Lowry v. . Inman

46 N.Y. 119
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 5, 1871
StatusPublished
Cited by48 cases

This text of 46 N.Y. 119 (Lowry v. . Inman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lowry v. . Inman, 46 N.Y. 119 (N.Y. 1871).

Opinion

Allen, J.

Mo personal liability attaches to the defendant, by reason of the words, individual property of stockholders liable,” appearing upon the face of the bills issued by the bank, and signed by the defendant, as one of its officers. It was but the literal statement of a fact, as it existed.

The extent of such liability, the qualification attached to it, and the manner of its enforcement, are not stated. The liability exists under, and is modified and limited by, the statute creating the corporation; and the indorsement, made to give credit and currency to the bills, had respect to the provisions of the charter, and was not made or understood as an independent undertaking of the stockholders, or as a representation of a liability, other than such as the statute creating the corporation designated.

Every person dealing with a corporation, or receiving its obligations, is supposed to be cognizant of the provisions of its charter.

The representation of the indorsement is, that the individual property of stockholders is liable for the payment of the bill, and the statute declares the same in the same words; and the defendant, by subscribing to the stock and becoming a stockholder, has consented and agreed that his individual property, shall be liable for the redemption of the bills of the bank, according to the terms and in the manner indicated by the act. The sole question is upon the inteipretation and effect of the statute, as that defines the character and extent of the liability assumed by stockholders. The indorsement upon the bills, is but a notice to the public of the charter liability.

A personal liability of stockholders for the debts of a corporation, in virtue of the charter, is not in the nature of a penalty or forfeiture, and does not exist solely as a liability imposed by statute. It is not enforced simply as a statutory *126 obligation, but is regarded as voluntarily assumed, by the act of becoming a stockholder. By such act he assents to be bound, or that his property shall be charged with debts of the corporation, to the extent and in the manner prescribed by the act of incorporation.

By the act of incorporation, corporators may enjoy absolute immunity from liability upon or for corporate obligations, or they may be liable absolutely, and to the fullest extent, for every corporate debt, as if no corporation existed; and there may be every shade and degree of liability, either personal or of property, between the two extremes. The legislature, in qualifying and modifying corporate rights and individual liability, may prescribe the limits of each, as well as the forum in, and the proceedings by which any liability imposed may be enforced.

The intent of the legislature is the foundation of the liability, and that being ascertained from the words of the charter, every/other question is readily solved. In many charters the intent is obvious, to impose an absolute liability on the stockholders. In all such cases the liability is personal, and, following the person, may be enforced as other personal obligations are enforced, and according to the course of procedure, in the plaeé where the individual sought to be charged is found. It is not in such case a statutory remedy, or a liability based upon a statute, and which is confined in its operation, to the limits of the sovereignty creating the corporation, and without extra territorial force or obligation. It is like other obligations, assumed in the form prescribed by the laws of the place where made, and, being valid there, is enforceable everywhere. Its validity, interpretation and effect are to be determined by the lex loci; but the remedy is governed by the lex fori.

If therefore, the act of the legislature of Georgia, incorporating the Sorth-western Bank of Georgia, had declared, in terms, that each stockholder should be individually liable, for the redemption of the bills and payment of the debts of the bank, or that the stockholders generally, or jointly and *127 severally, or otherwise, should be so liable, there would be no doubt, upon principle, or the decisions of our own courts, that the courts of this State would be open to a creditor of the bank, to enforce the liability of a stockholder for the payment of such debt, according to the terms of the charter. (Corning v. McCullough, 1 Comst., 47; Hawthorne v. Calef, 2 Wall., 10; Ex parte Van Riper, 20 Wend., 616.)

Any words importing a personal liability, will be equivalent to an express declaration, and sufficient to give the right of action; and, for present purposes, it may be assumed that general words, without limitation or qualification, charging the property, real and personal, of the stockholder, with the debts of the corporation, would create a personal liability. But the intent of the legislature to enforce, and of the stockholder to assume this liability, must appear from the language employed, giving every part of the instrument its proper force and meaning. If, taking every part of the act touching the liability of stockholders, or their property, and giving the words their usual and ordinary signification, where they do not appear to have been used in a peculiar or unusual sense, and interpreting it as a whole, it is evident, that the intent was not to create a general personal or property liability, but to charge the property of the stockholders, and that not generally, or by the usual and ordinary process, but conditionally, and by a peculiar and unusual procedure, only available in the courts of that State, not only limiting and prescribing the security and rights of the creditor, and the obligation and liability of the stockholder, but prescribing the remedy, going with it and as a part of the right, a general personal liability will not attach to the stockholder.

The operation and effect of the statute, or the liability of the stockholder, which is measured by it, cannot be extended by implication. There is no implied undertaking of the defendant as a stockholder of the bank ; and there is no obligation resulting from that relation, other than such as is expressed in terms, or by necessary implication in the act of incorporation.

*128 The plaintiffs must bring the case, within the four corners of that instrument or fail in their action.

If the charter does not impose an obligation, upon which an action could be brought and a personal judgment given, as upon any other contract liability, to be enforced against the person or property of the judgment debtor, as allowed by the lex fori) the demurrer is well taken. The right to an independent, personal action, as well in Georgia as elsewhere, is claimed and must be maintained if this action can be sustained ; for if no action would lie in Georgia, it is because the statute has provided another and adequate remedy, and has restricted the parties to that remedy.

An action m personam, giving the persons all the rights and remedies incident to a judgment in such action, is very different from a proceeding by special process in rem, either against specified property, or the property at large of the debtor.

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Bluebook (online)
46 N.Y. 119, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lowry-v-inman-ny-1871.