Kilton, Warren & Co. v. Providence Tool Co.

48 A. 1038, 22 R.I. 605, 1901 R.I. LEXIS 68
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedApril 26, 1901
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 48 A. 1038 (Kilton, Warren & Co. v. Providence Tool Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kilton, Warren & Co. v. Providence Tool Co., 48 A. 1038, 22 R.I. 605, 1901 R.I. LEXIS 68 (R.I. 1901).

Opinion

Douglas, J.

The complainants are judgment creditors of the Providence Tool Company, and, having issued an execution against said.company, which has been returned “ nulla bona,” bring this bill, alleging that the defendants were stockholders of the tool company at the time when the complainants’ debts were contracted ; that the company never made any return of its organization or any return of its standing, as required by its charter and the statute to which its charter is made subject; and that, therefore, the defendants are jointly and severally liable to satisfy the judgment against the company.

An analysis of the bill is given in the opinion rendered January 30, 1896, 19 R. I. 360, which overrules the demurrers filed by the several defendants and reserves the defences offered, holding that they may be set up by ánswer and determined on the final hearing of the bill.

Another opinion, December 12, 1896, 19 R. I. 656, was rendered, after hearing upon pleas of several defendants who, being executors or administrators of deceased stockholders, pleaded the special statute of limitations applicable to them, and sustained the pleas.

January 11, 1897, the bill was dismissed by consent as against Arthur Knight, Wilmarth H. Thurston, Cornelia R. Thurston, John R. Gladding, and John O. Thurston, and February 21, 1897, a decree was entered dismissing the bill as against Pallas S. Wheeler, Elizabeth G. King, and Elizabeth V. Andrews, upon the ground stated in the opinion of December 12, 1896.

The remaining defendants set up in their answers various defences. Amongst them the statutes of limitation are pleaded in various forms: First, as barring the present suit against the stockholders; and, 'secondly, as a defence which might *609 have been pleaded to the action of assumpsit wherein judgment was obtained against the corporation.

(1) There was some contention, in the argument of the case, as to what statute the alleged liability of the defendants should be founded upon.

The charter granted at the June session, 1847, by its terms imposed upon the corporation and its stockholders the liabilities set forth in the general law applying to manufacturing corporations, passed at the same session but not taking effect till after adjournment. The latter statute contains a provision that it may he amended from time to time, and it was amended before the contracting of the debts in question. At that time the law upon the subject was contained in chapter 600 of the Public Laws, passed March 27, 1877, and the same provisions are now found in sections 1, 12, 13, and 22, of chapter 180 of the General Laws, 1896.

. We have no doubt that the new provisions apply to stockholders under this charter. The language of Pub. Laws cap, 556, passed April 20, 1876, is : “ The liability of a member of an incorporated manufacturing company provided by sections 1 and 12 of chapter 142 of the General Statutes, and of the members of such corporations under other statutory provisions for the debts of such company hereafter contracted, or for obligations hereafter incurred, shall be and hereby is limited,” etc.

Section 2 of chapter 600 of the Public Laws is identical with section 22 of chapter 180 of the General Laws, and reads as follows :

“Sec. 2. All proceedings to enforce the liability of a stockholder for the debts of a corporation shall be either by suit in equity conducted according to the practice and course of equity, or by an action of debt upon the judgment obtained against said corporation; and in any such suit or action such stockholder may contest the validity of the claim upon which the judgment against such corporation was obtained upon any ground upon which such corporation could have contested the same in the action in which such judgment was recovered.”

*610 This section gives no action to the creditor, against the stockholders until he has exhausted his remedy against the corporation. It was so argued in Third National Bank v. Angell, 18 R. I. 1, where the court say : “Presumably the plaintiff has, by his former suit, exhausted his remedies against the corporation or he would not be proceeding against the stockholders.” And it was expressly so decided in Allen v. Arnold, 18 R. I. 809. The second clause of the section clearly implies that the judgment against the corporation shall precede the action or suit against the stockholders.

It is argued by some of the defendants that the liability of the stockholder, at least under section 1, is primary and absolute from the time of contracting the debt, and that, therefore, the statute of limitations begins to run in his favor immediately, Such would doubtless be the case if an action against him were given immediately, as in some of the cases cited by counsel. In Stilphen v. Ware, 45 Cal. 110, the statute in force (Stats. 1850, cap. 127, § 30) provided : “ The preceding sections of this act .shall not affect actions against directors or stockholders of a corporation to recover a penalty or forfeiture imposed or to enforce a liability created by law, but such actions must be brought within three years after the discovery by the aggrieved party of the facts upon which the penalty or forfeiture attached or the liability was created.” It is further provided : “ Stat. 1850, cap. 128, § 32. Each stockholder of any corporation shall be individually and personally liable for a portion of all its debts and liabilities proportioned to the amount of stock owned by him.”

The case held that in a suit upon a debt due from a corporation the liability of the stockholder ‘ ‘ was created ” when the debt became due.

Hardman v. Sage, 124 N. Y. 25, holds that where the statute made stockholders liable only for such corporation debts as were payable within one year from the time they were contracted, the extension of the time of payment beyond a year released the stockholders from liability.

Bassett v. Hotel Co., 47 Vt. 313, was a bill in equity against *611 a corporation and its officers, not to enforce the liability of a stockholder.

Sullivan v. Sullivan Mfg. Co., 20 S. C. 79, was an action against the ’officers of a corporation who had failed to make returns. The case is not in point, but the court say, amongst other'things, p. 90, “The consideration of the plea of the statute of limitation comes next. When the statute is applicable at all, it commences to run at the accrual of the right of action.”

The liability attaches to the stockholder when the debt is incurred, but no statute of limitation begins to run in his favor until a right of action against him is acquired by the creditor. Bank of U. S. v. Dallas, 4 Dana, 574; Hawkins v. Furnace Co., 40 O. St. 507; Bronson v. Schneider, 49 O. St. 438; Handy v. Draper, 89 N. Y. 334; Powell v. Oregonian Ry. Co., 38 Fed. Rep. 187; Longley

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Bluebook (online)
48 A. 1038, 22 R.I. 605, 1901 R.I. LEXIS 68, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kilton-warren-co-v-providence-tool-co-ri-1901.