Hightower v. Thornton

8 Ga. 486
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedJuly 15, 1850
DocketNo. 80
StatusPublished
Cited by50 cases

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Bluebook
Hightower v. Thornton, 8 Ga. 486 (Ga. 1850).

Opinion

Ry the Court.

Lumpkin, J.

delivering the opinion.

The.case made by this record is simply this: A judgment creditor of the late Planter^ & Mechanics’ Bank of Columbus, having [492]*492prosecuted his claim against the corporation to insolvency, filed his bill, alleging that the corporation was dissolved, both in fact and inform, and praying that the stockholders of the bank, who, it was averred, had paid only twenty-five dollars on the share — the capital stock being one million, in shares of one hundred dollars each — might be decreed to pay into Court such sums on their unpaid stock as should be sufficient to discharge the complainant’s demand.

Are these unpaid subscriptions corporate property, and can they be reached by the creditors in a Court of Equity 1

[1.] Upon the threshhold of this discussion, we are met with the Common Law principle — that upon the dissolution of a corporation, the debts due to and from it are extinguished. A doctrine which results, necessarily, from the fact, that the corporation having expired, whether by its own limitation, by surrender, abandonment of its members or judgment of dissolution, there is no one in law to sue or be sued.

[2.] But it does not follow, that the individuals who composed this corporation, (and corporations, aggregate, are but associations of individuals,) may not, by contract or in lato, have incurred liabilities which will survive their charter, and which will be enforced at Law or in Equity, according to the circumstances of the case. In the case of Lane and Morris, just decided, the liability was by contract, and a common action of debt, as provided for by the charter, was found to be an ample remedy.

[3.] Here the liability is equitable only, resulting from the undertaking of the defendant to the corporation — that he would subscribe so much to the capital stock of the company. After having acquired credit and contracted debts, upon the faith of this subscription, the company has failed, and its franchise been seized into the hands of the State, upon quo warranto. Will not the party be bound in Equity to fulfil his promise 1

[4.] And will not a Court of Equity provide a remedy to compel him to perform his just obligations, notwithstanding the dissolution of the corporation ?

When, upon quo warranto, the franchise of the City of London was recalled by the King, their right to sue as a corporation ceased ; but their liabilities, in the capacity they had sustained, were not extinguished. 8 St. Trials, 1087.

Judge Story, in treating of implied, trusts, says, that to this head [493]*493may be referred that class of cases, where the stock, and other property of private corporations, is deemed a trust fund, for the payment of the debts of the corporation. So, that the creditors have a lien or right of priority of payment on it, in preference to any of the stockholders in the corporation. Therefore, if the corporation is dissolved, the contracts of such corporation are not thereby deemed extinguished ; but they survive the dissolution of the corporation, and the creditors may enforce their claims against any property belonging to the corporation, which has not passed into the hands of a bona fide purchaser; for such property will be held affected with a trust, primarily for the creditors of the company, and subject to their right, secondarily for the stockholders, in proportion to their interest therein. Upon the like ground, the capital stock of an incorporated bank is deemed a trust fund for all the debts of the corporation. 2 Stor. Eq. Jur. §1252.

We have, then, the authority of this great Judge, for holding that the capital stock of this bank is deemed a trust fund, for the payment of complainant’s demand. What constitutes the capital stock of this corporation, we shall see hereafter.

[5.] I shall pass over the English adjudications upon this subject, and especially the leading case of Dr. Salmon vs. The Hamborough Company, (1 Cases in Chancery, 204,) not because I do not believe that the doctrines which it contains are in perfect accordance with the well established principles of law and equity, but because doubt has been expressed as to the authority of this case. 1 Fonb. Eq. 297, note. And I desire that the equity jurisdiction, which is here sought to be maintained, may rest upon a foundation that cannot be shaken. Sufficient to say, then, that in the professional opinion of Chancellor Kent, read on the argument of Nevitt vs. Bank of Port Gibson, (6 Smede & Marsh. 513,) he asserts that there is not an instance in the English law, in which the funds of an insolvent or forfeited moneyed institution, have been permitted to be abandoned, and creditors denied redress and payment out of them; and he adds — that to permit the odious and obsolete doctrine of ancient date, before moneyed institutions were introduced, to be now applied to the dissolution of a bank, perhaps by its own mismanagement and abuse, so that all its assets were to be considered as dispersed to the wind, without any owner or power any where to collect and justly apply them, would be a disgrace to any civilized State.

[494]*494[6.] But this, he says, cannot take place, inasmuch as the improved and enlightened administration of equity jurisprudence, in every part of the country, has taught and established sounder and juster doctrines ; and that this is apparent in the legislative Acts and in the decrees of Courts of Equity, relative to insolvent and dissolved moneyed charters.

I might have forborne to introduce this opinion, had it not been that the views which it inculcates were fully sustained and sanctioned by the upright, firm and enlightened” tribunal to which it was addressed.

In Vose vs. Grant, (15 Mass. R. 505,) Judge Jackson expressed the opinion, that the creditors of a joint stock company would have an adequate remedy in a Court of Equity, against the individuals who had composed it.

[7.] In Spear vs. Grant, (16 Mass. R. 9,) the Court admitted that the stock actually vested, should bo considered as pledged for the payment of the debts of the corporation, as far as it would go, and that if it was withdrawn before the debts were discharged, that there would be an equitable obligation on the part of the stockholders, to account for so much as they originally consented to subscribe. But Mr. Chief Justice Parker, who gave the opinion of the Court, was unable to discover any adequate mode at Common Law, by which a creditor could compel any stockholder to pay him the amount of his stock; and that the remedy, if any there was, would be before a tribunal which was empowered to act upon the whole subject matter in an equitable point of view.

In the case of Wood vs. Dummer, (3 Mason’s Rep.

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