Moultrie v. Smiley

16 Ga. 289
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedAugust 15, 1854
DocketNo. 32
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 16 Ga. 289 (Moultrie v. Smiley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Moultrie v. Smiley, 16 Ga. 289 (Ga. 1854).

Opinions

The Court not being unanimous, the opinions of the Judges were delivered seriatim.

By the Court.

Lumpkin, J.

delivering the opinion.

[1.] As Counsel have addressed themselves almost exclusively to a single point in this case; and as it is the only one respecting which there is any contrariety of opinion between the members of the Court, I shall give to it the whole of my attention. It is this : Did the action of debt, brought against the directors, under the 8th rule of the Act of Incorporation of the Commercial Bank of Macon, abate by the expiration of the Charter, during the pendency, and before the termination of the suit ?

The important consequences which must necessarily flow from any decision made in this cause and other circumstances attending it, have induced me to re-examine, with more than ordinary care, the points heretofore decided by this Court, so far as they are again involved in the present issue ; as well as the arguments and authorities relied upon to controvert them.

With many, nay most of the propositions maintained by the learned and distinguished Counsel for the plaintiffs in error, I entirely concur.

I admit that all private charters are contracts — that it is the acceptance, express or implied, by the corporators, that gives force and validity to the Charter — that no one can be made a [294]*294corporator, without, much less against, his consent — that all contracts are supposed to bo made in reference to the existing laws of the place where they are executed — and that these laws, when contracts are made, are incorporated with and form parts of them — that the charter of the Commercial Bank of Macon was a contract between the people of the State, through the Legislature on the one part, and the stockholders on the other —that the franchise granted, was the consideration for the obligations assumed — that the inhabitants of a municipal corporation are individually liable for the debts of the corporation— and that they are, nevertheless, saved by its dissolution. These, and numerous other positions, stated and enforced with singular ability during this discussion, receive my hearty assent and approbation.

Moreover, I agree that the elementary writers, both in England and in the United States, do every where assert distinctly, that the debts due to and from a corporation, are extinguished by its dissolution, unless prevented by the terms ofo'f^-e charter itself, or by aliunde legislation; and that in the G^Vts of both countries, this doctrine may now be considered too ettled to be overthrown or shaken, and so totally extinguished that the members of the corporation cannot recover or be charged with them, in their natural capacities.

I deem it advisable to examine, at the outset, somewhat minutely, into the origin of this Common Law rule, not for the purpose of questioning its legality, but in order to restrict it in its application to the reason in which it is founded. For cessante ratione legis, eessat ipsa lex. And I feel fully warranted ■in this course, inasmuch as the rule itself has been justly characterized, by the most enlightened tribunals, as odious and iniquitous. Said Mr. Justice Olayton, in delivering the opinion of the Supreme Court of Mississippi, in Nevitt vs. Bank of Port Gibson, (6 S. & M. 513): “ The almost universal prevalence of Statutes, in some shape or other, in the Stales of this Union, to guard against the consequences of dissolution, proves that they have their foundation deeply imbedded in an innate sense of justice. And the condemnation of the Common Law rule, [295]*295by such men as Kent, Qaston, Tucker, and many others such as they, shows that it is in utter hostility to the spirit of this age. It belongs to the period when men, who could not pay their debts, were imprisoned for. life; and when the estates of criminals were confiscated to the government; and- it should be consigned to the same tomb with these antiquated barbarisms.”

In support of the rule, Judge Blackstone, in his Commentaries, (1 volume, 484) quotes the case of Edmunds vs. Brown and Sillard (1 Levinz, 237.) Mr. Barlow, the huthor of the text of the treatise on Equity, commonly called by Mr. Fonblanque’s name, because he attached to it his valuable notes, states the same principle in nearly the same language, and cites the same case from Levins, and no other. (1 Fonbl. Eq. 297.)

Now I am aware of the high authority of Sir Oresswell Levins, as a Reporter. He not only had the commendation of' Lords Mansfield and Kenyon, itself the highest praise, but per- - haps a still more satisfactory evidence of the value of his re- - ports is s’-'.wn, by the demand for three editions; and their-frequent elation at the Bar and elsewhere. Besides, he reported thi ,, mns of that ablest of Judges and most upright of ' men, Sir Matthew Kale, who presided in the Courts of Westminster Hall at the close of the 17th and the beginning of the 18th centuries. Could I find the doctrine then broadly asserted in Levins, I should be dumb — I should open not my mouth. But I must say, that no principle of equal magnitude ever rested on so frail a foundation.

What was the case of Edmunds vs. Broun and Sillard ? It was an action of debt on an obligation of ¿C500. The defendants pleaded non est factum', and on the evidence, it appeared! that the defendants were two of the principal members of the Company of Woodmongers, then lately dissolved; and that, the money was borrowed in the name of the company, and the • obligation sealed in the name of the company, and with their • .seal. The defendants, as was usual, put their names to the obligation. But the obligation was “noverint universi per ■ presentes nos magistrum et gurdianos," $c. del company de - [296]*296Woodmongers teneri, ¿-c.; and the obligation was endorsed sigillat et deliberat in presentía, ¿•c. and attested.

The company being dissolved, the action was brought against the defendants, intending to charge them in their private capacities. But is was ruled that on the above state of facts, this could not be. On which the plaintiff was non-suited.

It is needless to suggest, by way of commentary, what will ■readily occur to every legal mind — that in an action of debt > on the bond, on the plea of non est factum, this result was in- - evitable. The evidence showed that the corporation executed •the bond, and not the individual members who sealed the obli- : gation in the name of the company, adding also their own signatures. There was no pretence for charging the individual •members at law, upon the contract, if they had authority to ex- • ecute the obligation in behalf of the corporation, although with-cut such authority they might have rendered themselves liable as upon their own contract. And yet, this is the case cited by •Judge Blaelcstone, Mr. Ponblanque, and most of the elementa•ry writers, English and American, as the leading, if not the • only authority, that on the dissolution of a corporation, its - debts are extinguished, and that for their recovery, there is no ■remedy at Law or in Equity ; and for the addendum or amplifi- • cation of the doctrine by Chancellor Kent,

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Bluebook (online)
16 Ga. 289, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moultrie-v-smiley-ga-1854.