Hook v. Whitlock

3 Paige Ch. 409
CourtNew York Court of Chancery
DecidedAugust 27, 1831
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 3 Paige Ch. 409 (Hook v. Whitlock) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Chancery primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hook v. Whitlock, 3 Paige Ch. 409 (N.Y. 1831).

Opinion

The Chancellor.

The second section of the act of April, 1814, (3 Laws of N. Y. 199, b.) makes the assignment, under the order of the proper officer, a full discharge, not only to the corporation but also to the president, directors and stockholders of the company, from all debts due at the time of the assignment. But as all the debts due to these complainants were contracted before the passing of that act, it was void as to those debts, as a law impairing the obligation of contracts. And according to the decision of the supreme court of the United States, in Sturges v. Crowningshield, (4 Wheaton’s Rep. 122,) and the doctrine established in our own courts since that decision, the debts due to these complainants were not discharged either as against the corporation or the individual stockholders.

The statute authorizing the discharge of the corporation as an insolvent debtor does not profess to make that discharge a dissolution of the company. On the contrary, there are provisions in the act which show conclusively that the legislature did not intend it should have that effect. And if the surplus of the assigned property was equal to one half the former capital of the company, the corporation was authorized to go on with the business of insurance. There was nothing in this case to prevent the complainants, who had not already obtained judgments for the amount of their demands, from suing the corporation, at any time during its legal existence, notwithstanding the discharge. And as the stockholders are only liable for the debts which were due from the corporation at the time of the expiration of its charter, if any of these [415]*415claims were barred by the statute of limitations, as against the company, at that time, the defendants are not liable, although suits could not have been brought against them individually until after that period. If the corporation could have pleaded the statute of limitations in bar immediately previous to the expiration of the charter, the stockholders, who are only collaterally liable, may set up the same defence in bar of the claim against them. This plea, however, is not calculated to raise that question as to any part of the demands set forth in the complainants’ bill. There is no allegation here that the corporation did not undertake and promise, or that the complainants’ rights of action against the company did not accrue, within six years before the second Tuesday of January, 1820.

If the debts were actually due from the corporation at the time of its dissolution, it can make no difference whether they were due from the corporation by judgments, or specialty, or only by simple contract. The right of action against the stockholders is founded upon the statute; and the form of the action against them must be the same, whatever may be the nature of the original indebtedness of the company. If an action at law is brought against the stockholders, it must be either an action of debt or assumpsit, founded upon their liability created by the statute. As a general principle, wherever a party is under a legal liability to pay money to another in consequence of some supposed benefit received as the consideration for such liability, and where no particular form of action is prescribed by the common law, or by statute, to recover the amount so due, an action of assumpsit may be maintained upon an implied promise, founded on such legal liability. But if the liability of the defendant is founded upon some negligence or misconduct on his part, by which the plaintiff has sustained an injury, an action on the case is in general the appropriate remedy. I think this is a case in which actions of assumpsit might have been brought against the several stockholders to recover the amount due from each according to their respective liabilities. It is equally clear, however, that the creditors of the company might have brought actions of debt instead of as[416]*416sumpsit. Wherever a statute imposes a legal obligation upon one party to pay money to another, the person to whom the payment is to be made may maintain an action of debt for the money. (Per Bailey, J. 7 Dowl. & Ryl. 381. Comyn’s Dig. Debt, A. 1. Saund. on Pl 404.) The complainants, if they had sued at law, might have brought an action of debt, founded on the statute; and this court, which decides in such cases, in analogy to the statute of limitations, will not consider this plea a bar, unless it would have been a bar at law to any action which might have been brought there. The statute of limitations which was in force at the time the right of action in this case accrued, as to actions of debt, is a transcript of the 21 James I. ch. 16, § 3, and only extends to actions of debt for arrears of-rent, or which are founded upon contract without specialty. (1 R. L. of 1813, p. 186.) Under this statute, it appears to have been long since settled in the English courts, that the limitation of six years did not extend to the case of an action of debt founded upon a statutory liability; the statute being considered in the nature of a specialty. (Com. Dig. tit. Temps. G. 15.) And in the case of Bullard v. Bell, (1 Mason’s Rep. 243,) before the circuit court of the United States, in 1817, Judge Story reviewed the authorities on this subject, and decided that the statute of limitations did not extend to an action of debt, against the stockholders of a corporation, founded upon a statutory liability. The revised statutes require all actions of debt founded upon any contract, obligation, or liability, not under seal, except such as are brought upon judgments and decrees, to be commenced within six years. (2 R. S. 297, § 18.) This would embrace the present suit, founded upon a liability created by statute, although some of the demands against the company were in judgment. But the forty-fifth section of the title of the revised statutes, which relates to the time of commencing actions, (2 R. S. 300,) has restricted the application of the provisions of the four first articles of that title to cases where the right of action has accrued since the new statute went into operation. And all cases which arose before.that time are to remain subject to the laws previously in force. Although these articles relate exclusively to actions at law, yet the forty-ninth section of the sixth article [417]*417applies the same limitations to suits in equity, where there is a concurrent jurisdiction in the courts of law and equity as to the subject matter of the suit. I think the fair construction of this last section is, that in cases of concurrent jurisdiction, this court must be governed by the legal rule, as it existed before the first of January, 1830, as to all suits in which the right of action accrued before that time, and by the new statute in those cases where the right to sue has. arisen since. The subsequent sections of the sixth article, limiting the time of commencing suits in equity, fix the period at ten years, in. cases where this court has exclusive jurisdiction, and where the subject matter of the suit is not cognizable in the courts of common law. The cause of action against these defendants as stockholders did not accrue until the dissolution of the corporation by the expiration of its charter, in January, 1820. Although this bill was filed within ten years from that time, yet it does not appear that a subpoena was taken out and served, or that a bona fide attempt to serve it was made within the ten years.

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Bluebook (online)
3 Paige Ch. 409, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hook-v-whitlock-nychanct-1831.