Pfaff v. Gruen

69 S.W. 405, 92 Mo. App. 560, 1902 Mo. App. LEXIS 508
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 25, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 69 S.W. 405 (Pfaff v. Gruen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pfaff v. Gruen, 69 S.W. 405, 92 Mo. App. 560, 1902 Mo. App. LEXIS 508 (Mo. Ct. App. 1902).

Opinion

GOODE, J.

A demurrer was sustained to the plaintiff’s petition in this case, in which he seeks to enforce a statutory liability agaiiist Jacob Gruen and John Gruen as stockholders in-the Columbus Watch Company, an insolvent corporation organized under the laws of the State, of Ohio.

The grounds of the demurrer were a misjoinder of parties defendant and a failure to state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action.

Plaintiff stood on his petition.

Erom the allegations contained therein it appears the plaintiff is both a stockholder and a creditor of an insolvent Ohio corporation, the Columbus Watch Company, and that he brings this suit in behalf of himself and all its other creditors. The defendants are and for years have been stockholders thereof and the only stockholders resident in this State. It also appears that two suits have been instituted in the court of common pleas of Eranklin county, Ohio, against said watch company. In one the plaintiff in this action, Carl Pfaff, and Louis Lindeman were plaintiffs; in the second, Jacob Scheutz was plaintiff. In both cases the corporation itself and all the stockholders in Ohio were made parties defendant, either by service of process or their voluntary appearance. The object of both suits was to wind up the corporation, ascertain its indebtedness, collect its assets and distribute them among its creditors.

By the finding of the said court of common pleas and also by the return of an execution which had been issued on a judgment obtained by said Scheutz against the Columbus [565]*565Watch Company and returned nulla Iona prior to tbe filing of bis bill in equity, it appears tbe corporation is insolvent.

A receiver was appointed in tbe first case, prior to tbe institution of tbe second one, but tbe two causes were subsequently consolidated and the same receiver retained. It further appears that an assessment of thirty per cent of tbe par value of tbe company’s capital stock was assessed against tbe shareholders in said suit in Ohio, which they were directed to pay to tbe receiver and that all holders of stock, including these defendants, have paid that assessment. Afterwards, another assessment was levied against the stockholders, which, with the first levy, carried the assessments against them up to the full par value of the capital stock. The amounts necessary to be paid by the defendants and all other shareholders to make good what the company owes, were definitely fixed by the decree of the court in said consolidated ease and all the stockholders have paid their second assessment, except these defendants who refuse to pay, wherefore this action was instituted to compel payment.

We regard most of the propositions of law involved in the controversy as well settled and supported by harmonious decisions; but some of them are still open, at least in this jurisdiction, and the cases in other States which deal with them are so contradictory as to cast doubt on what the rule is or ought to be.

A statutory liability, like the one with which the defendants are sought to be charged, is not strictly an asset of a corporation, but an indemnity or further security exacted by the laws of the State of the corporation’s domicile for the benefit of its creditors. Such a liability is not in the nature of a penalty, nor does the obligation to discharge it, if the contingency for which it is provided happens, that is, if the corporation becomes insolvent, rest exclusively on the Constitution and statutes which impose it. While it is a legislative expression of [566]*566the public policy and popular sentiment of the State where it prevails as to how incorporated companies can be best regulated, as between a shareholder of a company and the company’s creditors, it is in the nature of a contract; because if persons subscribe for shares in a company organized under a law which imposes the liability, they are presumed to have subscribed with reference to that law as well as all others regulating the companies and their members, and to have consented to be thus responsible, It is, therefore, in legal effect a promise to answer to corporate creditors in proportion to the value of the stock one holds — an implied contract to pay the company’s debts if the company itself can not. Brown v. Hitchcock, 36 Ohio St. 667; Concord Nat. Bank v. Hawkins, 174 H. S. 372; Blakeman v. Benton, 10 Mo. App. 107.

Another settled rule is that this liability on the part of shareholders is not primary but contingent on the insolvency of the company and its inability to meet its obligations to creditors.

The disposition of the courts of States outside the one where an insolvent company is domiciled is to enforce such a statutory liability, both because of that comity and good will which ought to exist among the States of the Hnion and that respect which the governmental departments of other States ought to show to the laws and policies of a sister State, and also because it is the duty of courts everywhere to compel parties to keep all obligations and engagements, not illegal or immoral, into which they enter. As has been said, a liability of this kind is more than a public policy, more than a mere indemnity exacted from the holders of corporate stock in favor of corporation creditors; it is an obligation voluntarily assumed by every individual who subscribes for shares in a company organized and doing business under laws which prescribe such a liability, and, therefore, over and above the duty of comity — that ■nobless?, oblige which should constrain sovereign States — ought to be [567]*567enforced on tbe same broad principles and for the same persuasive reasons that other contracts are enforced; because a principal duty of courts is to compel men to perform their contracts. Legal and judicial compulsion is what makes agreements useful, and the transaction of business by and through agreements possible. It is the obligation of contracts, which consists in the remedy given by the law for their enforcement. Cocke v. Hoffman, 5 Lea 112.

“A contract is an agreement in which a party undertakes to do or not to do a particular thing. The law binds him to perform his undertaking and this is of course the obligation of his contract,” was the language of Chief Justice Maeshalx, in Sturges v. Crowinshield, 4 Wheat. 122.

The foregoing observations apply to the statutory liability of members of corporations generally, wherever that kind of liability exists, without reference to the particular provisions of the Constitution and statutes of Ohio, which we are called on to consider in this case and which need to be noticed. The Constitution of that State contains this clause:

“Dues from corporations shall be secured by such individual liability of the stockholders and other means as may be prescribed by law, but in all cases each stockholder shall be liable over and above the stock by him or her owned, and any amount unpaid thereon and a further sum at least equal in amount to such stock.”

In the Revised Statutes of Ohio are the following sections undertaking to execute the foregoing constitutional provision:

“The stockholders of a corporation which may be hereafter formed and such stockholders as are now liable under former statutes shall be deemed and held liable in addition to their stock in an amount equal to the stock by them subscribed, or otherwise acquired, to -the creditors of the corporation to secure the payment of the debts and liabilities of the corporation.

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Bluebook (online)
69 S.W. 405, 92 Mo. App. 560, 1902 Mo. App. LEXIS 508, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pfaff-v-gruen-moctapp-1902.