Individual liability for corporate debts, as incident to membership of a corporation, arises only from express legislative enactment, either in the charter, or by some general law, to which all similar corporations and their individual members are made subject. Trustees, &c., v. Flint, 13 Metc. 539; Ang. & Ames on Cor. § 341-591. Immunity from such liability is one of the inducements which has led to the multiplication of private corporations, and caused them to supersede to a great extent in hazardous enterprises, or enterprises requiring large capital, partnerships, of which individual liability of each partner, whether active, nominal, or dormant, and without regard to the amount of the capital he contributed, is a constituent principle. The advantages of a corporation over a mere partnership — its capacity to sue and be sued by its general name — to contract, binding only the “artificial being, invisible, intangible, and existing only in contemplation of law” — *194its indestructibility by any mere change in its membership— its capacity to act, within the scope of its powers, as a natural person, have been the motive and cause of their multiplication in all commercial communities. Experience soon proved that some checks were necessary to prevent improvident conduct and abuse of these corporate powers, and that a security to creditors not afforded by the general law, was indispensable. There has been, and is a disposition, to fix on the members of the corporation in certain events, or to a qualified extent, individual, personal liability for the debts of the corporation. At an early day in the history of our legislation, before and since the organization of the State government, in the incorporation of banking companies, the legislature departed from the established law, exempting the members of such companies from individual liability, and provided in each charter that for the debts of the company, the stockholders, at the time of contracting the debt, should be liable personally in proportion to the number of shares held by them. See charter of P. & M. Bank of Huntsville, passed December 11, 1816; Laws of Ala. 39, § IT ; Charter of Tombeckbee Bank, passed February 13, 1818, Ib, 44, § 5; Charter of Bank of Mobile, passed November 20, 1818, lb. 51, § 11; Charter of P. & M. Bank of Mobile, approved January 8, 1836; Pamph. Acts 1835-6, p. 10, § 11; Charter of Southern Bank of Alabama, approved February 12, 1850; Pamph. ¡Acts 1849-50, p. 125, § 21; Charter of Northern Bank of Alabama, approved February 10, 1852; Pamph. Acts 1851-2, p. 116, § 21. The law authorizing free banks, or free banking incorporations, provided a mode for enforcing against the share-holders judgments against the corporation. Code of 1852, § 1387. This section of the Code was subsequently repealed and a provision inserted, that the stockholders should be respectively liable for the debts thereof, in proportion to the stock holden therein. R. C., § 1689. The general law authorizing the creation of corporations for the construction of rail, turnpike, plank or macadamised roads, subjects the shareholders to a like liability, (Code of 1852, § 1468; R. C., § 1739,) and the general law authorizing the formation of mining, manufacturing and other private corporations, contains the provision now to be construed: “The stockholders of any such corporation are liable for all debts due by it, at the time of its dissolution, to the extent of their stock.” R. C., § 1760; Code of 1852, § 1478. These statutory provisions are in accordance with a well defined legislative policy prevailing in this State, and *195cannot be considered as borrowed from the legislation of other States.
The members of a private corporation, not being personally liable for corporate debts, the capital of the corporation was the source of its credit. This capital, as a fund for the payment of corporate debts, embraced all the property, real and personal, of which the corporation has the beneficial ownership. The subscriptions of the several members to its capital stock, or the acquisitions from the use of the capital, were alike liable for the payment of corporate debts. A subscription for stock converts the subscriber into the debtor of the corporation to the amount subscribed, and in the event of the insolvency of the corporation, can in equity be condemned to the satisfaction of creditors. Allen v. M. R. R. Co., 11 Ala. 437. In a court of equity, “the' stock and other property of private corporations, is deemed a trust fund for the payment of the debts of the corporation; so that the creditors have a lien or right of priority of payment on it, in preference to any of the stockholders in the corporation. Therefore, if a corporation is dissolved, the contracts of such corporation are not thereby deemed extinguished, but they survive the dissolution of the corporation.” 2 Story’s Eq. 1252; Wood v. Dummer, 3 Mason, 308; Mumma v. Potomac Co., 8 Pet. 281; Curran v. State of Arkansas, 15 How. 304; Paschall v. Whitsett, 11 Ala. 472; Allen v. M. R. R. Co., Ib. 437. When the legislature imposed on the members of the corporation, in the event of its dissolution, a personal liability for corporate debts to the extent of their stock, it was a mere increase of the security for such debts. It was not intended to exempt from or diminish the liability of the fund, which a court of equity regarded as pledged to the payment of corporate debts. To this fund was superadded the personal liability of the members, and whatever should be realized therefrom.
