Glenn v. Williams

60 Md. 93, 1883 Md. LEXIS 10
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedMarch 29, 1883
StatusPublished
Cited by68 cases

This text of 60 Md. 93 (Glenn v. Williams) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Glenn v. Williams, 60 Md. 93, 1883 Md. LEXIS 10 (Md. 1883).

Opinion

Alvjky, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This was an action brought by 4he plaintiff as trustee against the defendants to recover of them a certain per cent, of the unpaid subscription to the capital stock of the National Express and Transportation Company, a corporation chartered and organized under the law of the State of Virginia. The corporation was organized in 1866, under a charter granted by the Legislature of Virginia in 1865, subject to the general laws of that State, relating to corporations or joint stock companies. And among the provisions of such general laws upon the subject, there is one which declares that upon every subscription for shares in any joint stock company there shall be paid upon each share two dollars at the time of subscribing, and the residue thereof as required by the president and directors / and if any money which any stockholder has to pay upon his shares be not paid as required by the president and directors, the same, with interest thereon, may be recovered by warrant or action, according to amount, &c.

The authorized capital stock of the company was 85.000. 000, (with the privilege of increasing it to 810.000. 000,) divided into shares of 8100 each, on which two dollars per share were payable at the time of subscription, and the balance as called for by the president and directors. Of this capital stock 40,044 shares -were subscribed, and the defendants, as it is alleged, became sub[108]*108scribers for one hundred shares. On the stock subscribed calls or assessments were made to the extent of about 20 per cent.; but a considerable proportion of the calls was never realized. Much the larger portion of the subscribers to the stock resided in other States, and at great distance from the principal office of the corporation, and, as we may suppose, the collection of assessments upon the stock was attended with no little difficulty. The company soon became embarrassed and determined to suspend its operations; and on the 20th of September, 1866, under and by virtue of an order and resolution of the board of directors, the president of the company executed a deed of trust to three trustees for the benefit of the creditors of the company. That deed or assignment conveyed all the property of the corporation, including the balance unpaid on subscriptions to the stock. The validity of the deed was a subject of litigation, and was before this Court in the case of the Balt. & Ohio R. R. Co. vs. Glenn, 28 Md., 287, and was then pronounced valid, according to the laws of Virginia, where it was made. It has also been pronounced valid by a Court of competent jurisdiction in the State of Virginia.

In December, 1871, a creditors' bill was filed in the Chancery Court of the City of Richmond, in the State of Virginia, where the corporation was located and had its principal office, against the corporation, and certain of its officers, and against the trustees named in the deed of assignment ; and to which bill an amendment and supplement were filed in August, 1879, praying that the trustees named in the deed of- assignment he removed, and'others appointed in their place ; that an assessment on the un-. paid capital stock be made ; that the debts of the corporation be ascertained and paid; and for general relief. Upon this bill and amendment such proceedings were had as resulted in a decree of the Court, whereby the original trustees in the deed were, upon their own request, dis[109]*109placed, and the plaintiff appointed in their stead ; an account of the debts due from the corporation taken and adjudged to be paid, and an assessment of 30 per cent, on the unpaid subscriptions to the capital stock made, with authority and direction to the plaintiff, as trustee, to proceed, by suit or otherwise, and in such jurisdictions, as he might be advised, to collect such assessment. It is by virtue of the power and authority thus conferred upon him that the plaintiff has brought the present action.

The case is presented on demurrers to pleading exclusively. The parties by their counsel have agreed that the Court shall refer to the record of the Chancery Court of the City of Richmond, in the case of Gflenn’s administrator and others against the ^National Express and Transportation Company and others, (the creditors’ suit already referred to,) as if the same had been fully set out in the declaration, and that the printed copy of such record of said cause may be used in this Court, without being copied into the record in this cause. The object of this is, as we understand it, to place before the Court all the facts relevant to the case as fully as they could have been alleged in the declaration; and any facts disclosed by that record which may be material to the questions raised on the pleadings, are to be regarded as set out in the declaration. It is only in that way that we can regard such an agreement in deciding questions on demurrer.

The declaration, as amended, contains but a single count, in which are alleged briefly the facts supposed to be sufficient to constitute a right of action against the defendants. The latter pleaded by way of defence eleven pleas, and all of them, except the first and fourth, have been demurred to by the plaintiff. The Court below gave judgment on the demurrers for the defendants, and the appeal is taken from that judgment. The issues of fact were not tried, and are therefore not before us.

The demurrers mount up to and challenge the sufficiency • of the declaration, as well as the pleas to which they were [110]*110interposed. We are required, therefore, to determine the questions that arise upon the whole pleadings before us, the declaration included. And the questions thus raised are:—

1st. Whether the Chancery Court of the City of Richmond obtained jurisdiction over the case referred to against the National Express and Transportation Company, and others, by proper process, to justify that Court to render the decree referred to in the declaration? If so,

2nd. Whether that Court had power and jurisdiction, under the circumstances of the case, to make assessments, or to direct assessments to be made, upon the unpaid subscriptions to the capital stock of the corporation, with which to pay the debts of the company; and whether any decree making or directing assessments upon the capital stock for such purpose, can bind or affect the stockholders who were not, in their individual capacities, parties to the cause ?

3rd. Whether there was power and jurisdiction in that Court to remove the trustees appointed by the corporation, by its deed of assignment, and to appoint a new one in their stead, and to invest such new or substituted trustee with the rights and powers possessed by those removed, including the right to sue in his own name as trustee ?

4th. Whether it be competent to the defendants in this action, and as a bar thereto, to plead and rely upon the Statute of Limitations of 'this State, to the various debts due from the corporation, and which have been found to be owing, and adjudged to -be paid, by the decree of the Chancery Court of the City of Richmond, and for the payment of which the assessment uj>on the unpaid subscriptions to the capital stock was ordered ?

5th. If the present action be properly brought and by the proper party, whether the Statute of Limitations forms a bar to the right to recover ?

6th. Whether the institution and pendency of other suits in equity, not by the plaintiff, but by other parties, [111]

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Bluebook (online)
60 Md. 93, 1883 Md. LEXIS 10, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/glenn-v-williams-md-1883.