Powell v. Oregonian Ry. Co.

38 F. 187, 13 Sawy. 543, 1889 U.S. App. LEXIS 2804
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Oregon
DecidedMarch 18, 1889
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 38 F. 187 (Powell v. Oregonian Ry. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Powell v. Oregonian Ry. Co., 38 F. 187, 13 Sawy. 543, 1889 U.S. App. LEXIS 2804 (circtdor 1889).

Opinion

Di’ady. J.

This suit is brought to collect from the defendant a judgment obtained by the plaintiff on April 8, 1887, against the Dayton, Sheridan & Grand Ronde Railway Company, for the sum of $5,300.

The defendant is sued as the holder of 1,000 shares of stock of said corporation, since February 27,1884, on which there is due and unpaid the sum of $89,000; and it is alleged in tbo bill that these are the only shares of the stock on which anything is due.

The ease was before this court on December 8, 1888, (36 Fed. Rep. 726,) on a demurrer to the bill, when it was held that a judgment obtained against an Oregon corporation for permissive waste constituted an ‘•'indebtedness” of such corporation, within the purview of article 11, § 8, of the constitution of the state, for which a stockholder therein is liable thereunder to the amount of his unpaid slock.

In Ladd v. Cartwright, 7 Or. 329, it was held by the supreme court of the state that a creditor of a corporation cannot proceed against a stock-nolder to subject any unpaid balance on the latter’s stock to the payment of his claim in the first instance. But he must exhaust his remedy at law against the corporation, when he may proceed in equity against all the delinquent stockholders, where the rights of all parties may be adjusted in one suit. See, also, Patterson v. Lynde, 106 U. S. 519, 1 Sup. Ct. Rep. 432; Pollard v. Bailey, 20 Wall. 520.

On the overruling of the demurrer, the defendant had leave to answer the bill. The answer is excepted to for impertinence. The exceptions include the greater part of the pleading.

In and by the matter excepted to, the defendant alleges in effect: (1) That the Dayton, Sheridan & Grand Ronde Railway Company was dissolved, and not in existence on January 29, 1887, when the action was commenced, in which the judgment sought to be enforced was obtained, and therefore the latter is void. (2) That the cause of such action was [188]*188a claim for damages sounding in tort, and not an “indebtedness” for which a stockholder may be liable to a creditor of the corporation; and (3) that the cause of suit is barred by the lapse of time.

In support of the averment that the judgment is void it is all eged in the answer that on January 8, 1879, the Dayton, Sheridan & Grand Ronde Railway Company being insolvent, the Wallamet Valley Railway Company proposed to purchase its road and property, and that the stockholders of the former corporation, at a meeting thereof held on February 15,1879, accepted such proposition, and authorized the directors thereof to dispose of the property accordingly, which they did on June 2,1879; and said stockholders at said meeting also passed a resolution to the effect that, upon the transfer of its road and property being made, to the Wal-lamet Valley Railway Company, as aforesaid, “this company do stand dissolved.”

In the action in which this judgment rvas obtained the defense wras made that the Dayton, Sheridan & Grand Ronde Railway Company was dissolved and non-existent. But it appears that the trial court ruled otherwise, and on an appeal to the supreme court the ruling was affirmed. Powell v. Railway Co., 16 Pac. Rep. 868. I am unable to see why this is not an adjudication of the question, and one that is binding on this defendant. The general rule on this subject is that a stockholder is in privity with the corporation, and cannot collaterally question a judgment against it, except for fraud or want of jurisdiction. Thomp. Liab. Stockh. § 329. And although it may be that a valid judgment cannot be given against a dissolved or dead corporation any more than against a dead man, yet where the existence of the corporation is put in issue, and contested, and determined in favor of such existence, certainly the stockholder is bound by the result. It may .be that where a judgment is obtained by default against an alleged corporation, which is in fact defunct, and the same is sought to be enforced against a stockholder, he may contest the existence of the corporation as a defense to the suit.

It seems that this question has been decided otherwise, and I may say every wise, in New York; but in Stephens v. Fox, 83 N. Y. 313, the court of appeals appears to have wheeled into line with the current of judicial decisions, and holds -that in a proceeding by a creditor of the corporation against a stockholder thereof, a judgment against the corporation is competent evidence of the plaintiff’s status as a creditor thereof, and the amount of his claim. In other words, the judgment not only concludes the corporation on .the question of indebtedness to the creditor therein, but also establishes the title of the creditor to succeed to the right of the corporation, namely, to have the balance due on the stock applied on his demand.

But as a matter of fact, the Dayton, Sheridan & Grand Ronde Railway Company does not appear ever to have been dissolved. True, the stockholders declared that it should “stand dissolved” on a given contingency, which actually happened, namely, the transfer of its road to the Walla-met Valley Railway Company. ' But the power of stockholders is limited by the corporation act ‘to the mere authorizing a dissolution; and in and [189]*189of themselves they have no such power. Section 3225, Comp. 1887, declares that from the first meeting of the directors of a corporation the powers vested therein are exercised by them, except as otherwise specially provided. Section 3235 (Id.) provides that the stockholders may, by a majority vote of the stock, “authorize the dissolution” of the corporation; but they are not empowered to declare or otherwise accomplish such dissolution. The power of dissolution, when so authorized, like all other powers of the corporation, not otherwise especially vested, belongs to the directors, by whom it must be exercised, if at all. In this case the stockholders appear to have ignored the directors, and, instead of authorizing them to dissolve the corporation, undertook to do it themselves. This act was a nullity; and the dissolution of the corporation, so far as appears, has not yet been even duly authorized, let alone accomplished.

In Wallamet Falls Co. v. Kittridge, 5 Sawy. 48, it was held by this court that a dissolution of a corporation must be authorized by the stockholders, and declared by the directors, who may do so or not, as they see proper.

It is admitted that this judgment was given in an action for damages sustained by the plaintiff on account of a certain waste suffered or permitted by the Dayton, Sheridan & Grand Ronde Railway Company, while it was the lessee of a warehouse belonging to the plaintiff', and situate at Dayton on the line of its road. But what effect that fact has on the liability of the defendant to contribute what is due on its stock to the satisfaction of this judgment as an “indebtedness” of the corporation is not apparent.

The capital stock of a corporation is a trust fund for the payment or discharge of any liability which in the course of its business it may incur, either ex contractu or ex delicto. For instance, the Dayton, Sheridan &

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Bluebook (online)
38 F. 187, 13 Sawy. 543, 1889 U.S. App. LEXIS 2804, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/powell-v-oregonian-ry-co-circtdor-1889.