State Nat. Bank v. Sayward

91 F. 443, 33 C.C.A. 564, 1899 U.S. App. LEXIS 2036
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedJanuary 19, 1899
DocketNo. 252
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 91 F. 443 (State Nat. Bank v. Sayward) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the First Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Nat. Bank v. Sayward, 91 F. 443, 33 C.C.A. 564, 1899 U.S. App. LEXIS 2036 (1st Cir. 1899).

Opinion

ALDRICH, District Judge.

The defendants are residents of Massachusetts, and hold stock in an Ohio corporation. The corporation in which the stock is held is a private corporation, called the “Findlay Boiling-Mill Company,” and is not a party here. This is a suit to enforce the stockholders’ statutory liability created by the constitution and statute laws of the state of Ohio, and is directed against the Massachusetts stockholders in the Findlay Boiling-Mill Company of Ohio, for the purpose of collecting a judgment for $12,465.68, including costs, which this plaintiff, an Ohio creditor, recovered against the rolling-mill company in an Ohio suit. These defendants were not parties to the Ohio suit; they own only a small part of the stock of the corporation; and there are other creditors of the corporaiion than this plaintiff.

Section 3, art. 18, of the constitution of Ohio, declares that:

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

[444]*444And the statute creating the liability is as follows:

“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.” -Rev. St. Ohio 1880, § 3258.

The remedy for the enforcement of the creditors’ statutory right provides that a stockholder or creditor may enforce such liability jointly against all the holders or owners of stock, which action shall be for the benefit of all the creditors of the corporation, and against all persons liable as stockholders, and in such action there shall be found and determined the amount payable by each person liable as stockholder on all the indebtedness of the corporation. The statute-providing the remedy also, among other things, provides for a judgment for a pro rata amount among the resident stockholders.

There is nothing in the case presented which requires a critical discussion of the question whether the bill or complaint is strictly a creditors’ bill. It is enough to say that, as a substantial feature of the Ohio statute which provides the remedy, it is required that the action shall be for the benefit of all the creditors of the corporation and against all persons liable as stockholders, and that the remedy fairly contemplates an accounting, which, in substance and effect, means a proceeding in the nature of an equitable proceeding. It is not worth while, in respect to states where distinctions between forms of action are abolished, to discuss the strict technical meaning of names employed in statutes to designate the remedy, like that of “action,” “petition,” “action at law,” or “suit in equity.” It is sufficient to look to the substance of the statute, and if it is found that the statute provides for or contemplates a remedy in the nature of an equitable proceeding, and the character and conditions of the liability are such as present ground for equitable cognizance, the remedy should be in equity.

The supreme court of Ohio in Umsted v. Buskirk, 17 Ohio St. 114, 118, in passing upon the statute in question, observes that:

“The right arising out of this liability is intended for the common and equal benefit of all the creditors. The suit of a creditor, under this statute, should, in our opinion, be for the benefit of all the creditors; and the stockholders whose liability is sought to be enforced have the right to insist on their co-stockholders being made parties for the purposes of a general account and to enforce from them contribution in proportion to their shares of stock.”

The same court, in an earlier case in the same volume (Wright v. McCormack, 17 Ohio St. 87, 95), remarked that the liability imposed on the stockholders is not a primary resource or fund for the payment of the debts of the corporation; and the liability is treated as collateral and conditional to the principal obligation which rests on the corporation, to be resorted to by all the creditors in case of the insolvency of the corporation, or where payment cannot be enforced by the ordinary process, and as a security provided by the statute for the benefit of all the creditors, in which no creditor can gain priority or institute a separate suit for the enforcement of the liability in his own behalf.

[445]*445The question of the character and scope of the creditors’ remedy upon the stockholders’ liability under the Ohio statute was again before the supreme court of that state in 1881, in Wheeler v. Faurot, 37 Ohio St. 26, 28, in which the proceeding was referred to as being one in equity to marshal the liability of all the stockholders, inter sese as well as to the creditors, and the court, in speaking of other stockholders, says:

“It was a right which Wheeler and Shuler had to have them brought into court, to the end that, when ihe final judgment was entered, the rights of all persons interested in the matter, as well as the object of the suit, should bo adjudicated and settled, and all further litigation thereby avoided.”

The only case outside of Ohio involving this statute, called to our attention, is that of Aultman’s Appeal, 98 Pa. St. 505. This case was decided in January, 1882, and it does not appear that the statute of 1880, prescribing the remedy, which contains important limitations, was before the court for its consideration. The distinct ground, however, on which the court based the decision in that case, was that the plaintiff was the holder of all the indebtedness of the Ohio corporation; that all the assets, real and personal, of the corporation had been exhausted; and that the defendants were all the stockholders, and resided in the state of Pennsylvania. Yet, in course of the opinion, Chief Justice Sharswood significantly remarked that:

“The reasons against a court of equity assuming jurisdiction over the affairs of a foreign corporation are certainly very cogent, and will have to be maturely considered, if such question should hereafter arise. We do not now say that the court ought not, in the exercise of a sound discretion, to decline to interpose at the suit of some of the creditors against some of the stockholders of such a Corporation.”

Looking at the Ohio statute aside from the authoritative interpre tation which the Ohio supreme court has placed upon it, we should have no hesitation in saying that the remedy contemplated for the ascertainment of the stockholders’ liability and the creditors’ rights was an equitable proceeding, and, there being no expression of a contrary statutory intent, it is safe to assume that it was intended that the proceeding should conform to the common and ordinary requirements of the rules relating to equity procedure. The statute and the decisions of the Ohio court, therefore, conform to the federal practice, which would require that the adjustment of the rights involved in the statute in question should be had in an equitable proceeding, in accordance with equity rules.

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Bluebook (online)
91 F. 443, 33 C.C.A. 564, 1899 U.S. App. LEXIS 2036, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-nat-bank-v-sayward-ca1-1899.