(After stating the facts.) The plaintiff’s right of action is expressly grounded on the Civil Code (1910), § 2220, which declares that “persons who organize a company and transact business in its name, before the minimum capital stock has been subscribed for, are liable to creditors to make good the minimum capital stock with interest.” The plaintiff sustained no contractual relation to the corporation which was alleged to have commenced business before all of its minimum capital stock had been subscribed. If he has any action against the corporation, it must be founded in tort; for the alleged conversion and appropriation of the plaintiff’s property was without his consent. The proposition raised by the demurrer is, whether the plaintiff is a creditor of the Senoia Duck Mills within the meaning of the quoted code section. This is a codification of the principle enunciated in Burns v. Beck & Gregg Hardware Co., 83 Ga. 471 (10 S. E. 121). In that case two persons after procuring a charter organized a corporation without subscribing the minimum capital stock or paying in the ten per cent, required by statute, then proceeded to business, contracted debts, and made a fraudulent assignment of the corporate assets. Creditors of the corporation filed an equitable petition against the two organizers of the corporation and the corporation, to set aside the assignment, and to hold liable the corporators as well as the *792corporation, charging the corporation with fraud. One of the points involved the liability of the corporators, as to which the court ruled: “As a matter of law, when the stock of' a corporation is not subscribed for up to the minimum amount of capital fixed by the charter, and none of it is paid in, if the corporators organize, elect themselves officers, proceed to business, contract debts up to and beyond the nominal capital, having paid in nothing whatever, they commit a legal fraud by so doing, and are liable to creditors to make good the minimum capital, together with interest thereon, should this be necessary to discharge the corporate debts.” In the opinion it was said, in substance, that the corporation was one de facto only, and had no legal right to transact business or to obtain credit; that it did obtain credit by reason of the wrongful acts of its corporators in setting it on foot prematurely and holding it out as duly organized. This conduct, said Bleckley, C. J., “was a legal fraud committed by them, and rendered them liable to respond to the corporation creditors to the extent at least of the capital stock that should have been subscribed and paid in, in the event the corporation assets proved insufficient to discharge its liabilities.” The creditors in that case were attempting to assert a debt contracted in the name of the corporation. The term “creditor,” as there used, was confined to those whose demands against the corporation arose ex contractu, either express or implied. The code section was up for construction in John V. Farmell Co. v. Jackson Stores, 137 Ga. 174 (73 S. E. 13), where it was said by Eish, C. J., that the requirement of the statute was “for the ultimate benefit of those who may extend credit to the corporation.”
It is contended, however, that the word “creditor,” as used in the code section, comprehends any person to whom a debt is owing by another, whether the debt arise by virtue of a contract or grow out of a trespass or tort. We do not think, in the light of the origin of the code section, and the basis upon which the principle of liability is evolved, that corporators of a de facto corporation are liable for the torts of the corporation. In most jurisdictions persons who assume to act as a corporation, when they have neither de jure nor de facto corporate existence, are held to sustain the relation of partners as to third persons, and are individually liable as such, both for torts committed and on contracts made by their agents in the course of the business, unless the person dealing with *793them is estopped to deny their existence as a corporation. 1 Clark & Marshall on Private Corporations, § 78. A corporation which begins business before all of its minimum capital stock is subscribed, though not a de jure corporation, is nevertheless one de facto (Burns v. Beck etc. Co., supra); and the corporators of a de facto corporation are not liable to third persons as partners., Brooke v. Day, 129 Ga. 694 (59 S. E. 769). The liability established by the statute is not to creditors by reason of any partnership existing between the corporators, but because of a fraud which the corporators perpetrated upon those with whom the corporation dealt in a contractual capacity. Indeed, it has been said that the liability of the corpora-tors to the creditors of a de facto corporation rests upon the ground that its organizers, who acted as agents in contracting the liability, warranted their authority; viz.: that the corporation had been properly organized and was entitled under the law to engage in the business for which it was eorporated. Farmers Co-operative Trust Company v. Floyd, 47 Ohio St. 525 (26 N E. 110, 12 L. R. A. 346, 21 Am. St. R. 846). From the fundamental basis of liability of the corporators of a defectively organized corporation it is clear that the liability to creditors referred to in the code section is to creditors whose claims arise out of contract, express or implied. We have not overlooked the declaration of the code, that the relation*" of debtor and creditor exists “whenever one person, by contráfet or by law, is liable and bound to pay to another an amount of money, certain or uncertain.” Civil Code (1910), § 3215.. ^unquestionably this is the generic meaning of thq term “creditor/’ but, as we have undertaken to point out, it is used,«EN;he statute under consideration in its more circumscribed and'^Ordinary meaning as denoting the holder of an obligation arising ex contractu.
A somewhat similar question arose in Nebraska. A statute of that State required every corporation thereafter created to give notice annually, in certain newspapers, of the amount of all existing debts of the corporation, and declared that in ease any corporation should fail to comply with that provision, the property of all the stockholders was to be liable for the corporate debts; and it was held that the debts referred to were debts arising upon contract, and not damages for torts. Doolittle v. Marsh, 11 Neb. 243 (9 N. W. 54).
The argument is advanced, that, inasmuch as this court has de*794cided that the statute of 13th Elizabeth, against fraudulent conveyances, as codified in section 1952 of the Code of 1873, is broad enough to embrace tort-feasors in its provisions, the statute under consideration should receive a no less comprehensive interpretation. The statute of 13th Elizabeth, as so codified, declared that certain specified acts by debtors “shall be fraudulent in law against creditors, and as to them null and void.” It is true that this court held that a. conveyance, if fraudulent as against a creditor in the ordinary sense of that word, would seem to be fraudulent also as against any persons who had at the time of the conveyance a valid and subsisting claim of damages for trespass upon his person or property, committed by the party making the transfer. The court reached its conclusion, however, not upon an independent interpretation of the section of the Code of 1873, but construed that section in connection with the original statute of the 13th Elizabeth, which was declared to be still of force in Georgia in so far as it embraced tortfeasors in its provisions. Westmoreland v. Powell, 59 Ga. 256. In the Code of 1895 (§ 2695) and in the present Code of 1910, ■§ 3224, the codifiers have added, after the word “creditor,” the words “and others,” so as to definitely bring the provisions against transfers by fraudulent debtors within the old English statute. There is no analogy between the statute of 13th Elizabeth and the statute under consideration, as to the meaning of the word “creditor,” as respectively employed. The scope and purpose of the two statutes are entirely distinct. The former is intended to protect one who has a debt or claim for damages from having its collection defeated by a ■fraudulent transfer of the debtor’s or tort-feasor’s property. The latter originates a liability, affording to the creditor of a de facto corporation, which has conducted business before its minimum capital stock has been subscribed, a remedy in addition to that against the assets of the de facto corporation.
After a careful consideration, we think the construction given this statute in John V. Farwell Co. v. Jachson Stores, supra, does not embrace a claim of one whose liability against the organizers of the corporation is founded solely in the corporation’s tort.
Judgment affirmed.
All the Justices concur, except Fish, C. J., absent, and Lumphin, J., dissenting.