Page v. McConville

10 Ohio C.C. 316
CourtOhio Circuit Courts
DecidedJanuary 15, 1895
StatusPublished

This text of 10 Ohio C.C. 316 (Page v. McConville) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Circuit Courts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Page v. McConville, 10 Ohio C.C. 316 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1895).

Opinion

Smith, J.

This cause was heard in this court on a motion filed on behalf of defendant in error, James McConville, agent, to strike from the files the petition in error, ándito dismiss the case for the reason that the plaintiff in error has failed to make the necessary parties defendants in error.

The original petition in the case, the judgment in which it is sought io have reversed, was filed in the superior court of Cincinnati, on March 2, 1889, by James McConville, as agent of the shareholders of the Metropolitan National Bank, against, Wra. H. Doane, Joseph R. Brown, C. E. Page, The Aetna Telephone Go., and others alleged to be stockholders in said Telephone company. The petition alleged that under and by virtue of the act of Congress approved June 30, 1876, he had been elected and had qualified as the agent of the stockholders of said bank, and that he brings the suit in his own behalf as on that of all the creditors of such telephone company, a corporation under the laws of Ohio. He sets up the recovery of a judgment by him as such agent against the telephone company, the issue of an execution thereon, returned unsatisfied, and that certain persons, naming them, were stockholders in the amount named, and that none of them had paid more than 20 per cent on their stock subscriptions, and that for the payment of the debts of the company they were each liable for the additional 80 per cent, and on their individual liability to an amount equal to their stock subscriptions. Wherefore he prays that the court would ascertain who the creditors of said company are, and the amount due to each of them, and the names of the stockholders in the company, and that they be required to pay the balance due on their subscriptions; and if there is a deficiency of assets to pay the debts, that each stockholder be required to pay his ratable proportion on his stock liability to pay the same.

[318]*318Answers were filed by some of the defendants denying tlie validity of the claim of the plaintiff, and other persons alleged to be stockholders were brought in, and the case was referred to a referee to hear and determine the issues and state the account. Before the case was decided, and as early as December 17, 1891, an entry was made by the court finding that John F. Pogue was then the duly qualified agent of the stockholders of the bank and the successor to MeConville, former agent, and he was substituted as party plaintiff in place of MeConville, and the action ordered to proceed in his name.

On February G, 1892, Pogue as agent filed a supplemental petition, making a correction as to the amount of his claim, and praying for the same relief as was prayed for in the original petition.

On a hearing had February 20, 1893, the court found that the referee had erred in finding that J. R. Brown was a subscriber for 50 shares of said stock, and that W. H. Doane was a subscriber for 100 shares, and set aside so much of said report, and adjudged that Brown was a subscriber for only 25 shares, and Doane only for 50 shares. To this Page excepted, and on February 21, 1893, filed his motion for a new trial on the ground that the court erred in holding that Brown was a subscriber only for 25 shares and Doane for 50 shares, and for other reasons. This was overruled, and on March 24, 1893, a final judgment was entered fixing the indebtedness of the Telephone Company, determining the stockholders, the number of shares held by each, and the amount that each should contribute to the payment of such indebtedness, and directing each of said stockholders on or before March 24, .1893, to pay into the hands of Province M. Pogue, who was by such judgment appointed a receiver for the purpose of receiving, collecting and distributing' the money to be paid in pursuance of said order, the amounts adjudged against them severally. Page and John F. Pogue, agent, filed motions to set aside this judgment [319]*319and for a new trial, but tlie motions were overruled April 1, 1898, and exception taken, and a bill of exceptions was then allowed containing all of the evidence heard.

On May 3, 1893, C. E. Page filed in the general term of the Superior Court a petition in error, the caption of which, giving the names of the parties, is as follows: C. E. Page, plaintiff in error, v. James McConville, agent, et al., defendant in error. It alleged the recovery of the judgment against him by the defendant in error in the case wherein the defendant in error was plaintiff, and the plaintiff in error was defendant. No other person was named as a defendant in error. Neither John E. Pogue, agent, Province M. Pogue, receiver, or any of the stockholders whose rights had been adjudicated in tlie case were named as defendants. No summons appears to have been issued, but the petition is endorsed as follows: “Summons waived and appearance entered by defendant in error by Pogue, Pottenger & Pogue, attorneys for defendant in error. “

We think it is entirely clear from the language of the petition in error, that, it was not the intention of the plaintiff in error to make auy one a defendant in error with McConville. No summons in error was issued for any one else, and the entry of appearance was for McConville alone. It does not appear that the attorneys who entered his appear-, anee were authorized to represent any of the stockholders, and as we remember, they claim they were not. They do appear to have represented John F. Pogue, agent; but he was not named as a defendant in error, and they did not enter his appearance. As McConville, as agent, was out of the case long before the rendition of the decree complained of, it would seem that he was not a proper party to the petition in error (Pogue having been appointed to succeed him), and if this be so, there is really no defendant in error before the court, for it can hardly be claimed that where one party has been substituted for another, as for instance where one ad[320]*320ministrator or guardian is substituted for another, and a judgment is thereafter rendered, it may properly be reversed on a petition in erorr filed against the first administrator or guardian alone.

But if it be conceded that McConville was a proper and only defendant to this petition in error, how does the case stand? He would then be the only person who could resist the reversal of the decree before rendered. That decree, as has been said, was one settling the affairs of the telephone company, and adjusting the conflicting rights of the creditors, and of the stockholders among themselves, with reference to the amount each should pay as a stockholder to satisfy the debts of the corporation. It wras in one sense several, for it fixed the amount to be paid by each stockholder, to a receiver appointed to receive and disburse it. But it was joint in other respects, for if the judgment, entered should be set aside and a new trial granted, it might be found that some stockholders not parties to the error proceeding had been assessed as the owners of too many or too few shares of the stock of the company; and this would require a re-adjustment of the whole account. It was eminently proper, then, and we think it was essential,' so far as the reversal might affect the interests of the stockholders, that they should be parties to the error proceeding, otherwise their rights would be seriously affected by the action of a tribunal in a proceeding to which they were not parties.

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Bluebook (online)
10 Ohio C.C. 316, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/page-v-mcconville-ohiocirct-1895.