A party having a claim for unliquidated damages against a
corporation which has not been dissolved, but has merely
distributed its corporate funds amongst its stockholders and ceased
or suspended business, cannot maintain a suit on the equity side of
the United States circuit court
Page 148 U. S. 604
against a portion of such stockholders to reach and subject the
assets so received by them to the payment and satisfaction of his
claim without first reducing such claim to judgment and without
making the corporation a defendant and bringing it before the
court.
Corporations are indispensable parties to a bill which affects
corporate rights or liabilities.
A claim purely legal, involving a trial at law before a jury,
cannot, until reduced to judgment at law, be made the basis of
relief in equity.
The general practice in this country and in England, when a bill
in equity is dismissed without a consideration of the merits, is
for the court to express in its decree that the dismissal is
without prejudice.
The case is stated in the opinion.
MR. JUSTICE JACKSON delivered the opinion of the Court.
The appeal in this case presents for our consideration and
determination the question whether the circuit courts of the United
States can properly entertain jurisdiction of a suit in equity
which unites and seeks to enforce both legal and equitable demands
when the right to the equitable relief sought rests and depends
upon the legal claim's being first ascertained and established, and
where the person against whom such legal demand is asserted is not
made a party defendant -- or, stated in another form more directly
applicable to the present case, can a party having a claim for
unliquidated damages against a corporation which has not been
dissolved, but has merely distributed its corporate funds among its
stockholders and ceased or suspended business, maintain a suit on
the equity side of the United States circuit court against a
portion of such stockholders to reach and subject the assets so
received by them to the payment and satisfaction of his claim,
without first reducing such claim to judgment and without making
the corporation a defendant and bringing it before the court? This
question, which hardly needs or requires more than its bare
Page 148 U. S. 605
statement to indicate the answer that must be made thereto,
arises as follows:
The appellant, the Swan Land & Cattle Company, Limited, a
corporation organized under the Companies' Acts of Great Britain,
and being a citizen of that kingdom, filed its bill in equity in
the court below against the appellees, all of whom are citizens of
Illinois except two, who are citizens of Wyoming, containing
substantially the following material averments: that in November,
1882, three Wyoming corporations, known respectively as the Swan
& Frank Livestock Company, the National Cattle Company, and the
Swan, Frank & Anthony Cattle Company, being the owners of large
herds of cattle and other property in Wyoming, and engaged there in
the business of raising and selling what are known as "range
cattle," entered into an agreement in writing with one James
Wilson, of Edinburgh, Scotland, acting in his own behalf and for
others to be thereafter associated with him in a limited liability
company to be formed under the Companies' Acts of Great Britain, by
the terms of which said company, when organized, was to purchase of
the Wyoming corporations, for the sum of $2,553,825,
"all and singular the lands and tenements, water rights,
improvements upon lands, houses, barns, stables, corrals, and other
improvements and grazing privileges; also all livestock, consisting
of neat cattle, horses, and mules, belonging to the said three
Wyoming corporations, or any or either of them; also all livestock,
brands, tools, implements, wagons, harness, ranch, camp, and
round-up outfits, and branding irons"
belonging to said Wyoming corporations, all of such property
being particularly enumerated and described in certain inventories
annexed to said agreement. In regard to all the property sold
except the livestock, the agreement provided that the
representations in those inventories should be verified by a
competent inspector or inspectors to be named by the British
company prior to the transfer of the title to such property, and
that deficiencies, if any, in such representations should be made
good or supplied by the Wyoming companies. The agreement then
provided,
"as to all livestock mentioned and described in said
inventories,
Page 148 U. S. 606
that said first parties [the Wyoming corporations] shall and do
hereby agree and guarantee to and with said second party [the
British corporation] that the herd books of said first parties,
showing the acquisitions, increase, disposition of, and number of
cattle now on hand of said first parties, respectively, have been
truly and correctly kept,"
a copy of which herd books was required to be furnished to the
party of the second part.
