Holland v. Duluth Iron Mining & Development Co.

68 N.W. 50, 65 Minn. 324, 1896 Minn. LEXIS 271
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedJune 29, 1896
DocketNos. 9942-(153)
StatusPublished
Cited by34 cases

This text of 68 N.W. 50 (Holland v. Duluth Iron Mining & Development Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Holland v. Duluth Iron Mining & Development Co., 68 N.W. 50, 65 Minn. 324, 1896 Minn. LEXIS 271 (Mich. 1896).

Opinion

COLLINS, J.

This was an action brought by a judgment creditor of a corporation to enforce against the stockholders individually their double liability for the corporate debts.

At the trial the court held that the judgment previously obtained against the corporation was conclusive evidence of its indebtedness and liability, and would not permit the stockholders to litigate the merits of the claim upon which it was based. The correctness of this position is directly attacked upon an appeal from an order denying defendant stockholders’ motion for a new trial.

The practical effect of the decision in Dodge v. Minnesota Roofing Co., 16 Minn. 327 (368), was to hold that a judgment against a corporation was conclusive against the stockholders in any action or proceeding to enforce their individual liability, although the exact question was not before the court. And in the case of Frost v. St. Paul B. & I. Co., 57 Minn. 325, 59 N. W. 308, which was an action upon judgments against a corporation for the recovery of money to enforce the liability of stockholders for unpaid subscriptions, and their statutory liability, it was held that the judgments were evidence of the indebtedness of the corporation; the court saying that a judgment for the recovery of money is, as against everybody, evidence of a debt from and after its rendition, as fully as could be any other transaction between the parties.

The force of these decisions seems to be admitted by counsel for the defendants here, but they insist that there is a distinction in principle, as to the effect or conclusiveness of judgments against cor-' porations, between the cases in which actions are brought against stockholders on account of unpaid subscriptions and those wherein the object is to enforce the statutory or constitutional liability, the ground for distinguishing being that anything due for unpaid sub[330]*330scriptions is an indebtedness to and an asset of the corporation, while the statutory or constitutional liability is not. Because this liability is to the creditors only, and is not a corporative asset, nor can the corporation enforce it, counsel urge that when the action is-based upon it there is no privity of interest between the corporation and its stockholders by reason of which the latter are concluded by a judgment against the former, or which can even make the judgment prima facie evidence of a. corporate indebtedness. It seems to be conceded by counsel that, to the full extent of the corporate property, and whenever its assets are to be reached, there is this privity of interest, and the stockholders are bound by the judgment. Reduced to a simple proposition, the position of counsel is that when the purpose of the action is to enforce a direct liability to the corporation the stockholders cannot question the judgment, but if the liability is indirect, arises only when the corporation assets are insufficient to satisfy the debts, and can only be enforced by the creditors, the judgment is ineffectual for any purpose.

When we consider the character of stock corporations, and the powers and duties of the officers selected and authorized to manage them, it is not an easy task to demonstrate upon principle why a'judgment against the body corporate should sometimes and under some circumstances bind the stockholders, and not at all times and under all circumstances; or why stockholders are privies in interest, and therefore concluded by the judgment, when their liability to respond to the full extent of amounts due on unpaid subscriptions is involved, and not privies in interest, and not bound by the judgment, when the same creditor undertakes to compel response to statutory or constitutional liability to pay the same judgment. Both liabilities are incurred at the same time, and by the same act, namely, by the act of subscribing for stock. The subscriber then becomes obligated to pay for his shares, and also to pay an amount- equal to their face value, if necessary, and his liability is as definitely fixed in the one case as in the other. The difficulty we have referred to is apparent from an examination of the cases cited by counsel in their briefs, in which the courts have attempted to give reasons for restricting the effect of judgments against corporations, and limiting their binding force to cases in which corporate assets only were involved; and of -those cited by counsel Miller v. White, 50 N. Y. 137, and Stephens [331]*331v. Fox, 83 N. Y. 313, lead. But there is great uncertainty as to the exact position of the courts of New York on this question, as has-been well shown by Mr. J. O. Harper in his note to Bissit v. Kentucky River Nav. Co., 15 Fed. 353. To the cases commented upon by him; as tending to the existing confusion in that state we will add Allen v. Clark, 108 N. Y. 269, 15 N. E. 387, in which Miller v. White, supra, is alluded to.

Certainly the rule in New York is not settled, and, in our judgment, the logic of the reasoning adopted in some of their cases, in support of a conclusion that to the extent of the corporate property- or assets the shareholders are bound by the judgment, tends thoroughly to establish the doctrine which seems to prevail in this country that, as the statutory or constitutional liability is an obligation voluntarily assumed by the stockholderwhen he subscribes for his shares,, the officers of the corporation represent him as to that liability to the same extent as they do when his ordinary liability assumed by the same act of subscription is involved. The officers of the corporation, in the absence of fraud and collusion, can bind the stockholders, and fasten upon them obligations which cannot be questioned by the latter. The officers can not only make the corporation liable to the full extent of the corporate assets, but they can also fasten the statutory or constitutional liability upon the stockholders. This liability is incident to taking stock, and is incurred by the subscriber. When subscribing for his shares and entering into the organization, he undertakes the responsibility for the result of litigation in which the corporation becomes involved, to which he is not a party, and has not been given an opportunity to defend personally. He is then represented by officers who are not only authorized to take charge of all litigation, but whose duty it is so to do; and why should not those whom the officers represent be held privies in interest, and concluded by the result, in the absence of fraud and collusion? There would seem to be no middle ground on which to place a judgment against a corporation, and, if the stockholders are bound under any circumstances, they must be under all. This is the common conclusion of nearly all of the courts, although their reasons are not always the same. See cases cited in the following text-books: 3 Thompson; Corp. § 3392, 2 Black, Judgm. § 583; 2 Morawetz, Corp. § 619. [332]*332Also 12 Am. & Eng. Enc. Law, 97, note 1. Also Oswald v. Minneapolis Times Co., supra, page 249, 68 N. W. 15.

At the trial an objection was made by defendants’ counsel to the introduction in evidence of the judgment roll, upon the ground that the complaint on which the judgment was rendered failed to state a •cause of action against the corporation. What has been said herein-before covers the claim that the objection should have been sustained. See, also, Lane v. Innes, 43 Minn. 137, 45 N. W. 4, and cases cited.

Taken as a whole, the evidence was sufficient to support the finding that defendant Wilson was a stockholder.

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Bluebook (online)
68 N.W. 50, 65 Minn. 324, 1896 Minn. LEXIS 271, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/holland-v-duluth-iron-mining-development-co-minn-1896.