In a court of equity only, was the capital of the corporation treated as a trust fund, and subjected to the payment of corporate debts. If the fund could be reached at law, by legal process against the corporation, the remedy at law was adequate, and equity would not interfere. Then, legal priorities, dependent on legal remedies, would prevail. One creditor might obtain a preference in payment over another. When, however, a resort to equity became necessary, as the court proceeded upon the ground of a trust, attaching to all corporate debts alike, equality was equity, and no legal diligence would entitle one creditor to priority over another.
The personal liability of a stockholder to the extent of his *196stock, created by the statute, is for all the debts of the corporation. It does not depend on or spring out of contract with any or all of the creditors of the corporation, or with the corporation. The statute enjoins upon him as a duty to pay for the satisfaction of all corporate debts a sum equal to the amount of his stock. The duty is owing to all creditors and not to any particular creditor. This being the nature and character of the liability, no single creditor can be permitted to appropi’iate it to his satisfaction, to the exclusion of other creditors, who are equal in right and equity to him. A remedy to enforce the liability cannot be pursued at law. There is no legal remedy in which all creditors can unite, and in which judgment could be pronounced, awarding to each the exact measure of his rights.
There seems to us insuperable difficulties, not only technical, but founded in equity and good conscience, and in the spirit and policy of the statute creating this personal liability, to the maintenance of an action at law for its enforcement. The liability is single, distinct in amount — can it be split up into as many several causes of action as there may be creditors ? That an entire or single cause of action may not be divided or split into several, is an elementary principle. The liability arises only on the dissolution of the corporation. Until the dissolution it is contingent. That is the event rendering it capable of enforcement. On that event it accrues for the debts of the corporation, limited to the extent of the stock. If a suit is maintainable, which creditor shall be entitled to priority, he who first commences suit, or he who, by superior diligence, first obtains judgment? Can the stockholder after a dissolution of the corporation, when its credit is impaired, avail himself of its condition, to pay such creditors as he may choose to prefer, and thereby absolve himself from a liability due alike to all creditors ? If he is liable to a suit at law, at the instance of any corporate creditor, how can this right be denied him ? Can he speculate in the debts of the dissolved corporation, and avail himself of such debts as he may purchase as a set-off to his liability ? To what extent can the set-off be allowed — for the nominal value of the debts, or the sum he paid for them ? Suppose the corporation really indebted to him at its dissolution, can he set-off such debt, against the action of a creditor, pursuing a right not derived from the corporation, and which the corporation never had capacity to enforce, because it was not due to it ? The statutory liability is an additional security for the corporate debts, springing up on the dissolution of a corporation, to which the legislature intended the *197principle, that equality is equity, should be applied. Any creditor of the corporation suing for himself and on behalf of all other creditors, can in equity enforce it. In such suit all rights and equities can be fully adjusted, and every creditor receive satisfaction of his debt to the extent to which he is entitled. A court of law is incapable of this adjustment, and therefore the remedy is in equity only.
We are aware of the decision in Ibbotson v. Bank of Poughkeepsie, 24 Wend., 479. We have examined and considered it, and though it is founded on a statute not materially differing from ours, we cannot follow- it. It thwarts the spirit and policy of the statute, and is inconsistent with well defined legal principles. It seems to have led to a change in the legislation of New York. Walker v. Crain, 17 Barb. 119. It is inconsistent with the decisions in Massachusetts, and these decisions seem to us supported by the better reasoning. Baker v. Atlas Bank, 9 Metc. 182; Harris v. Dorchester, 23 Pick. 112; Crass v. Babcock, 10 Metc. 525; Spear v. Grant, 16 Mass. 9.
If the charge given by the court was erroneous, which we will not now consider, it was error without injury, as in no event was the plaintiff’s action maintainable.
The judgment must, therefore, be affirmed.