Heggie v. . Building and Loan Association

12 S.E. 275, 107 N.C. 581
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedSeptember 5, 1890
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 12 S.E. 275 (Heggie v. . Building and Loan Association) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Heggie v. . Building and Loan Association, 12 S.E. 275, 107 N.C. 581 (N.C. 1890).

Opinion

Davis, J.

rafter stating the facts: Whatever may have been the nature of the plaintiff’s claim, whether just or unjust, conscionable or unconscionable, his judgment, if regularly taken in a Court of competent jurisdiction, and in accordance with the course and practice of the Court, created a lien upon any property owned by the defendant corporation, and its payment may be enforced by-execution, or, if execution be returned unsatisfied, by proceedings supplementary to execution, as prescribed by section 488 et seq. of The Code, and the judgment cannot be attacked or impeached by any member of the defendant association, or its creditors, except for fraud or collusion.

The corporation represents the share-owners in’ defending actions involving the rights and obligations of the corporation, and, in the absence of fraud or collusion, binds them, and individual stockholders cannot assert or defend the rights of the corporation. Moore v. Mining Co., 104 N. C., *591 534; Cook on Stock and Stockholders, §678; Foundry Company v. Killian, 99 N. C., 501.

The plaintiff having obtained his judgment against the defendant association, the liability and rights of the corporation, and of its members in relation thereto, are settled.

But counsel for Mrs. Cheatham insist that the plaintiff’s judgment is “irregular and void,” because the action in which it was rendered was commenced in July, 1884, “more than three years after the dissolution of the corporation, and more than three years after it had ceased to do business under its charter, &c., * ' * * and no receiver was ever appointed,” and for this he cites The Code, §667, et seq.; VonGlahn v. DeRosset, 81 N. C., 467, and Dobson v. Simonton, 86 N. C., 492. This is a misapprehension. It is admitted that the company had ceased to do business under its charter, and that, in 1876, as stated in the affidavit of Mr. Hays, “it took measures for closing its business, and making settlement with its members as speedily as practicable,” and this, as appears from the affidavit, was by applying the accumulated assets in the hands of the treasurer to the payment of the stockholders, to redeem or retire their stock, which procedure was, as it not unnaturally would be, “generally acceptable to the membership of the association,” but the corporation could not settle with its members by the application of its assets to the retirement or redemption of the stock of the shareholders, until it had first settled and discharged all of its liabilities. ‘It is well settled, at least in this country, that the capital stock of the corporation is a trust fund, to be preserved for the benefit of corporate creditors, and no agreement or arrangement between a corpora: tion and its stockholders, whereby the latter are to be released from indebtedness on their subscriptions, will be valid or of any force as against creditors. Waterman on the Law of Corporations, pages 126 et seq.; Cook on Stock and Stockholders, § 42; Foundry Company v. Killian, supra. A fortiori, *592 would any arrangement or agreement by which the assets of the corporation should be divided and distributed among the shareholders in payment for their stock, before its liabilities to creditors are settled, be void as to creditors?

The Code, § 667, relied upon by counsel, relates to corporations whose charters shall expire by limitation, or be annulled by forfeiture, or otherwise, and provides that such corporations shall be continued as bodies corporate for three years for the purposes mentioned in that and the following sections, and has no application to a case like the present, in which the charter granted in 1872 had not expired or been annulled, and it appears from the'record that payments were made by the corporation to Mrs. Cheatham after 1876 and as late as February 7th, 1889. Besides, H. C. Hicks, as appears by Mr. Plays’ affidavit, “declined to have his stock (which was unredeemed) retired, * . * * but insisted that the association should continue to do business in the manner indicated by the charter and by-laws until it should run its course to the end,” and it would be singular if he, or one succeeding to his stock, could be allowed, at a much later period, to avail himself of that section of The Code, not only to defeat the application of the assets of the defendant corporation to the payment and satisfaction of a judgment against, but to subject the assets to the payment, or (as the corporation considered it) the redemption or retirement of his stock, for which, as stated by Mrs. Cheatham in her complaint, he had not “paid in full the amount” of his subscription. What amount had been assessed and paid by the shareholders upon their stock does not appear, but the full amounts had not been paid.

It is further insisted for Mrs. Cheatham, that it appears from the account stated, and upon which judgment was rendered in favor of the plaintiff against the defendant association, that the defendant association had been, more than paid, and there was no necessity for the sale of the land, *593 and the plaintiff’s “remedy was against the land, to recover it,” and not against the association. Whether the plaintiff might have had such a remedy against the land we need not consider, as there was a judgment in his favor, in a Court of competent jurisdiction, from which, though an appeal was taken, no appeal was ever prosecuted, and no member or creditor of the defendant association can attack or impeach it except for fraud or collusion, and there is not only no allegation of this, but the whole record precludes all suspicion of it.

It is further contended by counsel for Mrs. Cheatham, that C. C. Heggie having been a member of the defendant corporation was estopped, being in pari delicto, and could not allege usury against it, as was held in Latham v. Building and Loan Association, 77 N. C., 145; and the plaintiff assignee of his equity of redemption was also estopped, and this defence was not set up by the defendant association, and Mrs. Cheatham, “being interested in the administration of the assets, and in preventing the priority attempted to be given to the plaintiff,” and “ not being a party to plaintiff’s action is not estopped to show the invalidity of his judgment,” and that it is void. If invalid and void, as insisted by counsel, the authorities cited were not needed to show that it might be “set aside at any time.” That is well settled. But, as we have seen, in the case before us the judgment was not void. It was regularly rendered by a Court of competent jurisdiction, both as to the parties and the subject-matter, and no fraud or collusion is alleged or shown.

In the case of Dobson v. Simonton, 86 N. C., 492, cited by counsel, the judgments impeached were nullities, having been rendered when there was no such corporation as the Bank of Statesville in existence, either in 'law or in fact. No such bank ever had a de jure existence, and its de facto

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Bluebook (online)
12 S.E. 275, 107 N.C. 581, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/heggie-v-building-and-loan-association-nc-1890.