The bill then averred that after the making and delivery of this
agreement, the vendor companies proceeded to make the necessary
arrangements for the turning over of their property to the
purchaser in accordance with the terms of the agreement, and that,
in pursuance of the agreement, the said Wilson returned to Scotland
and organized a limited liability company, completing its
organization March 30, 1883. In effecting this organization, Wilson
was aided in inducing parties to take stock in the new company by a
certain report in relation to the properties that were the subject
of the negotiation, made by one Lawson in December, 1882, who had
previously visited and inspected said properties, and who, it was
averred, was acting in the interests of the vendor corporations and
was in their employ, having received from them the large sum of
$12,000 for said report, and also by Alexander H. Swan, the
president of each of the vendor corporations, who at that time was
in Scotland, and represented that the number of cattle the vendors
would turn over under the agreement was 89,167, as was shown by
alleged copies of the herd books, which he produced, and also by
certain alleged inventories of the stock on the ranches, and that
any death losses in the herds would be more than made good by the
number of calves on the ranches that escaped branding at the usual
branding season, and who also made certain estimates as to the
prospective increase in the herds, which representations and
estimates were implicitly relied upon by the parties forming the
new corporation. By a supplemental agreement, also in writing,
between the contracting parties, it was provided, among other
things, that Swan should become the general manager of the new
company
Page 148 U. S. 607
at a salary of $10,000 a year, and he and the vendor companies
should subscribe for 10,000 shares of stock in the new company, and
the vendors then agreed that if the number of calves branded in
1883 belonging to the herds sold should be fewer than 17,868, then
they should be jointly and severally bound to pay to the new
company $31.68 for each deficiency in that number.
The bill then averred that the vendors represented that it would
be impossible to count the cattle upon the ranches, and that the
new company would be obliged to take possession of them wherever
they might be ranging, without any count's being made, and that,
relying upon all these representations made by the vendors and in
their behalf as above set forth, the new company received delivery
of the property so purchased by it, and paid the purchase price it
had agreed to pay in the manner agreed upon, and did and performed
all the things it was required to do and perform by the terms of
the aforesaid agreements.
The bill then averred that the representations made by the
vendors and in their behalf as respects the number of cattle on the
ranches, and which were relied upon by the parties forming the new
company, were grossly untrue, and known at the time by the vendor
companies to be so, and that the number of cattle actually turned
over to the new company under the agreement was at least 30,000
less than was represented by the vendors, whereby it had suffered
loss and damage in the sum of at least $800,000.
The bill then proceeded as follows:
"Your orator further showeth that said vendors had no other
business except the management of the herds sold to your orator,
and no other assets, or substantially none, except the properties
sold by them to your orator, and your orator showeth that after the
sale of their said properties to your orator, and the receipt by
them of the purchase price, as aforesaid, said three vendors paid
whatever liabilities they had outstanding, except their liability
to your orator herein set forth, and distributed the money and
stock obtained from your orator as the proceeds of said sale and
all their other assets amongst their respective
Page 148 U. S. 608
shareholders, and the same were received by said shareholders,
and since that time said three corporations have not, nor has
either of them, made any use whatever of their franchises, but they
have abandoned the same, and neither of said corporations has any
officer of agent upon whom process can be served, and they have
not, nor has either of them, any assets of any kind out of which
any judgment at common law against them, or either of them, could
be satisfied. Your orator further showeth that the assets of said
corporation were in the hands of said corporations a trust fund,
held by said corporations in trust to satisfy the claim of your
orator herein set forth, before the shareholders of said
corporations were entitled to receive any portion of the same, and
said shareholders, in receiving said assets, did take and now hold
the same as trustees in place of said corporations, and subject to
the lien of your orator's aforesaid claim, and should account for
the same to your orator, and apply the same, so far as necessary,
in satisfaction of your orator's claim, herein set forth."
The bill prayed that the several defendants be required to
answer certain interrogatories thereto attached, but not under
oath, and that whatever property each and every one of them may
have received from the vendor corporations, or any of them, in the
distribution of the assets aforesaid be decreed to have been taken
and to be held by them in trust for the payment of the claim of the
plaintiff, and
"be applied, so far as shall be necessary, in satisfaction of
the damages which shall be found due to your orator from the
vendors aforesaid upon final hearing hereof,"
and for other and further relief, etc.
