Pittsburg Steel Co. v. Baltimore Equitable Society

77 A. 255, 113 Md. 77, 1910 Md. LEXIS 27
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedMarch 31, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 77 A. 255 (Pittsburg Steel Co. v. Baltimore Equitable Society) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pittsburg Steel Co. v. Baltimore Equitable Society, 77 A. 255, 113 Md. 77, 1910 Md. LEXIS 27 (Md. 1910).

Opinion

*79 Schmucker, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This appeal raises.’the issue of the constitutionality of Chapter 305 of the Acts of 1908, which abated pending actions at law to enforce a stockholder’s liability to the creditors of a corporation and substituted therefor a creditor’s bill in equity.

The present suit was instituted in the Superior Court of Baltimore City on February 21st, 1908, by the appellant as a creditor against the appellee as a stockholder of the South Baltimore Steel Car and Foundry Company. The declaration contains six common counts in assumpsit, and one special count alleging that the plaintiff is a creditor of the company in the sum of $4,021.59 and that at the time he became such creditor the defendant held stock in the company to the par value of $9,000, on the subscription for which a balance of $3,000 remained due and unpaid. The plaintiff claimed the right to recover that unpaid balance.

The defendant filed general issue pleas to the first six counts and demurred to the seventh. Before any further proceedings were had in the case, the Act of 1908, Chapter 305 was passed. That Act by repealing and re-enacting section 64 of Article 23 of the Code of 1888 and adding section 64A, made a bill in equity the exclusive remedy for the enforcement by creditors of corporations of the liability to them of the stockholders for any unpaid balances due on their stock. The Act further provided that it should become operative as of July 1st, 1907, and that all actions at law for the enforcement of such liability instituted after that date and prior to the passage of the Act should be abated.

Then the defendant in reliance upon the Act moved in the Court helow to abate the suit. The Court granted the motion and entered judgment of dismissal in favor of the defendant, and the plaintiff appealed.

The appellant -contends that the retrospective provision of the Act abating actions at law to enforce the liability of stockholders, begun since July 1st, 1907, is in violation of sec. 10 of Art. 1 of the Federal Constitution forbidding any *80 State to pass a law impairing the obligation of contracts. The law is well settled that the right of the creditor to recover against the stockholder is one founded on a contract which the law conclusively presumes to exist between those parties. In Brandt v. Ehlen, 59 Md. 27, our predecessors said: “All of the decisions in this country agree that the right of the creditor to recover against the stockholder rests on the liability of the latter to the corporation and that this liability is one founded on contract.” See also Norris v. Wrenschall, 34 Md. 501-2; Matthews v. Albert, 24 Md. 535; Hager v. Cleveland, 36 Md. 492; Garling v. Bechtel, 41 Md. 325; Colton v. Mayer, 90 Md. 717; Coulbourn v Boulton, 100 Md. 354; Crawford v. Rohrer, 50 Md. 605; Norris v. Johnson, 34 Md. 489.

The law as to the extent to which an existing remedy for the enforcement of the obligation of a contract is to be considered as part of the contract itself, and the character of a subsequent change in such remedy which will operate to impair the contract is well stated in Seibert v. Lewis, 122 U. S. 294, cited and relied on in appellant’s brief. In the opinion in that case the Supreme Court say: “It is well settled by the decisions of this Court that the remedy subsisting in a State when and where the contract is made, and is to be performed, is a part of its obligation, and any subsequent law of the State which so affects that remedy as substantially to impair and lessen the value of the contract is forbidden by the Constitution, and is therefore void. It had been previously said, upon a review of the decisions of the Court in Von Hoffman v. City of Quincy, 4 Wallace, 535, 553: 'It is competent for the States to change the form of the remedy or to modify it otherwise as they may see fit; provided no substantial right secured by the contract is thereby impaired. Ho attempt has been made to fix definitely the line between alterations of the remedy which are to be deemed legitimate and those which, under the form of modifying the remedy, impair substantial rights. Every case must be determined *81 upon its own circumstances. Whenever the result last mentioned is produced the Act is within the prohibition of the Constitution, and to that extent void.’ ”

The doctrine is most strongly stated in Bryan v. Virginia, 135 U. S. 693, ás follows: “It is well settled by the adjudications of this Court that the obligation of a contract is impaired in the sense of the Constitution by an Act which prevents its enforcement or which materially abridges the remedy for enforcing it which existed at the time it was contracted, and does not supply an alternative remedy equally adequate and efficacious.”

In order to apply the test thus laid down to the Act under consideration it is essential to determine what was the remedy for the enforcement of the stockholder’s liability to which the creditor was entitled before the passage of the Act, and what was the new remedy which it provided for him. It is conceded that before the passage of the Act any creditor could sue at law any stockholder who was such at the time the debt was contracted and recover from him to the extent of the balance due on his stock subscription, or he eotdd enforce his claim by a bill in equity. Norris v. Johnson, supra; Crawford v. Rohrer, supra. The right of the creditor to thus sue at law was not a separate or exclusive one of his own, which could be satisfied only by payment to him individually. It was a mere right held by him in common with all other creditors of the corporation to whom the stockholder was liable, and one which the stockholder could satisfy and destroy by payment to any' other or others of such creditors. The right, therefore, of the creditor under such circumsatnces to bring a separate suit at law for an obligation which the debtor might satisfy by payment to a stranger to the suit was not a very valuable right. It was in a certain sense an individual right of action, but it bore only a slight resemblance to the right of a creditor to maintain a suit against his own debtor to recover an obligation due to no one else than himself. If, as we have decided in Matthews v. Albert, supra, the stockhodler is to be regarded as a “debtor under *82 the statute to the creditors of the corporation” who hécame such while he was a stockholder, then he, being under the obligation of a debtor to all of them, must have had the correlative right to discharge his obligation by payment to any of them and have been free to select the one to whom to make the payment. We held in Garling v. Bechtel,

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Bluebook (online)
77 A. 255, 113 Md. 77, 1910 Md. LEXIS 27, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pittsburg-steel-co-v-baltimore-equitable-society-md-1910.