This was the case of a judgment recovered against the Salem & Boston Stage Company, and a levy of the execution on the property of James Perkins, as a member of that corporation, liable in his individual capacity for its payment. By the act incorporating this company, they were made subject to the provisions of St. 1808, c. 65, defining the powers and duties of manufacturing corporations, and the several acts in addition thereto.
This liability of an individual to satisfy an execution on a *318judgment to which he was not a party, and to which he had no opportunity to answer, is created and regulated by statute, and is not to be extended, by construction, beyond the plain enactments of the statute, as found by express provision or necessary implication. Andrews v. Callender, 13 Pick. 484.
In England, it has been held, as a reasonable restriction upon such a liability, that an individual cannot be charged in execution, as a member of such company, until there has been a suggestion, on thé roll, of the facts supposed to render him liable, and he has had notice and an opportunity to come in and plead. Bartlett v. Pentland, 1 Barn. & Adolph. 704. But it has been decided differently in Massachusetts ; and under the statutes which render individual members of manufacturing corporations liable for the debts of the corporation, it is held that no scire facias, or other process or summons, can issue against the indi vidual; but he is charged, at the peril of the creditor, on the same process, which issues against the corporation. Leland v. Marsh, 16 Mass. 389. Marcy v. Clark, 17 Mass. 330.
The question is, whether, if there has been an attachment of the property of an individual member of a manufacturing corporation, on mesne process, an execution' can be levied on the attaóhed property, or any other property of the same individual, without first making a demand on the corporation for payment of the execution, or property on which to satisfy it. This must depend upon" the provisions of the statutes creating and regulating this liability.
The first statute provision on this subject is that of 1808, c. 65, § 6. It provides distinctly for an attachment of property on mesne process, or the arrest of the body of any member of such corporation, if, within fourteen days after demand, the corporation doth not show the officer sufficient real or persona, property, to satisfy such judgment as may be rendered against such corporation. It also provides for levying the execution, which issues on a judgment against such corporation, upon such member, if the corporation, within fourteen days after demand, shall not show sufficient real or personal property to satisfy and pay the creditor the sum due. These two distinct provisions *319are thrown together in one sentence, for the sake of brevity; but construing il according to the maxim reddendo singula singulis, the above is the true result of the provision of this statute.
The St. of 1817, c. 183, though it made some alteration in the law, did not change this essential feature. It had been decided in Leland v. Marsh, ubi sup. that the execution to be levied on the individual member, must be the same execution, on which demand had been made upon the corporation, and as it might often happen that fourteen days did not remain, before the return day of the execution, the remedy against the individual must fail, until an alias should issue, and a new demand be made on such alias. This statute therefore provided, that when demand had been made on the first execution, and it was not satisfied by the corporation before the return day, the creditor might, on taking out an alias, levy the same on an individual member, without a new demand. It also provided this remedy, if the corporation should not show sufficient personal property, and extended the liability to those persons, who were members when the debt accrued. These were all the alterations made by this statute of 1817.
It seems to us, that these two provisions, the one to attach property on mesne process, the other to seize on execution, were made alio intuitu; the former, creating a lien on property, to secure a future judgment, if one should be recovered against the corporation, and not be satisfied by them; not affecting the owner’s title, not disturbing his possession and occupation of real estate ; the latter, divesting the owner’s property, and applying it to the satisfaction of the corporation’s debt. And we are of op nien that the latter liability, being not the party’s own debt, but founded on the statute, is, by the statute, provisional and contingent, and can „ only exist where a demand has first been made on the corporation to satisfy and pay the sum due, and the corporation has neglected, for fourteen days, to comply with such demand. It may be likened to the contingent obligation of bail, who are liable only when their principal avoids ; and such avo dance must be shown by a return of non est inventus.
Nor does it make any difference in regard to this liability to *320pay and satisfy an execution, that property of the individual mem her had been attached on mesne process, to secure a future judgment, if not paid by the corporation. It may well happen that a corporation is able to satisfy a judgment, when it is recovered, though they were not able, or not disposed, to show personal property to be attached previously to judgment. But the decisive reason is found in the statute, which provides only that the property of a member may be taken on execution, after the corporation, which is the principal debtor, has failed, for fourteen days after demand of satisfaction on that execution, or on execution on the same judgment, to satisfy and pay the same. There having been no such demand in the present case, we are of opinion, that the levy was void, and nothing passed by it to the de mandant.
Nonsuit confirmed-