Wheeler v. . Millar

90 N.Y. 353, 1882 N.Y. LEXIS 390
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 21, 1882
StatusPublished
Cited by51 cases

This text of 90 N.Y. 353 (Wheeler v. . Millar) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wheeler v. . Millar, 90 N.Y. 353, 1882 N.Y. LEXIS 390 (N.Y. 1882).

Opinion

Finch, J.

The defendant is sued as a stockholder of the Mallary Paper Bag Manufacturing Company, a corporation organized under the General Manufacturing Act, and is sought to be made liable for an indebtedness of that corporation to plaintiff, upon the ground that its capital stock had not been fully paid in. The latter fact is undisputed, but it is answered that the defendant was not a stockholder, and not liable to the plaintiff as such. The referee has found as a fact that the defendant was a stockholder, and upon evidence which warranted that conclusion. It was proven that he was one of the original corporators, and signed the articles of incorporation; that he subscribed for fifty shares of the stock, although he had never paid for them; that he was a trustee of the company, and acted as such, thus recognizing his ownership of stock, without which he could not have held such office; that he was secretary of the company and actively engaged in the management of its affairs; that he appeared upon the stock-book of the corporation as a stockholder therein to the extent of fifty shares of the stock; and that although called upon to produce such book, he failed to do so, alleging that it was lost. It is now insisted that all these facts establish only that he was a subscriber to the stock, and not a stockholder, and that he could only become the latter by the issue to him of a certificate, or by actual payment for the stock. But the certificate is only evidence of ownership. Its issue and acceptance show an acknowledgment of that fact on both sides, *358 but such acknowledgment may equally be inferred from other facts in the absence of a certificate. Nor is payment indispensable. The statute which underlies this action distinctly recognizes that there may be stockholders in a company whose capital has not been paid in, and fastens upon them a liability as such by reason of that very non-payment. The authorities to which we are referred by the appellant do not sustain his position. The one mainly relied on (Mills v. Stewart, 41 N. Y. 384) was a case in which the subscriber to the stock of a railroad corporation, who had paid the ten per cent necessary to make his subscription valid, had thereafter omitted to pay the further installments demanded, and in consequence his stock had been duly forfeited in accordance with the regulations of the company. After such forfeiture it was very properly held that he was not a stockholder, and what was said by Murray, J., which is pressed upon our attention, amounted only to this, that one must be a stockholder in fact, to be liable, and not merely a subscriber whose stock has been forfeited, and who no longer holds it. Tracy v. Yates (18 Barb. 152) was a case where a note was taken upon the express stipulation that when paid ” it should be in full of so many shares of stock. Payment, by the express terms of the contract, was made a condition precedent to the passing of the title. In Seymour v. Sturgess (26 N. Y. 134) the facts were complicated and peculiar, but the defendant was conceded to be a stockholder, and the real question was upon his liability under the provisions of a Maryland charter. In The Hamilton & Deansville Plank Road Co. v. Rice (I Barb. 159) the defendant never signed the articles of association, but subscribed for and accepted a certificate of stock. None of these cases lay down an arbitrary and inflexible rule. A share of stock like other property may be sold on credit. The title may pass, the right become vested, if such be the intention and contract of the parties, although payment is deferred and the usual written evidence of title is absent. Whatever may be said of a case where no fact is present as the foundation of an inference that title has passed, except the bare fact of a subscription, it is entirely reasonable that where, in *359 addition, the corporation has explicitly recognized the alleged stockholder as such, and the latter has acted in that capacity, such facts should be deemed sufficient to justify a conclusion of ownership, and make the subscriber a stockholder. Certainly the rule has been carried even further than this (Spear v. Crawford, 14 Wend. 20; Burr v. Wilcox, 22 N. Y. 551); but whether correctly or not it is unnecessary at present to consider. There was enough in the facts of the present case- to- justify the conclusion that the defendant was a stockhol'derand. owned the fifty shares for which he subscribed.

And thus the defendant is left in a position exposed' to the-statutory liability for the debts of the company to the extent of $5,000, being the par value of his stock. He meets the emergency by pleading an equitable offset to the plaintiff’s claim, founded upon an alleged indebtedness of the company to him. He has a right to make such defense. (Mathez v. Neidig, 72 N. Y. 100; Agate v. Sands, 73 id. 620.) The first of these cases carefully explains the basis upon which the defense stands. The statutory liability arises whenever-the whole capital stock has not been paid in. The stockholder sued may have paid in full, but that does not relieve him, if others are in default. (Laws of 1848, chap. 40, § 10.) He is still liable to an amount equal to his stock, so long as the whole capital is not fully paid. But that liability constitutes a fund which any creditor of the company may reach. If now the stockholder sued is himself such creditor to an amount equaling his statutory liability, he has quite as good a right to the fund which is pursued, as the pursuer. Indeed, he has the better right, because it is already in his possession, and it would be inequitable to take it from him for the benefit of another creditor who has no superior equity. But the stockholder must be really a creditor of the company. He must stand in a relation to it which in equity and justice is as strong- as that of the assailant. It is claimed here that such is not the defendant’s position, and that he is not in reality a creditor-of the company at all, because he owed the corporation on his unpaid subscription as much or more than the ct ipany owed, him; *360 and that against the creditor seeking the statutory fund in his hands he cannot set up an equitable claim upon it while his own debt to the company remains unpaid, and is more than enough to balance and extinguish his demand as a creditor.

It is best to examine, first, so much of the accounts between defendant and the corporation as will develop the exact relation existing between them. The total of Millar’s claim against the company, as he states it, is $15,728.64; and the credit of the company, exclusive of the stock subscription, is $9,884.12; leaving in his favor, as he insists, a balance of $5,844.52. But the balance found by the referee is only $2,081.74; so that the defendant claims $3,762.78 more than the referee allows. The items constituting this .excess .are stated in detail and their merits discussed. One of them is the Shuttleworth note of $1,000. But, as we understand the facts, after as patient a study of their complications as was possible, that note was already allowed by the referee, and not rejected. It is represented in his findings by the check of October 12, 1874, with which defendant was credited.

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Bluebook (online)
90 N.Y. 353, 1882 N.Y. LEXIS 390, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wheeler-v-millar-ny-1882.