The three vendor corporations were not made parties defendant to
the suit. The two Wyoming defendants were not served with process,
and did not appear in the case. The Illinois defendants who were
served with process entered a special appearance and demurred to
the bill upon three grounds: (1) that the bill did not state a case
within the equity jurisdiction of the court or one entitling the
complainant to any discovery or equitable relief as prayed; (2)
that the several vendor corporations, and each of them, were
necessary parties
Page 148 U. S. 609
to the suit, and (3) that the averments of the bill are too
general in their nature to charge the defendants, or either of
them, as a trustee of any portion of the assets of any one of the
vendor corporations.
The demurrer was sustained by the circuit court, and the bill
dismissed, 39 F. 456, and an appeal from that decree brings the
case here.
The grounds upon which the court below based its decision and
decree were: (1) that the complainant had no standing in a court of
equity without first reducing its claim for damages to a judgment,
and (2) that even if that position be untenable, still the vendor
corporations were necessary and indispensable parties to the
suit.
The bill does not seek to hold the defendants below personally
liable for the alleged fraud committed by the vendor corporations
in which they were stockholders. There is no averment or even
intimation in the bill that the defendants in any way participated
in the fraudulent misrepresentations of the vendor companies on
which it is charged the complainant relied and acted to its injury.
They are therefore not personally responsible for any damage
resulting to the complainant by reason of the alleged fraud.
The theory of the bill is that the assets of the vendor
corporations which have been distributed to and received by the
defendants as stockholders constitute a trust fund for the payment
of all debts and demands against the companies, and may therefore
be followed in the hands of and recovered from such stockholders to
the extent necessary to discharge valid claims against the
corporations from which they were received. The funds sought to be
reached are undoubtedly applicable, under proper proceedings
against all necessary parties, to the payment, so far as may be
needed, of outstanding indebtedness against the corporations which
distributed the same, but the difficulty here is that the
complainant has not adopted the requisite and necessary procedure
to subject said funds thereto. It has no judgment against the
corporations by which it was defrauded, nor are such corporations
made parties defendant to the suit or brought before the
Page 148 U. S. 610
court. The stockholder defendants, who have been served with
process and entered their appearance, do not undertake to
represent, and cannot in any way represent, the corporations
against whom the claim for damages is asserted.
Bronson v.
La Crosse & Milwaukee Railroad, 2 Wall. 283,
69 U. S.
301-302.
Now it is too clear to admit of discussion that the various
corporations charged with the fraud which has resulted in damage to
the complainant are necessary and indispensable parties to any suit
to establish the alleged fraud and to determine the damages arising
therefrom. Unless made parties to the proceedings in which these
matters are to be passed upon and adjudicated, neither they nor
their other stockholders would be concluded by the decree. The
defendants cannot be required to litigate those questions which
primarily and directly involve issues with third parties not before
the court. As any decree rendered against them would not bind
either the corporations or their co-shareholders, it would
manifestly violate all rules of equity pleading and practice to
pursue and hold the defendants on an unliquidated demand for
damages against companies not before the court. The complainant's
right to follow the corporate funds in the hands of the defendants
depends upon its having a valid claim for damages against the
vendor corporations. That demand is not only legal in character,
but can be settled and determined and the amount thereof
ascertained by some appropriate proceeding to which the
corporations against which it is made are parties and have an
opportunity to be heard. Stockholders cannot be required to
represent their corporations in litigation involving such questions
and issues. The corporations themselves are indispensable parties
to a bill which affects corporate rights or liabilities. Thus, in
Deerfield v. Nims, 110 Mass. 115, it was held that the
corporation was a necessary party in a bill by a creditor of the
corporation against its officers or stockholders, who had divided
its assets among themselves. So in
Gaylords v.
Kelshaw, 1 Wall. 81,
68 U. S. 82, it
was held by this Court that in a bill to set aside a conveyance as
made without consideration and in fraud of creditors, the alleged
fraudulent grantor is
Page 148 U. S. 611
a necessary defendant because it was his debts that were sought
to be collected, and his fraudulent conduct that required
investigation.
