Turner Bros. v. Alabama Mining & Manufacturing Co.

25 Ill. App. 144, 1886 Ill. App. LEXIS 546
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJune 14, 1887
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 25 Ill. App. 144 (Turner Bros. v. Alabama Mining & Manufacturing Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Turner Bros. v. Alabama Mining & Manufacturing Co., 25 Ill. App. 144, 1886 Ill. App. LEXIS 546 (Ill. Ct. App. 1887).

Opinion

Pleasants, P. J.

The bill herein having been dismissed on demurrer thereto by the individual defendants, the sole question here is upon its sufficiency. Appellants filed it as creditors of the defendant company, on behalf of themselves and all others in like case who should join therein, against the corporation and certain of its stockholders, to reach balances alleged to be due it for stock subscribed for, issued to aud still held by them respectively. It is a purely foreign corporation that never did any business or had any office or agent in Illinois, and when the bill was filed had ceased to do any or to have any office, officer, agent, employe, stockholders or debtors, or any books, papers or property of any kind in Alabama, where it was incorporated, and was unable to pay its debts without resorting to those balances, which it had hitherto neglected to do, but was sti'l in existence. Complainants respectively had there obtained judgments, or money decrees, against it, on which executions were issued and returned nulla hona, but none here. The defendant stockholders, from a time prior to its organization, continuously resided and still reside at Quincy, Illinois. When they subscribed for their stock they made an agreement with the company, unknown to complainants when its indebtedness to them was contracted, by which only a small percentage of the amount subscribed for the shares issued to them was to be paid or called for, and this percentage was paid by them, but the balance of their subscriptions is-much more than enough to satisfy all the claims of complainants.

It is declared by the act of incorporation that “ any person subscribing for or owning stock in said company shall be liable for the debts and liabilities of the company in proportion to the amount of' their stock.” This liability rests as wrell upon those who have, as upon those who have not, fully paid for their stock, and is not what is here sought to be enforced. The bill expressly avers that “no redress is sought upon the statutory liabilities of the stockholders of said company created by its charter; that the sole object of this bill is to reach said unpaid balances on the aforesaid stock, owned and held by said defendant stockholders as aforesaid, and have the same applied in payment of the complainants’ said judgment and decree claims.” There is nothing in the charter of the company, or any other positive law of Alabama, relating to indebtedness on subscription for stock. It is governed by the general law, which treats it as a trust fund, like other assets of the corporation, for the payment of its debts. 2 Story’s Eq. Jur., Sec. 1252; Wood v. Dummer, 3 Mason, 308; Curran v. Arkansas, 15 How. 304; Sawyer v. Hoag, 17 Wall. 610; Sanger v. Upton, 91 U. S. 60; Patterson v. Iynde, 106 U. S. 520; Spear v. Grant, 15 Mass. 505; Bartlett v. Drew, 57 N. Y. 587; Thompson on Liability of Stockholders, Sec. 10.

The principal objections to the bill, urged on demurrer, are the want of necessary parties and of a domestic judgment or decree against the defendants; and the principal authority cited in support of them is Patterson v. Lynde, 112 Ill. 196, in which the demurrer was sustained and the bill dismissed on these grounds.

That case, in most of its features, was singularly like the one at bar, but with these differences: there the domicile of the corporation was in Oregon, and by the Constitution and statute of that State, as had been held by its Supreme Court (in Ladd v. Cartwright, 7 Ore. 329), the liability of the defendant stockholders was for the debts of the corporation fro rata, and so enforceable only in equity,where the rights of the corporation and all its creditors and delinquent stockholders could be adjusted in one suit, and before suit brought they had, at least in form, assigned their stock, so that under the statute they were liable for the balance unpaid by them only in case and to the extent that the assignee had not paid it Neither the other delinquent subscribers nor the assignee of the defendants were made parties.

"We do not understand that by the general law or any rule recognized in this State, the creditor of a corporation seeking only to reach indebtedness due it on subscription for stock, and not to wind up its affairs, is in all cases required to bring into court any other than the corporation and its stockholders, whose indebtedness is sought to be reached. Hatch v. Dana, 101 U. S. 205, and cases there cited; Patterson v. Lynde, 112 Ill. 196 ; and no objection to this bill, on account of parties or the want of any, is perceived.

An important question, as bearing upon the character of the bill and the jurisdiction of equity, is the relation sustained by the delinquent stock subscriber to the creditors of the corporation. Appellants claim that as to what is due on the subscription, it is that of a trustee, directly, on the well settled principle that whoever is found in possession of a trust fund, obtained with notice of its character, holds it cum onere% and is bound to account therefor, as trustee, to those beneficially interested. Thompson’s Liability of Stockholders, Secs. 13,10 and 9, and cases cited in notes. This principle is nowhere more forcibly asserted than by our own Supreme Court in the case of Clapp v. Peterson, 104 Ill. 26, in which it was held to rest upon the reason that the act by which the property or fund is thus obtained is essentially a fraud upon the cestui que trust. And even though it be by contract with the trustee,, valid as between them and free from actual fraud, if it is clearly injurious to his rights, he may impeach the transaction, pursue the property or fund so far as it can be traced, and' except as against an innocent purchaser, subject it to the purposes of the trust. It also holds, in harmony with all the authorities, that the capital stock of a corporation, or indebtedness for it, is a trust fund for the benefit and security of its creditors, and a stockholder is conclusively chargeable with notice of its character as such, so that with respect to it he can not be an innocent purchaser. Indeed, while all indebtedness to the corporation, like all its other assets, is a trust fund for that purpose, indebtedness for its capital stock is said to be different from any other in that, and so far as we are aware, only in that it is not subject to set-off of claims due to the debtor from the corporation. Sawyer v. Hoag, 17 Wall. 610.

notwithstanding all this, however, we hold that the subscriber for capital stock docs not, as such, sustain any. direct trust relation to the creditors of the corporation, but is simply and solely its debtor. He is not in possession of any thing that is or ever was a part of the trust fund. What he has is a certificate, showing in him a certain amount of the capital stock, with whatever rights and liabilities are incident to it. But this is represented by and consists of his obligation upon his subscription which is said in Patterson v. lynde, 106 U. S. 520, to be “part of the assets of the corporation, at least so far as creditors are concerned; ” and this obligation is in possession of the corporation. The certificate is his own, and rightfully so, as against the creditors. The contract by which he obtained it was not a fraud upon them on his part, nor an abuse of its trust on that of the corporation, as in Clapp v. Peterson, supra. '' His liability and relations, then, must be determined by that contract. It defines and limits them.

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25 Ill. App. 144, 1886 Ill. App. LEXIS 546, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/turner-bros-v-alabama-mining-manufacturing-co-illappct-1887.