Vonglahn v. . Derosset

81 N.C. 467
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedJune 5, 1879
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 81 N.C. 467 (Vonglahn v. . Derosset) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Vonglahn v. . Derosset, 81 N.C. 467 (N.C. 1879).

Opinion

Smith, C. J.

The president and directors of the Commercial bank of Wilmington were incorporated and organized under an act of the general assembly, ratified on the 18th «day of January, 1847. Its existence as a corporate body expired by the limitation contained in its charter and amendment on the 31st day of December, 1871. One of the clauses of the charter upon which the plaintiffs’ claim is predicated is in these words: “ In case of insolvency or ultimate -inability of the bank to pay, the individual stockholders shall be liable to creditors in sums double the amount of the stock by them, respectively held.”

To enforce this liability the plaintiff, Von Glahn, institu-tutcd an action in his own name and as a creditor, against George Harris, one of the defendants, andi it was held that he could not recover and appropriate to his own individual use, a fund in which all the creditors had an equal and common interest, and that they were necessary parties. Von Glahn v. Harris, 73 N. C., 323. And the same disposition was made of a similar action against another of the defendants at the same term. Von Glahn v. Lattimer, Ibid, 333.

The plaintiff thereupon on the 23rd day of December, 1875, and within the year, on behalf of himself and the other creditors, commenced the present proceeding against the defendants, stockholders, and representatives of deceased stockholders, and the case came before this court upon a demurrer filed by the defendant Kidder.

The demurrer was overruled upon the ground that the defendants having a common defence could not sever in their pleadings, and the cause was remanded. Von Glahn v. DeRosset, 76 N. C., 292.

*472 The present appeal presents several matters of defence, set up in the several answers, some of which are special to the particular defendants and not necessary to be noticed. The common defences relied on by all are,

1. The charter of the bank having by express limitation expired with the year 1871, and the period of three years allowed by law for the settling up of its business thereafter having expired, the indebtedness of the bank and the collateral liability of the stockholders therefor are extinguished and the action cannot be maintained.

2. The action is barred by the statute of limitations and is not within the savings of section 45, C. C. P., modifying section 8, chapter 65 of the Revised Code.

3. The corporation itself and the omitted stockholders are necessary and proper parties.

The insolvency of the bank though denied in the answers was admitted on the trial. We do not propose to examine the merits of the different defences set up to defeat the recovery, but confine our attention to one only which disposes of the case.

In Fox v. Horah, 1 Ire. Eq., 358, a bill in equity was filed to arrest the prosecution of an action at law by the defendant Horah, cashier of the state bank of North Carolina, to recover the amount of a promissory note executed by the plaintiff, as security of J. G. Hoskins for money borrowed of the bank, and drawn payable to its cashier, on the ground that the bank as a corporate body had ceased to exist. The court then consisting of Ruefin, Daniel and Gaston, the latter of whom delivers an elaborate and able opinion in the case, sustain the equitable claim to relief, for the reason that since the dissolution there was no legal person m esse entitled to the money when collected, and award a perpetual injunction against the further prosecution of the action at law.

So in Malloy v. Mallett, 6 Jones Eq., 345, this court recog *473 nizing the correctness of the doctrine enunciated and enforced in the preceding case, and declaring it to be “ a well settled principle of the common law that upon a dissolution of a corporation, its debts became extinct,” hold as a clear deduction therefrom that the liability of a stockholder, which is collateral and subsidiary only to the obligation of the principal debtor, is likewise extinguished by the event which extinguishes the prior legal obligation.

These decisions were made and these conclusions reached after full discussion and careful consideration by as able jurists as ever presided in this court, and our reluctance to disturb them after so long an acquiescence by the profession, could be overcome only by the clearest convictions of their error. They rest however upon strictly legal principles, well settled by authority and carried to their logical results, the soundness of which in their applications to the facts before the court, we are not disposed nor is it necessary to question or controvert.

But a remedy has been suggested, and in numerous cases applies, which may seem to conflict with the decisions of this court, by calling into exercise, on behalf of creditors or others interested, the equitable jurisdiction of the court, interposing and affording relief, when none is admissible at law, and for the very reason that there is no legal remedy. While it is manifest that, by its dissolution the corporation ceases to exist and can sustain the relations of neither creditor nor debtor towards others, and hence debts to or from it become extinct at law, it is inequitable that creditors should go unpaid, when there are funds or debts of the defunct corporation which ought to be applied in payment, simply for want of some legal being, intervening between the creditors and debtors of the corporation, with,capacity to make the collection and adjustment. Accordingly, acting upon the maxim that trusts shall not fail for want of a trustee, and regarding the debts and other property of the dissolved corporation as *474 the property of its creditors to the extent of their respective claims, the court of equity will stretch out its arms and gather up and collect' the assets, though there be no strict legal owner to assert his right, and will appropriate and distribute them among the creditors and subordinate thereto, among its secondary creditors, the stockholders themselves. The exercise of this equitable power, though not adverted to in the cases cited, is not denied, nor is it inconsistent with the principle therein declared. The remedy suggested grows out of those rigorous rules of the common law and is the offspring of necessity to prevent a failure of justice. As equity lends its aid to enforce a just and equitable right, because in such case the court of law, acting on fixed and unbending rules is incompetent to afford relief, the necessity which creates also limits the power to be exercised, and the power itself must disappear, when an adequate legal remedy is provided. Of the numerous cases cited in the well considered argument of the plaintiffs’ counsel, we shall only refer to a few in support of our views. Curran v Arkansas, 15 Howard, 304; Mumma v. Potomac Co., 8 Peters, 281: 2 Potter Corp., § 714; 2 Kent. Com., 307.

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Bluebook (online)
81 N.C. 467, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vonglahn-v-derosset-nc-1879.