Elsbree v. Burt
Elsbree v. Burt
Opinion of the Court
This is an action of debt, alleging that the plaintiff is a judgment creditor of the Crown Carpet Lining Company, a Rhode Island Corporation, against which execution has been taken out and returned wholly unsatisfied, and that the defendant was a stockholder therein who became liable to pay the debts upon which the judgment was obtained under certain provisions of chapter 180 of the General Laws.
The declaration is in three counts, the first and second alleg *323 ing liability accruing at different times under the provisions of sections 1 and 13, the third alleging liability under sections 11, 12, 13, and 14, of that chapter.
The case comes up on demurrer to certain of defendant’s pleas, claiming that they are severally insufficient in form or substance.
An express provision of the bankrupt act of 1898 is :
-J‘ Sec. 16. The liability of a person who is a co-debtor with or guarantor, or in any manner a surety for a bankrupt shall not be altered by the discharge of such bankrupt.” It is the evident intent of the bankrupt law to preserve to a creditor all his remedies against persons secondarily liable, barring only the claim against the bankrupt.
In the case In re Marshall Paper Company, 2 American Bankruptcy Reports, 653, it was said by Judge Lowell: “The bankrupt act of 1898 not only does not expressly provide that directors and stockholders shall be released from their individual liability, but it expressly provides the contrary,” referring to section 16 and explaining its application to stockholders who are, in a broad sense, sureties for the corporation. Upon this point the United States Circuit Court of Appeals, Colt, J., approves the position of Judge Lowell. He says : “ The theory of a discharge as well as this express provision of the act forbid that the secondary liability of the directors of a corporation, under the Massachusetts statute, should be affected by the corporation’s discharge in bankruptcy. Such a discharge does not prevent creditors from taking judgment in the state court against the corporation in such limited form as may enable them to reap the benefit of the directors’ liability. The ren *324 dering of such a judgment depends upon the authority of the state court under the local law. There is nothing in the bankrupt act to prevent it. Hill v. Harding, 130 U. S. 699.”
The same principle is upheld in Barre Nat'l Bank v. Hingham Mfg. Co., 127 Mass. 563.
The demurrer is therefore sustained, and this plea overruled.
The general issue in an ordinary action of debt as pleaded here is proper. It puts the plaintiff to the proof of his judgment, the fact that the defendant was a stockholder, that the capital stock was not paid in, that returns were not made, and all the essential facts of his case. The demurrer to this plea is overruled.
The fourth and fifth pleas set up to different counts of the declaration that at the'times the original debts were contracted the corporation was insolvent to the knowledge of the plaintiff. These pleas are also defective in form, in that they set up new matter and conclude to the country.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Arathusa v. Elsbree v. William A. Burt.
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- 1 case
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- Published