Wilbur v. Stockholders

29 F. Cas. 1189, 18 Nat. Bank. Reg. 178
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedJuly 1, 1878
StatusPublished

This text of 29 F. Cas. 1189 (Wilbur v. Stockholders) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wilbur v. Stockholders, 29 F. Cas. 1189, 18 Nat. Bank. Reg. 178 (E.D. Pa. 1878).

Opinion

CADWALADER, District Judge.

The supreme court has described the capital of a private incorporated company as a fund publicly pledged to all who deal with the association. [Ogilvie v. Knox Ins. Co.] 22 How. [63 U. S.] 387. The application of the remark was to relations of the stockholders of such a company to its creditors. The stockholders individually are not liable [1190]*1190for its debts in any sum greater than their proportional amounts of the capital; and this limitation fortifies the reason that the creditors should be assured of an available recourse for so much of the capital as may be required for payment of the debts. Therefore a deceptive existence of a nominal or illusory capital, as distinguished from an actual and available one, cannot be sanctioned. The capital is a fund clothed with a trust for the security of the debts. Story, Eq. Jur. § 1252, cited [Curran v. State of Arkansas] 15 How. [56 U. S.] 307. So much of the capital as the stockholders have paid in is administered by the corporation; and if misapplied, or not rightly applied, the stockholders, unless willful participants in the wrong, are not responsible for it, or for any losses of creditors which it may cause. But even this immunity of the stockholders does not extend to capital paid in which has afterwards been paid back to them. They can. as against creditors, retain only the accrued profits, which, as con-tradistinguislied from capital, have been actually earned and fairly distributed before insolvency. Capital paid back may, in the case of corporate insolvency, be followed by the creditors in the hands of the stockholders. Wood v. Dummer [Case No. 17,944]; [Curran v. State of Arkansas] 15 How. [56 U. S.] 307, 308.

The questions in the present ease concern capital never paid in. The obligations, express or implied, of the stockholders to pay such capital are held by the corporation in trust for the ultimate security of its debts. [Upton v. Tribilcock] 91 U. S. 45; [Sanger v. Upton] Id. 56; [Webster v. Upton] Id. 66, 70, 71. Where the corporation is solvent, the unpaid capital is not due and payable by the stockholders until payment in part or in whole is ealied for by the corporate authorities, unless a postponement of the payment would be inconsistent with some provision of the act of incorporation, or with a conventional engagement with the stockholders. Ordinarily, there is no such inconsistency of either kind, and thus, in the case of a solvent corporation, a call or levy by the corporate authorities, assessing the amount or amounts payable, must ordinarily precede any ascertained obligation of the respective stockholders to pay. But in the contrary ease of an insolvent corporation. the recourse of its creditors does not depend upon any such condition precedent, and cannot be thus postponed. Every stockholder is. with relation to creditors, under an obligation to pay so much of the amount represented by his share, or shares, of the capital, as may be required for payment of the corporate debts. Where he has made no express engagement, this obligation to pay is implied. Where an express engagement has been made upon such a condition as would impair the recourse of creditors, they may proceed as if no such conditional engagement had been made. Upon the insolvency of the corporation, the obligations of the stockholders thus at once become assets for the payment of its debts to such extent as other assets are deficient. To this extent the obligation of every stockholder, in its just proportion, then becomes in equity a debt payable for the benefit of the creditors. No act of the corporation, before or after its insolvency, can derogate, in this respect, from the rights of creditors. Neither can any omission of the corporation, or of the corporate authorities, exempt or absolve stockholders from this obligation. For example, there may not have been any call, or assessment of the contributory amounts of unpaid capital; or, where an assessment has been formally made, the corporation may not have taken measures, by suit, or otherwise, to compel defaulting stockholders to pay. Such omissions do not affect the equitable right of the creditors to payment. But there is no direct privity between them and the stockholders. The creditors therefore cannot, in their own names, sue the stockholders in a court of law, and may be unable, in such a court by mandamus or otherwise, to compel a private corporation either to make an assessment, or to institute suits to enforce one if made. See 1 Q. B. 288. But however sueli emissions may thus, for technical reasons, impede redress at law, they do not prevent or impede the available and complete recourse of the creditors in equity.

In a suit in equity by the creditors against the stockholders of an insolvent corporation to compel them to contribute a sufficient amount of unpaid capital to make good the deficiency of other assets, the corporation must of course be a party defendant. Such a suit is maintainable under several heads of equitable jurisdiction. The jurisdiction is exercisable in aid of the equitable rights of the creditors, who would otherwise have no adequate redress at law. It is also exercisable in order to enforce the due execution of the franchise of the corporation under the trust with which the capital is clothed for payment of the debts. The proceeding has been described by the supreme court as in the nature of an attachment in which the stockholders are called in to answer as garnishees. [Ogilvie v. Knox Ins. Co.] 22 How. [63 U. S.] 387. But in order to avoid circuity, the proceeding is also, on equitable principles, considered as a suit directly against the stockholders. They are thus, by the same court, assimilated in such a case to the special partners of a limited partnership. Id. This analogy implies that the stockholders become debtors through the mere insolvency of the coiporation. In such a suit a receiver is ordinarily appointed. The amount of the deficiency. and amounts of the contributory quotas, may be ascertained by proofs, or through a reference and master's report, according to the course of procedure in equity: and there may thus be a final decree, affording adequate relief to the creditors, without any assessment by the corporate authorities. [Ogilvie v. Knox Ins. [1191]*1191Co.] 22 How. [63 U. S.] 380 ; 3 Comst. [3 N. Y.] 415, 423; 13 Wis. 57.

If a sufficient corporate organization continues to subsist, an assessment by the corporate authorities upon the stockholders may be ordered by the court of equity in any stage of the proceedings for any purpose for which it may be thought convenient. But in such cases the assessment, so called, is different in its nature from the assessments by a solvent corporation. The consideration of this difference in the applications of the word “assessment” will become very important hereafter. In the meantime it may be observed that in the case of an insolvent corporation, the assessment, if judicially ordered, is only a proceeding in aid of the judicial recourse of the creditors. It may promote the enforcement, but is not essential to the existence, of the obligation of the stockholders. Thus Judge Treat was of opinion that where “a company is insolvent, the original mode of making calls upon the stockholders is not to be pursued in the enforcement of” the equitable right. He said: “The debt is then due on demand.” Myers v. Seeley [Case No. 9,994]. In a previous case in Ohio the language used was that where a company “becoming insolvent abandon all action under their charter, the original mode of making calls upon their stockholders cannot be pursued.

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Related

Upton v. Tribilcock
91 U.S. 45 (Supreme Court, 1875)
Sanger v. Upton
91 U.S. 56 (Supreme Court, 1875)
Webster v. Upton
91 U.S. 65 (Supreme Court, 1876)
Chubb v. Upton
95 U.S. 665 (Supreme Court, 1877)
President of the Delaware v. Sansom
1 Binn. 70 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1803)
Trevor v. Perkins
5 Whart. 244 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1840)
Adler v. Milwaukee Patent Brick Manufacturing Co.
13 Wis. 57 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 1860)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
29 F. Cas. 1189, 18 Nat. Bank. Reg. 178, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilbur-v-stockholders-paed-1878.