The general rule that suits in equity cannot be entertained and
decrees be rendered when necessary or indispensable parties,
whether corporations or individuals, are not brought before the
court is not affected by section 1 of the Act of February 28, 1839,
reenacted in section 737 of the Revised Statutes of the United
States, as this Court has repeatedly held.
Shields v.
Barrow, 17 How. 130,
58 U. S. 141;
Coiron v.
Millaudon, 19 How. 113,
60 U. S. 115;
Ogilvie v. Knox Ins.
Co., 22 How. 380;
Barney v.
Baltimore, 6 Wall. 280;
Davenport
v. Dows, 18 Wall. 626. The same rule is applied in
respect to averments as to citizenship of necessary parties to
confer jurisdiction or the right of removal.
Thayer v. Life
Association of America, 112 U. S. 717,
112 U. S. 719;
St. Louis & San Francisco Railway v. Wilson,
114 U. S. 61,
114 U. S.
62.
To take the present case out of the operation of the general
rule, it is argued on behalf of appellants that the bill discloses
such a practical abandonment of their franchises as to amount to a
dissolution of the vendor corporations. We cannot so construe the
bill. The dissolution of corporations is or may be effected by
expirations of their charters, by failure of any essential part of
the corporate organizations that cannot be restored, by dissolution
and surrender of their franchises with the consent of the state, by
legislative enactment within constitutional authority, by
forfeiture of their franchises and judgment of dissolution declared
in regular judicial proceedings, or by other lawful means. No such
dissolution is alleged in the bill. The averments that said
corporations paid all other liabilities, and thereafter distributed
their remaining assets among their respective stockholders, and
have since made no use of their franchises, and have no agent or
officer upon whom process can be served, and no assets out of which
any judgment against them could be satisfied, fall far short of a
dissolution such as would prevent a suit against the corporations
or their trustees, as provided by the laws of Wyoming, to establish
the validity and amount of the appellant's claim
Page 148 U. S. 612
for damages. Sections 506, 515. The cases cited to the point
that when the corporation is dissolved the necessity for making it
a party is dispensed with, need not therefore be reviewed. They are
not applicable to the present case. It does not help the matter
that complainant could not get the vendor corporations before the
Circuit Court for the Northern District of Illinois. That fact in
no way affects the question of their being necessary parties,
without whose presence no decree could be rendered against the
appellees. We do not deem it necessary to refer to the Wyoming
statutes further than to say we think they provide the means by
which the vendor corporations could there have been sued.
We are also clearly of opinion that the court below was correct
in sustaining the demurrer to the bill upon the other ground
assigned -- that the complainant had not previously reduced its
demand against the vendor corporations to judgment. That claim was
purely legal, involving a trial at law before a jury. Until reduced
to judgment at law, it could not be made the basis of relief in
equity. This is well settled by the decisions of this Court in
Taylor v. Bowker, 111 U. S. 110;
National Tube Works Co. v. Ballou, 146 U.
S. 517,
146 U. S. 523,
and
Scott v. Neely, 140 U. S. 106,
140 U. S. 115.
In this latter case, the subject is fully reviewed and the question
settled so far as the federal courts are concerned.
Our conclusion is that there is no error in the decree of the
circuit court sustaining the demurrer to the bill, but we are of
opinion that the bill, instead of being dismissed generally, should
have been dismissed without prejudice. In
Durant
v. Essex Company, 7 Wall. 107,
74 U. S. 113, it is
said that the general practice in this country and in England, when
a bill in equity is dismissed without a consideration of the
merits, is for the court to express in its decree that the
dismissal is without prejudice, and that the omission of that
qualification in a proper case will be corrected by this Court on
appeal, in support of which numerous authorities are cited. In
Kending v. Dean, 97 U. S. 423,
97 U. S. 426, the
same practice was adopted.
The decree must therefore be modified at appellant's costs,
and the cause remanded, with directions to dismiss the bill without
prejudice, and it is so ordered.
