Swan v. Mansfield, Coldwater & Lake Michigan Railroad

3 Ohio N.P. 225
CourtLucas County Court of Common Pleas
DecidedJuly 1, 1896
StatusPublished

This text of 3 Ohio N.P. 225 (Swan v. Mansfield, Coldwater & Lake Michigan Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Lucas County Court of Common Pleas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Swan v. Mansfield, Coldwater & Lake Michigan Railroad, 3 Ohio N.P. 225 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1896).

Opinion

PRATT J.

The question submitted to me at this time arises upon demurrers, filed by different dfT fendants to plaintiff’s petition ; and the decision is now wholly upon this question, no other pleadings being before me at this time, and no questions than those arising upon the petition having been discussed by counsel or considered by me.

The petition was filed on the 14th of August, 1895, by John Swan, as surviving partner of the firm of Swan. Rose & Co., and E. H. Potter,as Assignee in Bankruptcy of Robert H. McMann, another surviving member of that firm — the other members of the firm being dead. The action is brought against The Mansfield, Coldwater & Lake Erie Railroad Company, and a very large number — some 2,000 — other defendants, as stockholders in that Railroad Company

The petition alleges that the Railroad Company was organized in the year 1871, and owned a line of road extending from Mansfield, in Richland county. Ohio, in and through the counties of Fulton and Rich-land, its capital stock being 84,5000,000, in shares of 850 each. That the Pennsylvania Company, one of the defendants, was a corporation organized under the laws of Pennsylvania, and autorhized to subscribe for and own stock in other corporations ; that on the 10th of June, -1874, Swan, Rose & Co,, commenced in the Court of Common Pleas of Fulton County, their action against the Railroad Company, and on the 26th of March, 1892,recovered a judgment for 8922,-584.04, against the Railroad Company ; that execution was issued June 4th, 1895, and returned “No property. ” It alleges the death of two of the partners, the bankruptcy of McMann and tne appointment of Potter as assignee in bankruptcy. The petition then alleges that on the 31st of March, 1877, Stephen B. Sturges, a creditor of the Railroad Company, “commenced an action on behalf of himself and other creditors of said company, in the Court <?f Common Pleas of Richland County, Ohio, against the said the last-named company and its several stockholders, the defendants herein, for the pur[226]*226pose of enforcing, the statutory liability of said stockholdesr for the indebtedness of said company.”

And as to that action it is further alleged that a final degree in the Court of Common Pleas was rendered September 1st, 1890, and appealed to the Circuit Court of that county, and that in February, 1893, “a final decree and judgment was rendered therein against each of the stock-holders, severally, who were then parties defendant in said suit, but not against all the persons who were in fact stockholders in said company, in a sum not exceeding twenty-five per cent, of the stock of said company severally owned by said defendants who were such actual parties, and that proceedings in error, to reverse said judgment, are now pending in the Supreme Court of Ohio. ”

That is all that appears in the petition in reference to this Sturges action ; and what is intended by the clause “but not against all the persons who were in fact stockholders in said company, ’ ’ does not seem clear to me, when taken in connection with the statement that the Sturges suit was “aganist the several stockholders defendants herein” If the defedants there are the samé as the defendants here, I fail to see the purpose or effect of this allegation.

The petition then further alleges that the defendants herein — except the Railroad Company — were at the time when the indebtedness accrued on which plaintiff’s judgment was rendered, and still ar„, owners of the stock of the said Railroad Company. That the Pennsylvania Company was an original subscriber for, and a holder of, $1,500,000, of that stock, and that the plaintiff does not know the amount of stock held by other defendants. It then alleges that the Pennsylvania Company has not paid its subscription price, and'that neither it or any of the other defendants have paid more that 25 per cent, of their statutory liability.

The prayer of the petition is for the recovery of all stock subsciptions, and “that each stock-holder be required to.pay upon his statutory liability the amount found due upon the stock held by him, to satisfy the claim of plaintiffs and the costs of suit, and for all other equitable relief.”

The Pennsylvania Company demur to the petition, upon the following grounds:

1. “Now comes said defendant, the Pennsylvania Company, and demurs to tbe cause of action set forth m the petition of said plaintiffs to enforce tbe individual liability of the stock-holders of the Mansfield, Cold-water & Laire. Michigan Railroad Company for the payment of the debts of that company on the ground that said cause of action does not state facts sufficint to constitute a cause of action. ”
2. “Said Pennsylvania Company also demurs to the cause of action set forth in said petition to subject to the payment of the alleged judgment of the plaintiffs an alleged indebtedness of said Pennsylvania Company to said Mansfield, Coldwater & Lake Michigan Railroad Company, upon an alleged subscription for stock in said last-named company, on the ground that said cause of action does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action. ”
3. “Said Pennsylvania Company also demurs to the petition of said plaintiffs on the ground that said petition does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action. ”

Two of the other defendants, Charlotte Spice and G. F. Carpenter, file their demurrer, containing the following grounds:

1. The allegations thereof do not contain a cause of action against this defendant or either of them”
2 “Plaintiff’s petition shows that the cause of action occurred more than fifteen years ago, and it is therefore barred by the Statute of Limitations.”

Numerous other defendants have filed demurrers, but the grounds stated in these two, cover substantially all those stated in the other demurrers, and they have all been submitted upon the arguments of counsel on behalf of the above demurrants.

It is unnecessary to do more than to refer simply to Section 3, Art IT, Constitution of 1851, and to say that on May 1st, 1852, the legislature of Ohio, in accordance with the provision of this section of the constitution, passed “An act to provide for the creation and regulation of incorporated companies in Ohio.” Section 78 of this statute made provision as to this stockholders’ liability. This was amended May, 11, 1854, and, as so amended, stood without any change in its phraseology, until the revision of 1880 was made. A part of section 78, as passed in 1854, provided,as to this individual liability, as follows:

“Section 1. Individual liability. Be, etc., That the seventy-eighth section of the act to which this is an amendment (c. 1190, p. 1897) be so amended as to read as follows: Section 78. All stock-holders of any railroad, turnpike or plank-road, magnetic, telegraph or bridge company, or any joint-stock company organized under the provisions of this act, shall be deemed and held liable to an amount equal to their stock subscribed in addition to said stock, for the purpose of securing the creditors of such company, etc.”

By the Revision of 1880, this became section 3258 ; which reads as follows:

“Section 3258.

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Bluebook (online)
3 Ohio N.P. 225, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/swan-v-mansfield-coldwater-lake-michigan-railroad-ohctcompllucas-1896.