and is not to be extended, by construction, beyond the plain enactments of the statute, as found by express provision or necessary implication.” Stone v. Wiggin (1842), 5 Met. 316, 317. See also Gray v. Coffin (1852), 9 Cush. 192, 199.

That court accordingly held in Ripley v. Sampson, above cited, as well as in the earlier case of Child v. Coffin (1820), 17 Mass. 64, and in the later case of Dane v. Dane Manufacturing Co. (1860), 14 Gray, 488, that an execution against a corporation could not be levied on the estate of a stockholder who-'died before the commencement of the. action; in Kelton v. Phillips, above cited, as well as in Bangs v. Lincoln (1858), 10 Gray, 600, that the statute liability of a stockholder was not a debt provable against his estate in insolvéncy; in Stone v. Wiggin, above cited, that the estate of a stockholder, though attached on mesne process in an action against the corporation,, could not be taken in execution-on the judgment in that action, without first making a demand upon the officers of the corporation for payment or satisfaction of the execution; and in. Knowlton v. Ackley (1851), 8 Cush 93, in accordance with the opinion of Chief Justice Shaw in. Kelton v. Phillips, above cited, that a creditor of a corporation could not maintain an action at law against a stockholder.

In 1869, before the debt was contracted on which this action was brought, the Supreme Court of Rhode Island, in accordance with Knowlton v. Ackley and the other Massachusetts cases, above referred to, applied to the statute of Rhode Island *754 the rule that “ when a statute creates a right or liability and prescribes a remedy, the remedy prescribed is the only remedy ; ” and, while leaving open the' question whether the- statute liability of a deceased stockholder survived in any manner at law against his estate, adjudged that at all events his estate could not be charged, either at law or in equity, except in the mode of proceeding prescribed by the statute, and therefore such a liability could not be proved before commissioners on the insolvent estate of a deceased stockholder. Moies v. Sprague, 9 R. I. 541.

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Bluebook (online)
120 U.S. 747, 7 S. Ct. 757, 30 L. Ed. 825, 1887 U.S. LEXIS 2013, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fourth-nat-bank-of-ny-v-francklyn-scotus-1887.