Garrison v. . Howe

17 N.Y. 458
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 5, 1858
StatusPublished
Cited by109 cases

This text of 17 N.Y. 458 (Garrison v. . Howe) 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
Garrison v. . Howe, 17 N.Y. 458 (N.Y. 1858).

Opinion

Denio, J.

The distinct finding of the referee, that the plaintiff had not shown that he was a creditor of the defendant, which is stated as a conclusion of fact, might be conclusive upon every question of the case, if it were not perfectly apparent from other parts of the finding, and from the referee’s conclusions of law, that it was erroneous. It is apparently based upon the supposed necessity of proving the authority of the secretary to sign notes on behalf of the corporation; but no question of that sort arose upon the trial. The note was simply objected to, when offered in evidence, as irrelative and immaterial, which, so far from drawing in question the fact of its being the note of the corporation, tacitly assumed that no objection of that sort could be made.

But the finding that the defendant had, since the failure of the corporation, paid towards its debts a larger sum than the amount of his stock, presents a difficulty of a graver character. In Briggs v. Penniman (8 Cow., 387), which was a bill in Chancery, filed by a creditor against several stockholders of a manufacturing corporation formed under the general act of 1811, the late Court for the Correction *462 of Errors decided that the defendants were entitled to be allowed, on account of the liability imposed by the statute, for advances for the benefit of the company, whether such advances were made while it was prosecuting its business or after it had become dissolved. The provision imposing the liability is substantially the same in the two acts, so far • as it can affect this question. A distinction is sugges ted by the plaintiff’s counsel between such an action as that of Briggs v. Penniman, where the application of the aggregate of all the liabilities of the stockholders-was sought to be enforced, and where the judgment would make distribution of that and the other means for the payment of the debts among all its creditors, and an action like the one under review, by a creditor against a single stockholder, in the nature of an action of debt./' at law. It is true that, where an account is to be taken and1 distribution made, it would depend upon the relative amount of the debts and of the means of payment whether a particular stockholder would be required to pay the whole or only a part of the amount for which he might be liable under this provision of the statute, whereas in a suit by one creditor against a single stockholder, the whole liability would be enforced, if the debt of the plaintiff was so large as to require it; and on the other hand, if the debt sued for was less than the amount of the defendant’s stock, the latter would be required, in that action, to pay only so much as would satisfy the debt, though the case might be such that, upon a general account, the whole extent of his liability would be required to be enforced.

These considerations show that the nature and the results of these two forms of proceeding are widely different. It is, however, well settled, that a creditor may proceed by suit, in the nature of a common law action, against a single stockholder, and both policy and convenience require that he should have that right; for in the case of small debts the proceeding for an account, in the nature of a bill in equity, would be so tedious and expensive as to destroy the value *463 of the remedy. But if the stockholder thus prosecuted can show that he has already paid, on account of the debts of j; the corporation, a sum equal to the liability which the 1I statute has imposed, namely, the amount of his stock, he will, so far as that remedy is concerned, have defeated the action. The creditor must, therefore, take care to sue only a stockholder who cannot establish such a defence, or if he cannot find such a stockholder, but ascertains that the case is such that, upon the winding up of the concern, he could realize a part or the whole of his demand, he must adopt that form of proceeding. The doctrine that a creditor may proceed at law against a single stockholder, was settled in the late Supreme Court, in The Bank of Poughkeepsie v. Ibbotson. (24 Wend., 473.) It was held that the creditor was not required to go into the Court of Chancery for an account, but might proceed directly at law. It was said that if the defendant could show the payment of debts, or a personal charge in respect to him, to the amount of his stock, there was an end to further liability. I will add, that if this were not so, great injustice might be done. e Suppose a stockholder to be a creditor to just the amount | of his stock; he ought not to be required to pay anything, f unless the sum of the corporate debts is larger than the I aggregate of all the liabilities of the stockholders. But he ; cannot, in this class of actions, have an account, because j' the proper parties are not before the court. He must, J); therefore, upon the doctrine of the plaintiff in this suit, payyjpj the debt sued for, thoughin, equity he is not liable for anything. The rule to be deduced from the case seems to be this: If the creditor cannot find a responsible stockholder, who is not, at the same time, a creditor to the amount of his stock, he must proceed for an account, if he ascertains that such a proceeding will result in recovering his debt. So, if a stockholder be sued to enforce his individual liability in a case where an account and the enforcing of all theliabilities would relieve him from the whole or a part of the *464 debt claimed, he may himself resort to a suit for such account and for distribution. This I understand to be the view of the court in The Bank of Poughkeepsie v. Tbbotson, and it is probably as convenient a rule as can be established in the present state of the law. It would add to the security of debts of this description, and in my judgment would have a salutary operation, if stockholders who are officers and managers of corporations were precluded, by legislative authority, from interposing such a defence as this, when sued to enforce their statutory liability. Their power over the affairs of the corporation enables them, in contemplation of its insolvency, and when its condition is unknown to its creditors, to exhaust their liability as stockholders, by making preferential payments to favored creditors, and, by means of this defence, to set all others at defiance.

We cannot review the referee’s finding upon this question of fact, although we cannot fail to see that the case was a suspicious one upon the evidence. On the eve of the failure of the company, the defendant took a large judgment for his claims against and liabilities for it, and the whole of the judgment was collected by the sale of its property on execution. After this, he made payments on account of certain debts of the company, for which he was liable as its surety. Now, without a more intelligible.account than the evidence presents, it is impossible to say whether these subsequent -payments were for liabilities embraced in the judgment, or for fresh ones assumed by the defendant aftewards, or existing at the time and not included in the judgment. He has, however, satisfied the referee that such payments constituted him a creditor for their amount, and we cannot, upon this appeal, disturb that finding.

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Bluebook (online)
17 N.Y. 458, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/garrison-v-howe-ny-1858.