Johnson v. Tennessee Oil, Co.

69 A. 788, 74 N.J. Eq. 32, 4 Buchanan 32, 1908 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 85
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedMarch 31, 1908
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 69 A. 788 (Johnson v. Tennessee Oil, Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Court of Chancery primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Johnson v. Tennessee Oil, Co., 69 A. 788, 74 N.J. Eq. 32, 4 Buchanan 32, 1908 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 85 (N.J. Ct. App. 1908).

Opinion

Emery, V. C.

Complainant has recovered in this state a judgment against the defendant company, a corporation of the State of Arizona, and, on execution returned unsatisfied, files this bill on behalf of himself and all other creditors of the company, against the company and all of its stockholders and directors, for the general purpose of reaching equitable assets of the company for the , payment of the judgment debt. No other creditors have applied 11 to come in, and, upon the evidence, it would seem that there are :i no other creditors of the company than the complainant. The Í first source of assets applicable to the payment of this judgment ! debt of the company, asserted in the bill and at the hearing, is the right to recover from the defendants, as stockholders of the companjq the amounts alleged to be unpaid on the stock respectively held by them. The stock was in fact issued to all of the defendants as full paid and non-assessable, and was all issued and received for property purchased, at a valuation agreed on ■ by the incorporators, who at the time of the purchase constituted the board of directors and the only stockholders of the company. [35]*35It is now alleged that this property (oil and mining leases) was taken at a valuation which was excessive and fraudulent, and that as against creditors the stock must, therefore, be deemed to be unpaid. Under the New Jersey statute such payment of stock hy property fraudulently overvalued can be questioned by the receiver representing creditors, because such issue is a violation of the letter and spirit of our Corporation act, and is, as against creditors, to be treated as absolutely void for the purpose of payment, thus leaving the stockholders within reach of the sections of the act providing a remedy for creditors against stockholders for the amount unpaid on his stock. Easton National Bank v. American Brick, &c., Co. (appeals of Potter and others), 70 N. J. Eq. (4 Robb.) 722; S. C. (appeals of Green and others), 70 N. J. Eq. (4 Robb.) 732 (Court of Errors and Appeals, 1905). The liability of the defendants as stockholders, to creditors of the company upon their stock, depends on the laws of Arizona, subject as to parties and procedure to our own act of 1897 (P. L. p. 124 § 2), requiring in such cases the suit for enforcing a statutory personal liability to be not an action at law, bub'á suit in equity for an accounting, to which the corporatiqivand all of the stockholders afe parties. In reference to the liability of an individual stockholder for debts of the company, the Arizona statute provides (Rev. Stat. 1901 p. 306 765 § 5) : “That bodies corporate shall have the power to exempt the private property of members from liability for corpor.de debts.” The only statutory qualification of this power is by section 16 of the act.' Rev. Stat. 1901 p. 308 776. “Nothing herein shall exempt the stockholders of any corporation from individual liability to the amount of the unpaid installment on the stock owned by them, or transferred to them for the-purpose of defrauding creditors, and an execution against the corporation to -that extent may be levied upon the private property of an individual.” The original charter of the. company, filed November 18th, 1901, provided that the capilal sioek, one million two hundred and fifty thousand shares ol oie dollar each, should be fully paid up and forever non-assess-i fie, two hundred and fifty thousand to be treasury stock to Le sold at such price as the board of directors might direct, and the board were given express power “to sell or ex[36]*36change the stock of the company upon such terms and for such prices as they may agree on, and to take in payment therefor any real or personal property, service or things, or things in value which they may deem a just equivalent,” and it was also expressly provided, article 8, “that the private property of the stockholders and officers of said corporation is to be and shall be forever exempt from all corporate indebtedness,” and by article 9, “that all stock of the corporation shall be issued as fully paid and non-assessable, and that none be issued except in accordance with the rules of the board of directors.” By an amendment to the charter, filed February 19th, 1902, the treasury stock to be sold by the board was reduced to $25,000, and the capital stock was reaffirmed to be fully paid and forever non-assessable.

As to the language of the Arizona statute, which is widely dif- ' ferent from the New Jersey statute, on the.liability of the stockholders for corporate debts, the only question, as it seems to me, is whether the liability of the stockholders asserted in this bill can be considered as an individual liability for an unpaid infftaHrNmt on the stock owned by them, and therefore excluded from theNienefit of the provision of the statute and charter, “that the private-property of members shall be exempt from corporate debts.” I de-.not think this statute can be so construed, or that the exemption clause was intended to reach any cases except those of unpaid installments, properly so called; that is, cases , whereby the contract between the company and the stockholders, ' express or implied, future payment of installments on the stock was contemplated on its issue. This clause does not seem properly to cover a case whereby the contract between the company and the stockholder, at the time of the issue of the stock, no further payment by installment or otherwise was contemplated, and where no debt to the company from the stockholder for this stock could subsequently arise, so long as the contract for its issue remained uncanceled. If this section be inapplicable, then the statutory and charter provisions that the piivate property of stockholders and officers shall be forever exempt from all corporate indebtedness, would exempt them in any cases where the liability is put solely on the liability for unpaid -installment on stock owned.

[37]*37No decisions of the Arizona courts have been cited , on the construction of this clause holding that it extends to a case of overvaluation of property, whether fraudulent or otherwise, on its exchange for stock. On this point I follow, therefore, what seems to be the plain result of the language of the statute and the charter authorized under it, and conclude that the private property of the defendant stockholders whose stock was issued and received as full paid, cannot be taken to pay the corporate debt under this execution. For a fraudulent use of the statutory and charter provisions, by the issue of stock for property at a fraudulent overvaluation, the holders of stock so issued would, however, remain subject to liability to creditors under the equitable principles generally referred to as the “trust fund” theory of capital stock. The capitalization in this case was so grossly excessive as to be fraudulent, and the complainant would' be entitled to relief on this ground of fraud but for the fact that he was a subsequent creditor with full notice of the fraudulent overvaluation. The case therefore comes within the application of a rule or principle adopted by the highest authority, and by the great weight of authority in relation to the creditors who are entitled to avail themselves of relief on the ground of fraudulent overvaluation.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
69 A. 788, 74 N.J. Eq. 32, 4 Buchanan 32, 1908 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 85, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/johnson-v-tennessee-oil-co-njch-1908.