GARTSIDE COAL 00.
v.
MAXWELL.
197
GARTSIDE UOAL CO. V. MAXWELL
and
(Oircuit Oourt, E. D. Missouri.
November 8, 1884.)
LuBIMTY OF STOCKHOLDERS WHEllE COMPANY IS NOT VALIDLY INCORPORATED.
Where persons, supposing iu good faith that they are incorporated and are stockholders in a valid corporation, do business as a corporation for 8 series of years, without the corporate existence being challenged by the state, parties whQ deal with the company as a corporation cannot bold the stoc}(holders person. ally liable in case they afterwards discover that the company was not validly incorporated in consequence of some defect or irregularity in the proceedings of the supposed incorporaturs.
At Law. FED. REP.
For opinion upon motion to s.uppreas depositions, see 20
187. Hiram J. Grover, for plaintiff. Henry Hitchcock, Lucien Eaton, and Walker eX Walker, for defend-
BREWER, J., (m·ally.) In this case the facts are these: There was a corporation, or what pretended to be a corporation, which purchased coal from the plaintiff, and the transactions extended through a series of years. The defendants, or the defendants' so-called corporation, failed to pay,-became insolvent; and this uction is to charge those who were the stockholders in this supposed corporation as though they were partners; and the basis of the claim is that there was no corporation; that whatever it assumed or pretended to be, although it called itself a corporation, and attempted to transact business as a corporation, yet in fact it was no corporation, and had no legal existence; and that these parties who were acting as though they were holders in this corporation were really not stockholders, and must therefore individually be held as partners to have made the purchases. It is very clear to my mind that this attempted incorporation was invalid, and that if it had ever been challenged by the officer of the state, in proper proceedings. its exercise of corporate powers would have been enjoined; but, while I think that is unquestionably so, it does not seem to me to follow that those who were supposing themselves stockholders in this corporation can be held personally liable. I think the true rule is this: that where persons knowingly and fraud· ulently assume a corporate existence, or pretend to have a corporate existence, they can be held liable as individuals; but where they are acting in good faith, and suppose that they are legally incorporated, -that they are stockholderl:"l in a valid corporation,-and where the corporation assumes to transact business for a series of years, and the assumed corporate existence is not challenged by the state, then they cannot be held liable, as individuals, as members of the corporation. Of course, the converse is perfectly true, that a person who deals 1 Reported
ants.
by Benj. 1.<'. Rex, Esq., of the St. Louis bar.
198
REPORTm&
with a corporation, or gives to an aRsumed corporation 80 note, cannot question the corporate existence of that party with whom be has dealt or to whom he gave his note. So, on the other hand, where a person deals with what he supposes is a corporation, with what all parties think is a corporation, where he gives his credit to that supposed corporation, he cannot afterwards, when it turns out that it is not validly incorporated, turn round and say, "Well, I dealt with this supposed corporation; I thought it was a corporation; I trusted it as a corporation; I sold goods to it as a corporation; but it seems when it first attempted to become incorporated that there was some defect or irregularity in its proceedings, so that it did not become legally incorporated, and therefore you who are stockholders will be held personally liable." I do not think that can be done, and judgment will be entered for the defendant.
McLENNAN 'V. KANSAS
CITY, ST. J. & C. B. R. Co. Gov-
(Circuit Oourt, 8. D. Iowa, W. D. September Term, 1884.) PRACTICE-TAKING DEPOSITION IN COMMON· LAW ACTIONS-By WHAT LAW ERNED-REV. ST. U. S. H 861,863,867,914.
The ril!:ht to take testimony by depositions in common-law causes pending in the courts depends upon the statutes of the United States, and not the statutes of the states in which such courts are held; but when such right does exist under the United States statutes as to the mere mode of procuring the depo!\ition, the parties may follow, at their electiGn, either the provisions of the state law or of the act of congress.
Motion to Suppress Depositions. . Wm. McLennan and John H. Keatly, for plaintiff. Sapp d; Pusey, for defendant. SHIRA!:!, J. After this cause was removed to this court from the state court, wherein it was originally brought, the plaintiff sued out a commission to take the depositions of certain witnesses residing at Nebraska City, Nebraska, upon'written interrogations in the manner provided for in the statutes of Iowa, regUlating the procurement of testimony in causes pending in the state court. Notice of the intent to sue out the commission, with a copy of the interrogatories to be propounded to the witnesses, was served upon the counsel for defendant. The commission was issued to F. R. Ireland, a notary public residing at Nebraska City, who executed the same and returned the depositions to the clerk of this court, by whom they were filed in the usual manner. Nebraska City, where the witnesses resided, and where their testimonv was taken under the commission, is less than 100 miles from the place of trial, and it does not appear that any of the grounds for taking depositions de bene esse as set forth in section 863 of the Revised Statutes exist in this case. Had the cause remained in the state court, the depositions of the witnesses could hall's been V
14'LENNAN
KANSAS CiTY, ST. J. & O. B. ,R. 00.
199
taken under the provisions of the Code of Iowa in the manner and under the circumstances in which they have been taken in this court. The question presented by the motion to suppress is whether, in law actions pending in the courts of the United States in the districts of Iowa, either party may take depositions under the provisions of the Code of Iowa. It is claimed that the right so to do is conferred by the provisions of section 914 of the Revised Statutes, which enacts that "the practice, pleadings, forms, and modes of proceeding in civil causes, other than equity and admiralty causes, in the circuit and district courts, shall conform as near as may be to the practice, pleadings, and forms and modes of proceeding existing at the time in like causes in the courts of record of the state within which such circuit or district courts are held, any rule of the court to the contrary notwithstanding." The meaning of this section is that the pl'actice and proceedings in civil cases in the federal courts 'Shall conform, as near as may be, to the practice and proceedings in like cases in the state courts, in all matters wherein express provision is not made by the laws of the United States. "When the latter speak, they are controlling; that ,is to say, on all subjects on which it is competent for them to speak." Connecticut Life Ins. Co. v. Shaefer, 94 U. S. 457. By section 861 of the Revised Statutes it is declared that "the mode of proof in the trial of actions at common law shall be by oral testimony and examination of witnesses in open court, except as hereinafter provided." Sections 863-866 and 867 provide for taking depositions de bene esse, in perpetuam, and to prevent a failure of jusEce. It does not appear that any of the causes embraced within these sections for taking depositions exist in the present case, and it would seem clear, therefore, that the plaintiff must, under section 861, produce the witnesses in open court. The declaration in this section is explicit that the mode of proof in common·law actions is by oral examination in open court, except as otherwise provided in the statutes of the United States. In determining, therefore, whether the right exists to take testimony by depositions in common-law causes pend. ing in the federal oDurts, reference must be had to the statutes of the United States. When, however, the facts are such in a given case that, under the provisions of the stlttutes of the United States, the right to take the testimony of witnesses by depositions exists, then, as to the mere mode of procuring the deposition, parties may follow at their election eithel' the provisions of the state law or of the act of congress. See case of Flint v. Board Com'ra, 5 Dill. 481. rfhe right existing, therefore, in a given case to procure testimony by deposition, under the provisions of the statutes of the United States, the same may be taken upon written interrogatories duly served according to the requirements of the state statutes, and in the mode therein provided for,as well as in the manner provided for in the acts of congress. As it does not appear, however, in the present