Page 148 U. S. 613
MR. JUSTICE BROWN, dissenting.
I concur in the opinion of the court that the question involved
in this case needs little more than its bare statement to indicate
the answer that should be made to it, but I do not concur in the
answer made by the Court. Admitting to the fullest extent the
proposition that the mere discontinuance of business by a
corporation, the sale of its assets, the failure to reelect
officers, and the nonuser of its franchise do not,
ipso
facto, work a dissolution of the corporation, it seems to me
that this is aside from the merits of the case. I agree too that
before resorting to the stockholders, a judgment should, if
possible, be obtained against the principal debtors, which in this
case are the three Wyoming corporations. But the law does not
compel that which is impossible, and if the facts alleged in the
bill show that no judgment can be obtained against the corporations
and that it is useless to pursue them, the bare existence of such
corporations ought not to defeat the recovery of a just claim. I do
not understand it to be denied that if the corporations had been
formally dissolved by the decree of a competent court, the
plaintiff might have maintained this bill, and the fact that it had
no judgment against the corporations would be no defense.
Now the allegations of the bill in this case are such as to show
not only that the Wyoming corporations are practically dissolved,
and exist only in name, but that it would be impossible to obtain a
judgment against them in the jurisdiction where they were
organized. The Revised Statutes of Wyoming, sec. 2431, provide
that
"A summons against a corporation may be served upon the
president, mayor, chairman, or president of the board of directors
or trustees, or other chief officer, or, if its chief officer be
not found in the county, upon its cashier, treasurer, secretary,
clerk, or managing agent; or, if none of the aforesaid officers can
be found, by a copy left at the office or other place of business
of said corporation, with the person having charge thereof."
In that connection, the allegation of the bill is
"that, after the sale of their said properties to your orator,
and the receipt by them of the purchase
Page 148 U. S. 614
price as aforesaid, they had outstanding, except their said
three vendors paid whatever liabilities liability to your orator
herein set forth, and distributed the money and stock obtained from
your orator as the proceeds of said sale, and all their other
assets, amongst their respective shareholders, and the same were
received by said shareholders, and since that time said
three
corporations have not, nor has either of them, made any use
whatever of their franchises, but they have abandoned the same, and
neither of said corporations has any officer or agent upon whom
process can be served, and they have not, nor has either of
them, any assets of any kind out of which any judgment at common
law against them or either of them could be satisfied."
Now if there be no officer or agent of a corporation upon whom
process can be served, it follows that there can be no office or
other place of business of such corporation within the meaning of
section 2431, since the only object of an office or place of
business is for the accommodation of an officer or agent. The act
does not authorize service upon a trustee, but only upon the
President of the board of trustees, who would, of course, be an
officer of the corporation. The allegations of the bill in these
particulars may be shown to be untrue, but upon demurrer they must
be taken as true.
It is true that by section 2435
"service by publication may be had . . . in actions against a
corporation incorporated under the laws of this territory which has
failed to elect officers, or to appoint an agent, upon whom service
of summons can be made, . . . and which has no place of doing
business in this territory."
But while such service by publication might be effective so far
as to charge any property of the corporation within the territory,
it would not create a general liability against the corporation
which would be available elsewhere. This Court has repeatedly held
that a personal judgment is without any validity if it be rendered
against a party served only by publication of a summons, but upon
whom no personal service of process within the state was made, and
who did not appear.
Pennoyer v. Neff, 95 U. S.
714;
Harkness v. Hyde, 98 U. S.
476;
St. Clair v. Cox, 106 U.
S. 350.
Page 148 U. S. 615
The cases relied upon to sustain this decree do not touch this
question, and the authorities which require corporations to be made
parties to a bill against the stockholders have no application to
cases in which it is only useless, but impossible, to make them
parties. I do not think the defendants in this case, who are
charged with receiving the proceeds of a gross fraud, should be
permitted to take refuge in the shadow of these defunct
corporations.
MR. JUSTICE GRAY was not present at the argument, and took no
part in the decision of this case.