Moss v. Smith

155 P. 90, 171 Cal. 777, 1916 Cal. LEXIS 636
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 29, 1916
DocketS. F. No. 6412.
StatusPublished
Cited by45 cases

This text of 155 P. 90 (Moss v. Smith) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Moss v. Smith, 155 P. 90, 171 Cal. 777, 1916 Cal. LEXIS 636 (Cal. 1916).

Opinion

HENSHAW, J.

The plaintiff, H. A. Moss, brought this action against the defendants, directors of the Ocean Shore Railway Company, based upon the provisions of section 309 of the Civil Code. He averred that the Ocean Shore Railway Company had a capital stock of five million dollars, all of which had been subscribed for and issued and all of which was held and owned by divers persons; that the Ocean Shore Railway Company had issued and sold five million dollars of its bonds, equal to the total amount of its capital stock and of its subscribed capital stock, and owed five million dollars indebtedness on account of this bond issue; that plaintiff is the owner of eight of these bonds, of the par value of one thousand dollars each; that while the Ocean Shore Railway Company thus had outstanding debts represented by its notes and bonds in the sum of five million dollars, the defendants became directors of the company, and as such directors created debts of the corporation in the amount of upward of *779 two million dollars more; that all of this seven million dollars indebtedness is due and unpaid; that the corporation became and is insolvent; that this action is brought by plaintiff as a creditor of the corporation on his own behalf and on behalf of all the creditors of the Ocean Shore Railway Company. The prayer is for a joint and several judgment against these defendants to the amount of eight thousand dollars, the indebtedness due plaintiff, with interest; further, that defendants be ordered to pay two million dollars into court for the purpose of satisfying the claims of the other creditors. J. F. Bradford and J. Howard Smith, by leave of court, filed their complaints in intervention, which complaints in intervention are in all particulars essential to this consideration identical with the complaint of the plaintiff Moss. General and special demurrers were interposed to all of these complaints and these demurrers were sustained. Plaintiff and intervener declining to amend, take their appeal from the judgment which followed the sustaining of the demurrers.

Several legal propositions of consequence are argued by the litigants. It is proper to refer to them but, for reasons which will hereinafter appear, it is unnecessary to decide all of them. The first of these legal disputes arises over the construction of the statute (Civ. Code, sec. 309), which makes the participating directors “jointly and severally liable to the corporation, and to the creditors thereof, to the full amount of . . . the debt contracted.” By appellants it is contended that the language of the law itself and the decisions of the courts upon similar laws establish this right of action in any creditor of the corporation. Not only, it is urged, does the law make no distinction between the creditors, but in giving the right of action to “the creditors,” by force of its own language gives it to all of them, and this construction gains further assurance from the fact that the same right of action is given to the corporation, that the recovery therefore is in the nature of a recovery of a trust fund into the treasury of the corporation for the benefit not of a selected class of creditors but for the benefit of all the creditors. In support of this view are cited, with others, the cases of Low v. Buchanan, 94 Ill. 76; Woolverton v. Taylor, 132 Ill. 197, [22 Am. St. Rep. 521, 23 N. E. 1007]; National Bank v. Dillingham, 147 N. Y. 603, [49 Am. St. Rep. 692, 42 N. E. 338]; Thacher v. King, 156 Mass. 490, [31 N. E. 648]; Green v. Whitehead, 5 Pa. *780 Dist. R. 613; Hornor v. Henning, 93 U. S. 228, [23 L. Ed. 879]; and finally our own eases of Winchester v. Mabury, 122 Cal. 525, [55 Pac. 393], and Winchester v. Howard, 136 Cal. 441, [89 Am. St. Rep. 153, 64 Pac. 692, 69 Pac. 77]. Our own cases dealt with the provision of law found in section 3, article XII, of our constitution, making directors of corporations jointly and severally liable to the creditors and stockholders for all moneys embezzled or misappropriated. These decisions declared that the remedy in such an action for the enforcement of this constitutional provision is by a bill in equity in which all the creditors of the corporation are entitled to be represented, precisely as in the judgment recovered all are entitled to share, and appellants argue upon principle that the same construction should be given to the section of the code upon which this action is based. By respondents it is contended that the very plain meaning of the section is that the directors shall be liable only to the persons in whose favor such debts were contracted, and reference is made to the first edition of Thompson’s Commentaries on Corporations, and that learned author’s discussion in Cyc., where, for example, he says:

“Sec. 4265. Most of the statutes simply make the directors contracting such excessive debts liable therefor to the creditors of the company, meaning of course, to the persons in whose favor such debts were contracted. In some cases it is not distinctly so expressed; but in such cases the implication, of course, is that they are liable to those creditors, because when it is said that a man is liable for a debt, the meaning is that he is liable to the person to whom the debt is due.” (Thompson’s Com. on Corp.)
“Most of the statutes in terms make the directors liable to creditors, meaning, it must be assumed, to a creditor in favor of whom such excessive indebtedness was contracted.” (10 Cyc. 879.)

Further, it is argued that Hornor v. Henning and other cases limit with scrupulous care the language of their opinions, and declare only “that this liability constitutes a fund for the benefit of all the creditors who are entitled to share in it,” and that those only are entitled to share who have actually suffered or who may be thought actually to have suffered by reason of the incurring of the excess indebtedness, that is to say, the creditors of such excessive indebtedness. *781 This view, it is said, was the interpretation put upon Hornor v. Henning by Mr. Justice Lurton, but recently of the United States supreme court, in Allison v. Coal Creek etc. Co., 87 Tenn. 60, [9 S. W. 226], and this construction has been adhered to in Moulton v. Connell etc. Co., 93 Tenn. 377, [27 S. W. 672], and Tradesman Publishing Co. v. Knoxville etc. Co., 95 Tenn. 634, [49 Am. St. Rep. 943, 31 L. R. A. 593, 32 S. W. 1097]. This is the first of the legal propositions, interesting in itself, whose decision is unnecessary to this adjudication. Por the purposes of this discussion and decision only, the question will be resolved in favor of appellants’ contention.

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Bluebook (online)
155 P. 90, 171 Cal. 777, 1916 Cal. LEXIS 636, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moss-v-smith-cal-1916.