Potter v. Dear
Before: Paterson
Synopsis
(Corporation — Unpaid Subscriptions to Stock — Creditor’s Bill to Esforcé Payment. —A judgment creditor who has exhausted his legal Remedies against a corporation may maintain a creditor’s bill against ene e? more stockholders to recover the amount due to the corporation npon unpaid subscriptions to its stock.
Id. — Parties to Creditor’s Bill — Non-joinder of Corporation — Pleading — Waiver of Objection. — The corporation should be made a party to a creditor’s bill against subscribing stockholders, but is not an indispensable party, unless the object of the action is to secure an adjudication of the rights‘and liabilities of all the parties, and a final settlement of all the .affairs of the company; and when the action is against a single stockholder, objection to the non-joinder of the corporation is waived, if not made by demurrer or answer.
.Id,—Jurisdiction of Equity —Legal Remedy against Stockholders — Insolvency of Stockholders not Joined. — A court of equity will entertain jurisdiction over an action by a judgment creditor who has exhausted his legal remedies against the corporation to compel payment of unpaid subscriptions to its stock, without regard to the exhaustion of any concurrent legal remedy against the stockholders upon their individual liability, and without regard to the insolvency of subscribing stockholders not joined as defendants.
;Id.—Land and Improvement Company—Subscribed Capital Stock.— A laud aud improvement company, organized for the purpose of acquiring real property, by purchase or otherwise, buying and selling the same, building hotels, street.railroads, and otherwise developing lands, stands upon the same basis as banking, railroad, insurance, and like commercial corporations having a subscribed capital stock.
Paterson, J. Many of the questions discussed by [579]counsel were considered in Baines v. Babcock, post, p. 583, this day filed, and upon the authority of that case must be determined adversely to the contentions of appellant herein.
In this case the corporation was not made a party. No objection on the ground of non-joinder of the corporation as a party defendant was made in the court below by demurrer or by answer. The defect was therefore waived. (Code Civ. Proc., sec. 434.) Doubtless the corporation should always be made a party to the suit; but it is not an indispensable party, unless the object of the action is to secure an adjudication of the rights and liabilities of all the parties, and a final settlement of the affairs of the company. When the purpose of a suit is to compel payment of a debt out of the unpaid subscription of a single stockholder, the corporation if not made a party cannot be prejudiced by a judgment against the stockholder, and if he sees fit to go to trial and judgment without objecting to the non-joinder of the corporation, he will not thereafter be heard to complain. It is not claimed in this case, as it was in Baines v. Babcock, that all the stockholders were necessary parties defendant.
It is contended by appellant that the Santa Rosa Laud and Improvement Company is similar in its nature to the South Mountain Consolidated Mining Company, the mining corporation considered by Judge Sawyer in 8 Saw. 366. It is a sufficient answer to this contention to state the purposes for which the corporation under consideration was organized, viz., “ for the purpose of acquiring real property by purchase or otherwise in the county of San Diego, state of California, buying and selling the same, building hotels, street-railroads, and otherwise developing lands.” It stands upon the same basis as the “ banking, railroad, insurance, and like commercial corporations having a subscribed capital stock,” referred to by Judge Sawyer.
It is claimed that there is another distinction between this case and the case of Baines v. Babcock. It is said [580]that the complaint in the latter case showed that some of the stockholders of the corporation were either insolvent or absent from the state, and that no such claim is made in this case; that there is no necessity shown, therefore, for invoking the powers of a court of equity, plaintiff having a complete and adequate legal remedy under section 322 of the Civil Code; that the decisions cited by respondent “ were all rendered at places or in times when there was no legal remedy available to the creditor except one against the corporation itself and that there is no authority for holding that “ an equitable remedy can be pursued by a creditor before he has exhausted his legal remedies, both against the corporation and the stockholders,” unless by reason of the insolvency or absence from the state of some of the stockholders, as in the case of Baines v. Babcock, the legal remedy afforded by the statute would not be adequate.
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