Young v. Erie Iron Co.

31 N.W. 814, 65 Mich. 111, 1887 Mich. LEXIS 576
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 15, 1887
StatusPublished
Cited by36 cases

This text of 31 N.W. 814 (Young v. Erie Iron Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Young v. Erie Iron Co., 31 N.W. 814, 65 Mich. 111, 1887 Mich. LEXIS 576 (Mich. 1887).

Opinion

Morse, J.

The complainant filed the bill of complaint in •this suit in behalf of himself and such other creditors of the Erie Iron Company as should come in and prove their claims against said defendant corporation, and share the expense of the proceedings, against the said Erie Iron Company, a corporation organized under Act No. 113 of the Session Laws [112]*112of 1877, and the acts amendatory thereof, and certain of the-stockholders of the said company, naming them. The complainant endeavored to make all the stockholders who were-responsible and residents of the State defendants. He also made defendants those stockholders who were supposed to be responsible and non-residents.

The controversy in this Court relates wholly to the liabil- • itv of the defendants Martin Butzel, Magnus Butzel, and Emil S. Heineman, composing the firm of Heineman, Butzel & Co., of Detroit, Michigan, and Emil Heyn and Henry Heyn, also of Detroit, who are the only ones appealing from the decree in the court below.

The complainant, who is the assignee of D. E. Wadsworth & Co., of Ishpeming, recovered a judgment against the Erie Iron Company, in the June term, 1884, of the Marquette circuit court, for the sum of $14,204.91, upon which judgment execution was duly issued June 25, 1884, placed in the hands of the sheriff, and by him returned nulla Iona. This judgment is still in force. The object of the bill is the appointment of a receiver of the defendant corporation, who shall take charge of its affairs and property, if any, and levy an assessment upon the stockholders to pay the claim of complainant and other debts of the corporation. No other creditors joined in the proceeding.

The bill alleges, in substance, the existence of judgment, issue and return of execution, as before stated; that the Erie Iron Company is a mining corporation organized under Act No. 118 of the Session Laws of 1877, and having its only business office at the Erie mine, in Republic, Marquette-county. It names the stockholders who are made defendants, and avers that none of them have fully paid their stock subscription to said defendant corporation; that said corporation operated the Erie mine upon land leased to it by Elias H. and William A. Wright, two of the defendants, during the time the debt of complainant was incurred. It sets forth.. [113]*113the organization and operations of the corporation mainly as will be stated in the summary of facts hereafter given. It also states the names of the persons, firms, and corporations to which the defendant corporation was indebted at the time of the filing of the bill, and the respective amounts owing to each. It avers the total insolvency of said corporation about September, 1883.

The bill further alleges that the capital stock of $500,000 was never fully paid in; that only $18,018 in cash was paid and that the lease transferred by the Wrights to the corporation, at the sum of $422,000, and counted as so much cash capital paid, was worthless, and of no value whatever, and the corporation paid nothing for it; that the stock of the company, which was divided into 20,000 shares at $25 per share, was; placed upon the market, and sold at from $5 to $8 a share,— none higher than $8; and charges that this enormous valuation was placed upon said lease with the fraudulent intent to secure the stockholders from assessments to pay the just debts of the corporation, and so to cheat and defraud its creditors; and that the defendants had knowledge of such intended fraud.

It avers that the stock of said corporation is liable to assessment to the full face value thereof, less the amount paid in thereon in cash. It gives the names and residences of all the stockholders, and the number of shares held by them at the time the company ceased doing business. It then shows the insolvency of the said Wrights, who, as it will be seen,, were the main promoters of the company, and originally owned nearly all the stock. It alleges that the defendant, corporation has no assets of any kind, except its right to levy and collect its assessments against its stockholders; that, if' said right is enforced, ample means may be obtained with which to satisfy the complainant’s judgment, but unless said assessments are made the complainant will lose his debt.

The prayer of the bill is:

[114]*1141. That answer (not under oath) may be made.
2. That an account may be taken of the indebtedness of said defendant corporation.
3. That a receiver may be appointed.
4. That said defendant corporation may be decreed to pay complainant the amount due to him upon his judgment, principal, interest, and costs.
“5. That the indebtedness of said company to Elias H. and William A. Wright may be set ofE against the amount due from said Elias and William on their stock subscriptions, so far as it will go; that an account may be taken of the respective liabilities of the stockholders herein named as defendants, other than said William A. and Elias H. Wright, on their said stock subscriptions; and that they may each be decreed to pay to said receiver the amount due and remaining unpaid on the shares of stock held by him, or so much thereof as shall be found to be necessary to satisfy the debts of the company other than the indebtedness to said William A. and Elias H. Wright.
“ 6. And that the said receiver may apply all sums which he may receive from said stockholders in payment of such decree for stock subscriptions, and all other assets of said defendant corporation (if any) which he may collect or receive as such receiver, to the payment of your orator’s judgment and costs aforesaid, and the other indebtedness of said company.
“7. That the defendant corporation may be enjoined from any way discharging, releasing, incumbering, collecting, canceling, or intermeddling with the right of recovery of said corporation against said defendant stockholders upon their respective liabilities as such stockholder as aforesaid to the said corporation, or the creditors thereof, and that it may also be prohibited from making any assignment of its property, equitable or otherwise, or any part thereof, or in anywise disposing of any of its assets; and that your orator may have such other and further relief in the premises as the nature of his case shall require, and as the court shall deem meet.”

The answer of the defendants involved here denies that they were original incorpbrators or subscribers at any time to the stock of the defendant corporation, or that they ever purchased any stock from the corporation itself, but avers their purchase of the same from other persons in the good-faith belief that it was non-assessable and fully paid up. [115]*115They also aver that their stock was' not burdened with any liability for this indebtedness.

Under a demurrer clause in their answer the point is made here that one creditor cannot file a bill to obtain a decree against stockholders in his own behalf, even if the defendants are liable. Under the view that I take of the facts, and the law as applied to such facts, it is not necessary to examine this objection.

The proofs in this case were taken in open court, and after the closing of the same and argument thereon, the Hon. C. B.

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Bluebook (online)
31 N.W. 814, 65 Mich. 111, 1887 Mich. LEXIS 576, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/young-v-erie-iron-co-mich-1887.