National Park Bank v. Remsen

23 Jones & S. 144, 18 N.Y. St. Rep. 305
CourtThe Superior Court of New York City
DecidedDecember 5, 1887
StatusPublished

This text of 23 Jones & S. 144 (National Park Bank v. Remsen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering The Superior Court of New York City primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
National Park Bank v. Remsen, 23 Jones & S. 144, 18 N.Y. St. Rep. 305 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1887).

Opinion

By the Court.—Sedgwick, Ch. J.

The learned counsel for the respondent supports the claim to recover for liabilities incurred by the company, after payment of the capital and the recording of the certificate, by this sentence of the 9th section of the charter: “ and when the stock held by such stockholder shall be full paid stock, then to the extent of said stock only with costs,” etc.

The words “full paid stock ” do not refer to the whole capital stock of the company. They refer to stock held by the stockholder individually, for which or upon which the full amount which should have been paid, has been paid. By the charter, commissioners in the first instance, and afterwards the directors, take subscriptions to the capital stock, to a gross amount, as directed by the act. Some of the subscribers may pay the full amount due under their subscriptions, and cannot be called upon by the directors for further payment. ■ Others may fail to pay the whole, or a part of the amount due under their subscriptions. Or the amount of the capital fixed under the law, may. be subscribed for only in part, and that part may be fully paid for. In such case, the stock that had been entirely paid for, would be “ full paid,” while at the .same time the whole amount of the capital had not been paid in. The sentence of the section expressly refers to stock, as severally held by a stockholder, and not to the capital stock taken as a whole.

The next question is, what is the liability of a holder of such “ full paid ” stock ? The sentence in view does not describe it. Therefore, there would be none, but for the implied reference to the earlier part of the section. This earlier part creates a liability “ for all debts and contracts made by such company”......“until the whole amount of the capital stock fixed and limited by such company, shall have been paid in, and become full stock,” and a certificate thereof recorded. The respondent’s counsel, in the course of the argument, admits or claims [147]*147that this means debts and contracts “made” before the certificate has been recorded. This earlier part of the ■section creates no liability for debts “ made ” after the payment of the capital and the recording of the certificate. As the later part refers the liability to the preceding matter, there was created by the section no liability for debts or contracts incurred or made after the recording of the proper certificate.

On the argument, there was no assertion in behalf of the respondent that the capital had not been paid in fully, and a certificate of that recorded, before the indorsement of the note of November 27, 1878, and the recovery of judgment for costs and disbursement in the ■action against the company.

I am, therefore, of the opinion that the plaintiff should not have recovered for any part of that note, or for the costs and disbursements in the action.

I think the recovery for interest on the amount of the •debt of the company before this action was begun, was correct, if the recovery is not objectionable for other reasons. The principal and interest, down to the beginning of the action, were not together more than the amount of shares held by the defendant.

The statute of limitations was pleaded to the supposed causes of action. The action was not brought, until after six years from the time the company had failed to pay its obligations, with which this defendant is here charged. This defense should have been sustained if the 9tlx section of the charter is the only statute to be considered, for then a liability, upon which an action could be begun, Avould exist at least as soon as the company had neglected or refused to pay its debts, or perform its contracts, the capital not being paid and a certificate thereof recorded. The respondent contends that another statute is to be considered, in the provisions of section 24 of the general manufacturing act of 1848 (2 R. S., 6 ed., p. 508, § 59 [24]): “No stockholder shall be personally liable for the payment of any debt contracted by a [148]*148company formed under this act, which is not to be paid, within one year from the time the debt is contracted, nor unless a suit for the collection of such debt shall be brought against such company within one year after the debt shall have become due,......nor until an execution against the company, shall have been returned unsatisfied in whole or in part.” The 10th section of the manufacturing act had, in its words, said generally that stockholders should be hable for the company’s debts. The form of the provision is substantially the same as the first ¡Dart of the 9th section of the charter, in this case. The 9th section of the charter also provides that the corporation shall possess all the general powers and privileges, and be subject to all the liabilities conferred and imposed upon corporations organized under “ the general manufacturing act, as amended....... when the provisions thereof are not inconsistent with the express provisions of this act.” It is argued that a stockholder is a part of the corporation under the charter and therefore has the privileges of a stockholder, under the section 24 of the manufacturing act, and among the others, the privilege of not being sued for the debts of the company until after a return of an execution upon a judgment obtained against the company in an action upon its contract. If this position is valid the statute of limitations is not a defense. This action was begun within six years after the return of such an execution, in an action against the company brought in due time.

In the beginning, let it be conceded that a stockholder is a part of the corporation. It is then to be ascertained what are the “privileges” intended by the 9th section of the charter. The words are the “ general powers and privileges.” According to the ordinary use-of words, the word “ general ” qualifies “ privileges,” as it does “ power.”- The meaning is “general privileges.”" I am of opinion that the “ privileges ” meant, are such as would belong to the whole of the corporation, as a. [149]*149-corporation, and not a particular privilege, that would belong to a particular part oí a corporation. The limited character of the privilege claimed, shows that it is not general as to all the parts of a corporation, for it ■ does not refer to the corporation as a legal person. Its subject matter is not general, for the regulations that contain it are based upon a particular combination of facts.

I am of opinion however, that the 24th section of the manufacturing act does not contain a privilege whether general or otherwise, of a kind intended by the 9th section of the charter. The privilege argued for is that the stockholder is exempt from liability for debts, upon which no action has been brought against the corporation. Exemption from liability is not a privilege, even in a colloquial or figurative sense, unless, but for the -exemption, there would be liability. The enjoyment of a legal right is not a privilege, in a legal point of view. And to maintain that the benefit, supposing there is a benefit, in the provisions of the 24th section, .it is necessary to show that, but for that section, there would have been a liability for all debts, as soon as they arose. Taken by itself, the section .intimates that there would have been the general liability, if the 24th section had not become law. This .intimation is justified by the 10th section only. But in fact, the 10th section in its 'generality, never became law, until the act itself was made the law, and then all the parts were to be construed together.

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Bluebook (online)
23 Jones & S. 144, 18 N.Y. St. Rep. 305, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/national-park-bank-v-remsen-nysuperctnyc-1887.