O'Reilly v. Bard

105 Pa. 569, 1884 Pa. LEXIS 145
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMarch 7, 1884
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 105 Pa. 569 (O'Reilly v. Bard) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
O'Reilly v. Bard, 105 Pa. 569, 1884 Pa. LEXIS 145 (Pa. 1884).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Clark

.delivered -the opinion of the court, October 6, 1884.

The Reading Industrial Manufacturing Company was incorporated November 10, 1857, under the provisions of the Act of April 7, 1849, entitled “ An Act to encourage manufacturing,” &c., Pamph. Law’s, 563, and its several supplements; its operations were carried o.n for about three years;.the company [573]*573then became insolvent, and suits were instituted for the recovery of its indebtedness. One of these suits was brought by Moses K. Graeff, in which were joined as defendants several of the stockholders, viz: Peter Miller, Adam Bard, Henry Brown, and A. Henke & Co.; judgment was entered against the defendants in this case, December 7, 1868, foils,433.50, which judgment, after execution issued against the corporation, was paid April 6, 1870, by the executors of the will of Peter Miller, deceased, Adam Bard, and Henry Brown, three of the stockholders, joined as defendants, and the judgment was thereupon assigned to them.

Another suit was- that of William Mcllvaine & Sons, in which James Beidler, Henry Brown, Adam Bard, Peter Miller, and Samuel Spohn were made defendants, jointly, with the corporation; judgment was entered in this case December 9, 1870, for $184.50, and after execution against the company, this judgment was likewise paid by the same persons, and was assigned to them.

The case at bar is an action in assumpsit for contribution, brought by the stockholders paying the judgments against the remaining, or some of the remaining, stockholders. It does not appear what constituted the distinct cause of action, in each of the suits instituted against the company, but we may, perhaps, assume that as certain of the stockholders 'were joined in the suits, and judgments were obtained against them the suits were founded upon that class of debts, for which stockholders were liable.

Corporation stockholders, who have already contributed their proportions to the capital stock, are not at the common law, or in equity, liable for the corporate debts; statutes which impose this liability must therefore be strictly construed; this rule of law is well settled: Mean’s Appeal, 4 Norris, 78.' The right of contribution among stockholders also exists by reason only of the obligation imposed by the statute. If it were not for the statute there would exist no personal responsibility on the part of the holder of the stock, either to the corporate creditors or to each other for the corporate debts. The right of.the plaintiffs to recover in this case, therefore, depends upon the construction of the Act of 7th April, 1849, and its supplements of 20th April,. 1853, Pamph. Laws, 637, and 27th March, 1854, Pamph. Laws, 215.

By the 9th section of the Act of 1849, it is provided that stocltholders in any company, incorporated under that Act, shall be jointly and severally liable, in their individual capacities, for the debts of the company, to the amount remaining unpaid on their shares of stock, held by them respectively. The supplement of 20th April, 1853, extended this liability, [574]*574as to'all companies thereafter incorporated,' to all the debts of the company without restriction. . The further supplement of 27th March, 1854, however, limited this general liability to “debts due to miners, quarrymen, and other laborers employed by such companies, and for machinery, provisions, merchandise, country produce, and materials furnished for said companies, respectively,” and provided that this liability should be “ enforced and collected in the manner provided for in the Act, to which this is a supplement.” The Reading Industrial Manufacturing Company having'been incorporated November 10, 1857, the extent of the liability of its stockholders is fixed by the Act of '1854, and the manner of its enforcement is under the Act of 7th April, 1849.

' Referring to the Act of 1849;- we find that form of procedure, provided as follows,-viz :•

“ In any action, brought to enforce any liability under the provisions of - this Act, the plaintiff may include, as defendants, any one or more of the stockholders of such company, claimed to be liable therefor"; and if judgment be given in favor of the plaintiff for his claim, or any part_ thereof, and any one or more of the stockholders, so made defendants, shall be found to be liable, judgment shall be given against him or them. The execution upon such judgment shall be first levied on the property of such company, if it be found in the county where the chief business of the company is carried on, and, in case such property sufficient to satisfy the same cannot be found in said county, the deficiency, or so much thereof as the stockholder or stockholders, defendants in such judgments, shall be -liable to pay, shall'be collected of the property of such stockholder or stockholders.”

If this action of assumpsit were one brought by a creditor of .the corporation, for the collection, of-a proper claim from the stockholders, even after judgment and execution against the corporate effects, it clearly could not be maintained; this will doubtless be conceded, because, if the defendants in such a case are answerable at all, they are answerable under the statute, and the remedy of the statute must'be pursued ; that remedy is special, and, under the rule of the general Act of 1806, it is exclusive. Hoard v.-Wilcox, 11 Wright, 51, and Mansfield Iron Works v. Willcox, 2 P. E. S., 378, are cases precisely in point, and further reference is unnecessary.

But it is urged, that this is an action for contribution, not one by a creditor, to enforce liability under the Act; that the action for contribution is founded upon the general equity, arising from the payment by the plaintiff of more than his share of a liability existing at the time against all; that it is a general rule of law, independently of the statute, that where [575]*575several are jointly and severally bound to pay a sum of money and one of them pays the whole, in relief of the others, he may recover from the others, the aliquot part which they ought to pay. They say, therefore, that, independently, of the remedy of the statute, and in addition thereto, they have a right to avail themselves of the ordinary remedies provided by law, in cases of contribution. It is certainly true that this principle is in general a correct one ; contribution is not founded on contract, but on general principles of justice; it did not exist at the common law; it arises and is enforceable in equity; under our practice however relief is administered in the common law courts upon an implied assumpsit. But referring to the Act of 1849, we find specific provisions made to enforce contribution as follows:—

“ On the pajunent of any judgment aforesaid, or any part thereof, by one or more stockholders, the stockholder or stockholders so paying the same shall be entitled to have such judgment or so much thereof as may have been paid by him or them, assigned by (to) him or them for his or their benefit, with power to enforce the same in manner aforesaid; first, against the company, and in case the amount so paid by him or them shall not be collected of the property of the company then ratably against the other stockholders, if any such there be originally liable for the claim, on which such judgment was obtained.”

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105 Pa. 569, 1884 Pa. LEXIS 145, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/oreilly-v-bard-pa-1884.