Thacher v. King

31 N.E. 648, 156 Mass. 490, 1892 Mass. LEXIS 252
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedJune 22, 1892
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 31 N.E. 648 (Thacher v. King) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Thacher v. King, 31 N.E. 648, 156 Mass. 490, 1892 Mass. LEXIS 252 (Mass. 1892).

Opinion

Morton, J.

This is a bill in equity, brought by judgment creditors of the defendant corporation to enforce the liability of its president and directors to the extent of the excess of its debts over its capital, as provided in Pub. Sts. c. 106, § 60, cl. 3, § 62, et seq. The case was heard upon a master’s report, and the plaintiffs, Thacher and Company, had a decree for the amount of their judgment, and also for the amount of a simple contract debt due to them, with interest. The claim of another creditor, the New England Leather Company, was rejected. This company and the defendants appeal, and present certain questions raised by the master’s report, which we shall state.

The fundamental question is whether these debts of the corporation did exceed its capital on January 30, 1889, the time of the commencement of the suit in which Thacher and Company recovered judgment. This depends on the question whether debts due from the corporation to one of the defendant directors are to be counted among the debts for this purpose. It is argued for a director, that if such debts cannot be proved in this suit they ought' not to be counted for any purpose; ■ that the statute contemplates no distinction between the “ debts ” mentioned at the beginning of § 60, for which the directors are liable, and the “debts” which exceed the capital, in clause 3 of the same section; that it is held in New York that such debts cannot be proved; Easterly v. Barber, 65 N. Y. 252; Knox v. Baldwin, 80 N. Y. 610, 612; and that the conclusion argued for is drawn in McClave v. Thompson, 36 Hun, 365.

We cannot assent to the foregoing argument. Whether debts due to the directors can be proved in this suit or not, they may be lawful debts. When they are so, they stand on an equal footing with other debts as against the corporation, and therefore go to diminish the primary fund which the creditors look to, and to create the need for the personal liability imposed by the statute. [492]*492They are within the words of § 60, cl. 3, “ debts of a -corporatian,” and we see no reason for cutting down the literal meaning by construction. If a different doctrine should prevail in New York, very possibly it would be accounted for by the difference between the statutes of the two States.

A part of the defendant corporation’s indebtedness to the defendant King, as found by the master, was $9,960.44, for advances made by his firm as selling agents of the corporation. Of course they were expected to pay themselves for their advances out of the goods in their hands, and in fact they did receive and apply from goods on hand on January 30, 1889, but not sold, or sold but not paid for, the sum'of $7,385.77. The next question raised is whether the defendants are entitled to have this latter sum deducted from the former in determining how much the debts exceed the capital. It is suggested that this proceeding is so far analogous to proceedings in insolvency that what is the debt of the corporation should be ascertained on the principle of mutual credits applied there. Brown v. New Bedford Institution for Savings, 137 Mass. 262, 265. We shall not deal at length with the plausible arguments which conceivably might have induced the master to find differently, or the Legislature to adopt a complex instead of a simple system. The master has found that the larger sum was the amount of' money due to King and his partner on January 30. If they had a right to demand that amount in cash, it was none the less a debt because both parties expected that they would not do so, but would apply the property in their hands for sale as far as it would go. If that amount was the amount of the debt, due in •a popular and ordinary legal sense, it was the' amount of the debts within § 60, cl. 3. The Legislature saw fit to use plain words, which we must take plainly as we find them.

A suggestion was thrown out that Thacher and Company could prove only their judgment debt, and not the further sum due them on simple contract. But § 64 only requires that a judgment should have been recovered, and an execution returned unsatisfied, as provided in § 62, and when that condition exists any creditor may file the bill, and it is to be on behalf of himself and all other creditors. Even if it be necessary that the plaintiff bringing the bill should have recovered the judg[493]*493ment, which the statute does not say, still the benefit of the bill is not confined to judgment creditors, and, if other simple contract creditors can join them, there is no reason why the plaintiffs should not join their claims of like nature.

The remaining question concerns the right of the New England Leather Company to prove. This corporation is made up by the creditors of Bryant and King, the firm of which the defendant director King was a member, and it seeks to join as a plaintiff on the ground that it has taken an assignment of all the assets of Bryant and King, and that these include claims of the latter against the defendant corporation. We do not think the corporation stands any better than Bryant and King would have done had they presented their claims in person, or that Bryant and King would stand any better than King would have stood. Thayer v. Union Tool Co. 4 Gray, 75, 79. Potter v. Stevens Machine Co. 127 Mass. 592, 593. The case of Hayes v. Heyer, 35 N. Y. 326, stands upon the statute of that State, which differs somewhat from our statute.

The question remaining is, whether, where debts exceed the capital, a director who is a creditor can share with other creditors who are not directors in the amount which he, or he and other directors, may be compelled to pay towards the debts in consequence of such excess. The argument that he can do it is, first, that the statute makes no difference between him and any other creditor; secondly, that the debt due him is counted to make up the excess, and should therefore be counted in the distribution; and thirdly, that such construction will enable a director to ascertain at any time the limit of his liability, and to settle, if he desires to do so, without waiting for a suit in equity.

The liability which we are considering is wholly a statutory one, and is based on the idea that, if directors choose to contract debts in excess of the capital, they should be liable for the debts to the extent of the excess. This would seem to imply of itself that they are to have no share in such excess as creditors of the corporation. The statute enacting the liability is found, as to directors, in the Pub. Sts. c. 106, § 60, and as to stockholders, in § 61. Section 60 provides that “ the officers . . . shall be jointly and severally liable for its [the corporation’s] debts and [494]*494contracts in the following cases.” It is only, therefore, creditors who come within some one of the cases described to whom the officers- are jointly and severally liable. To say that the officers may come within one or more of those cases would be to say that they may be jointly and severally liable to themselves. It would seem plain that the debts and contracts for which the officers of a corporation were liable under the statute were the debts and contracts other than those due to or made with themselves. The officers are on one side, and the other creditors are on the other, and it is to them, and for their security alone, that the officers are made liable. Officers are not within the reason of the liability. They know, or are supposed to know, the condition of the corporation.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
31 N.E. 648, 156 Mass. 490, 1892 Mass. LEXIS 252, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thacher-v-king-mass-1892.