Klein Bros. & Co. v. Baltimore Underwriters' Agency

3 Balt. C. Rep. 211
CourtBaltimore City Circuit Court
DecidedOctober 15, 1912
StatusPublished

This text of 3 Balt. C. Rep. 211 (Klein Bros. & Co. v. Baltimore Underwriters' Agency) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Baltimore City Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Klein Bros. & Co. v. Baltimore Underwriters' Agency, 3 Balt. C. Rep. 211 (Md. Super. Ct. 1912).

Opinion

BOND, J.—

This hill, filed by a single creditor of the defendant corporation, avers that the complainant’s claim has been reduced ¡to judgment first in the State of New York, then in Baltimore City, and that execution has been issued in this city, but has been returned unsatisfied. Subsequent to the time when the obligaition accrued, it continues, the capital stock was reduced and assets of the corporation over and above the reduced amount, and within the original capital were distributed among the stockholders ; and the individual defendants were two of these. Since that time the corpoz’ation, it is alleged, has become and now is insolvent.

Upon these allegations the bill prays that the defendants may be required to discover who were the stockholders at the time of the reduction of capital, and what were the amounts received by them in the distribution of the excess capital; and it prays that thereafter there may be an accounting and ascertainment of the proportion which the individual defendants should contribute to pay the complainant’s claim, and that they may be required to pay it.

The defendants all appeared and filed genei-al demurrers, solely on the ground that the bill did not state such a case as entitles the complainant to any relief in equity against the respective defendants. In the argument it was contended that proper foundation had not been laid for a demand of discovery, that discovery could not be required in connection with the relief prayed, and that the proper foundation for such relief was not laid in the pleadings, as is set out in more detail here below.

The questions raised concerning the application for discovery can best he discussed, I think, after a consideration of ¡the nature of the relief asked, and the allegations upon which it is claimed.

What is that relief? Much of the argument proceeded on the assumption that llie liability for the return of withdrawn assets is a statutory liabil[212]*212ity, and tliat we are concerned with the various rules for the enforcement of such a liability, especially in a state foreign to that of the creation of the corporation. But no statute is alleged in bill showing a specific provision for such a liability, and we must assume there is none, and tihat we are relegated to the general rules of the law of corporations for what provisions there may be. And apart from the rule of pleading which brings us to this conclusion^, I think it may confidently be assumed that the statutes of Delaware do not contain a provision specifically making a stockholder liable for the repayment of withdrawn assets, either to a creditor or to .the corporation. The statutes pleaded do prohibit the reduction of capital stock without the payment of previously contracted obligations.

It is a clear rule of general law that stockholders who have assets of the corporation withdrawn without the payment of previously contracted debts, will be held liable to creditors, upon a showing that satisfaction cannot be obtained from the corporation itself. Ordinarily, of course, the remedy for the satisfaction of a ¡debt is at common law by way of judgment and execution upon -the corporate assets. But when it is shown that, after a judgment has been obtained, execution has failed to bring satisfaction, then the creditors may invoke the aid of a court of equity, and, availing themselves of the equitable doctrine that the subscribed capital of a corporation is a trust fund for its creditors, pursue into the hands of stockholders any of the corporate asests which have been withdrawn without having been cleared of this trust. And this proceeding-may be resortedi to in the courts of any state where the assets may be located.

2 Story’s Equity Jurisprudence, See. 252.

Hastings vs. Drew, 76 N. Y., 9. 15.

Bartell vs. Drew, 57 N. Y. 587.

Brew vs. Mich. Salt Assn, et al., 58 Mich. 351.

Railroad Co. vs. Howard, 7 Wall, 392, 409, &c.

It has been held in the New York cases just cited — cases frequently referred to for illustration of these rules —'that the creditors so pursuing assets into the hands of stockholders, have no concern with other creditors, nor have they with other stockholders or with questions of contribution toward the payment of debts of the plaintiffs. On the contrary, the New York court says, the proceeding is not one for winding-up the affairs of a corporation, or marshalling its assets, but the ordinary one “to collect a debt from a debtor unwilling to pay” (57 N. Y. 589). Consequently a single creditor was permitted to follow a single stockholder in those cases. It is there conceded, however, that the creditor may proceed for contributive payment of his debt if “he chooses to intervene to settle equities that may exist ’between his debtors.” The conclusion from' this view is, therefore, that a single creditor may proceed in equity directly against the assets, by a process equivalent to execution on corporate assets, disregarding other creditors, other assets and, other stockholders. Or, he may proceed for an apportionment among stockholders according to the assets withdrawn by them respectively, and may do so without regard to other creditors and without filing suit on their beh'alf.

This view seems not to be that held by other authorities, and I venture to think it is not a logical working out of the theory upon which equity takes jurisdiction of the subject matter. It is not questioned and cannot, be, that (apart from statutory provision for it) a creditor of a corporation has no right to follow into the hands of stockholders the assets with which that corporation has previously parted possession and ownership, except by availing himself of the purely equitable doctrine that the subscribed capital is a trust fund for creditors. Now, a trust fund for the benefit of creditors by its very name implies that the fund in equity is to be taken up and administered for all the beneficiaries that is all the creditors. And this being true it follows that the suit should be on behalf of all creditors who have rights in the funds and may enter. While the point was not specifically before the court for -decision, in Norris vs. Johnson, 34 Md. 485, 489, the court seems to have proceeded upon the assumption that 'this was one of the distinguishing requirements of the equitable jurisdiction. My conclusion is therefore that the bill in this case, seeking as it does [213]*213the payment of a single creditor, and failing to invoke the jurisdiction on behalf of other creditors, is demurrable. It may be that there are no other creditors entitled to share in the trust fund; but, if so, that fact should be shown.

Brewer vs. Mich. Salt Assn, et al., 58 Mich. 351.

it seems established that the creditors’ bill may be filed against one or more stockholders.

10 Cyc., 055.

2 Cook on Corporation, Sec. 549.

Singer vs. Hutchinson, 183 Ill., 606, 620.

It may be questioned, however, whether the complainant may go further, and have an accounting and adjustment of the equities between all stockholders in relation to this debt, as the fourth i>rayer contemplates, without a different proceeding to bind other stockholders. That question has not. been argued, and as the demurrer will be sustained on other grounds, I shall not decide it now without argument.

2 Cook on Corporations, Sec. 549, n. page 1500.

Singer vs. Hutchinson. 183 Ill. 600. 620.

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Related

Bartlett v. . Drew
57 N.Y. 587 (New York Court of Appeals, 1874)
Hastings v. . Drew
76 N.Y. 9 (New York Court of Appeals, 1879)
Sturges v. . Vanderbilt
73 N.Y. 384 (New York Court of Appeals, 1878)
Singer v. Hutchinson
56 N.E. 388 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1900)
Oliver v. Palmer & Hamilton
11 G. & J. 426 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1841)
Norris v. Johnson
34 Md. 485 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1871)
Brewer v. Michigan Salt Ass'n
25 N.W. 374 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1885)

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Bluebook (online)
3 Balt. C. Rep. 211, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/klein-bros-co-v-baltimore-underwriters-agency-mdcirctctbalt-1912.