The Coalfield Co. v. Peck
Decision Date | 31 March 1881 |
Citation | 1880 WL 14075,98 Ill. 139 |
Parties | THE COALFIELD COMPANY, for use, etc.,v.FERDINAND W. PECK. |
Court | Illinois Supreme Court |
OPINION TEXT STARTS HERE
APPEAL from the Appellate Court for the Second District;--heard in that court on appeal from the Circuit Court of Will county; the Hon. FRANCIS GOODSPEED, Judge, presiding.
Mr. GEORGE S. HOUSE, and Mr. A. O. MARSHALL, for the appellant.
Messrs. COOPER, PACKARD & GURLEY, for the appellee.
On the 7th day of November, 1877, H. Leroy Thayer, for whose use this proceeding is prosecuted, recovered a judgment, in the Will circuit court, against the Coalfield Coal Company, for $5963.30, and an execution issued thereon having been returned “no property found,” he, on the 27th day of December of the same year, sued out of said court a garnishee summons against Peck as a stockholder in said company.
Interrogatories were filed, and answered by the garnishee, and, upon the hearing, judgment was rendered against the garnishee, which, upon appeal to the Appellate Court for the Second District, was reversed, whereupon an appeal was taken to this court.
The liability which is attempted here to be asserted is under the 8th section of the act of 1872 (R. S. 1874, p. 287), entitled “Corporations,” which is as follows:
The position which is taken by appellee is, that this proceeding in garnishment after judgment, which has been adopted in this case, does not lie at all under this 8th section; that the only garnishee proceeding meant by the statute is that of garnishment as in original attachment, and that the only way in which the stockholder can be proceeded against and subjected under this section, is by suing out a summons against him at the same time the creditor's suit is instituted against the corporation. This construction is based upon the words “at the same time,” which occur in the section in the connection that “it shall be competent to proceed against any one or more stockholders at the same time,” it being contended that these words, “at the same time,” relate to the time of bringing any action to recover any indebtedness against the corporation, and are exclusive of all remedy otherwise than in the particular way of commencing proceedings against the garnishee at the same time suit is brought against the corporation. The Appellate Court sustained this view of the case.
We think the above a too contracted interpretation of the statute.
The statute declares, unequivocally, that “each stockholder shall be liable for the debts of the corporation to the extent of the amount that may be unpaid upon the stock held by him, to be collected in the manner herein provided,” which is, as we read it, “as in cases of garnishment.” Now, there were two modes known to our law by which, through garnishment, a debt owing by another to a judgment debtor might be reached and made subject by the judgment creditor to the payment of his judgment.
One is provided for in the act entitled “An act in regard to attachments in courts of record,” where, in the special proceeding by attachment, there is included in the writ of attachment a garnishee summons to any one claimed to be owing a debt to the attachment debtor.
The other is in the act entitled “An act in regard to garnishment,” where, when there has been a judgment obtained and an execution has been issued on it and returned “no property found,” provision is made for the issue of summons against any person supposed to be indebted to the judgment defendant, to appear as a garnishee, whereby any debt owing by him to the defendant in such judgment, may be subjected to the payment of the judgment. The latter mode was the one pursued in the present case.
It is difficult to believe that in this 8th section of the Corporation act, subjecting unpaid stock to a liability for the debts of the corporation, with provision for enforcing the liability “as in cases of garnishment,” reference was had to the act in regard to attachments alone, and not at all to that distinctive statute entitled “An act in regard to garnishment,” and that, instead of giving the remedy “as in cases of garnishment,” it is to be...
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