delivered the opinion of the court:
It is first claimed by appellants in the argument that the judgment recovered in the law court against the stone company is not proper evidence of the existence of a claim against the corporation to charge property in good faith distributed to appellants, they not being parties thereto. It is a well settled rule that a judgment rendered in a court of competent jurisdiction is conclusive between parties and privies in regard to all matters of controversy determined by the judgment, and all persons represented by the parties, both plaintiff and defendant, are bound and concluded as privies by the judgment which may be rendered. It is also a well settled rule that a corporation represents the stockholders in all matters within the scope of its corporate powers transacted in good faith by the officers of the corporation. Among the conceded powers of corporations may be mentioned those of bringing and defending actions in regard to the rights and obligations of the corporation. Bissit v. Kentucky River Navigation Co. 15 Fed. Rep. 353, is an interesting case on this question, where the authorities are fully cited and commented upon in a noté.
This was a creditor’s bill by a creditor who had reduced his claim to judgment against the Singer & Talcott Stone Company, brought against the corporation and its stockholders, to reach assets belonging to the corporation which had been turned over by the officers of the corporation to the stockholders in fraud of the rights of creditors, and it is not claimed that the judgment against the corporation was obtained by fraud, or that there was a want of jurisdiction in the court in which the judgment was rendered. In the absence of fraud in obtaining the judgment against the corporation, and in the absence of a want of jurisdiction in the court wherein the judgment was rendered, we think the judgment in a. case of this character was conclusive against the stockholders as to the amount and validity of the claim of the creditor.
Three other grounds are relied upon to reverse the judgment of the Appellate Court: First, that the finding of the court, in the decree, that the stone company employed appellees before the expiration of its charter and while it had power so to do is not supported by any evidence in the case; second, that none of the living solvent stockholders who were parties defendant should have been dismissed out of court, but the decree (if appellees had been entitled to any) should have been that such stockholders pay the claim by a pro rata contribution; and third, that the appellants offered, by cross-examination of Post and by questions put to their own witnesses and by tender of evidence for the defense, to show that the appellees’ claim did not arise at the time Post testified that it did, that that claim was without merit, and that appellees never had any claim against the corporation. These questions were fully discussed by Mr. Justice Adams of the Appellate Court in the following opinion, in which we concur: .
“The court, in its decree, found as follows in respect to the claim of appellees, which was the foundation of their judgment against the Singer & Talcott Stone Company: ‘Said claim so reduced to judgment, and the liability of said company, were legitimately incurred by said company, in the exercise of said company’s corporate capacity and power, in and about the selling and disposing of its corporate property, and was so incurred by the employment by the Singer & Talcott Stone Company of the complainants herein on or about January 10, 1892, as real estate brokers, to procure for said company a purchaser for its said above described real estate,’ etc.
“The Singer & Talcott Stone Company was organized under ‘An act to authorize the formation of corporations for manufacturing, mining, mechanical or chemical purposes, ’ approved and in force February 18, 1857. The company was organized April 20, 1872, and the term of its corporate existence was fixed by its articles of association, and the license issued in pursuance thereof, at twenty years, viz., until April 20,1892. The specific objection to the above finding of the court is, that, excluding the evidence of Post, there is no evidence to justify the finding that appellees were employed by the Singer & Talcott Company prior to April 20, 1892. The pleadings in the lawsuit in which the judgment against the Singer & Talcott Stone Company was recovered by appellees, consisting of a declaration and a plea of the general issue, were put in evidence by appellees. The declaration contains a special count, in which is averred the employment of appellees by the company to procure for the company a purchaser of certain described real estate owned by it, at §10 per square foot or at such price as would be satisfactory tó the company, — appellees, for procuring such purchaser, to receive two and one-half per cent of the price paid, — and that appellees did procure such purchaser at a price satisfactory to the company, etc.
“The company was sued and declared against by the name ‘Singer & Talcott Stone Company, a corporation,’ and filed a plea of the general issue in that name, supported by an affidavit of merits by Edward T. Singer, in which affidavit the affiant states that he is the president of the Singer & Talcott Stone Company. The record of the judgment shows that the company, by its attorney, moved for a new trial and in arrest of judgment, and argued those motions, from all of which it appears that the cause was tried and judgment rendered on the merits. The judgment so rendered is conclusive that all matters essential to a recovery were proved. The action was assumpsit, and it was necessary to appear that the defendant, the Singer & Talcott Stone Company, had made a contract with the plaintiffs which it had the corporate capacity to make. It was, under the pleadings, clearly competent for the stone company to show, if such was the case, that the contract under which the plaintiffs claimed was not within the corporate power of the company; that it was ultra vires, and, therefore, that in legal contemplation there was no contract. A judgment is conclusive as to all defenses provable under the issues. 2 Black on Judgments, sec. 609.
“The judgment being conclusive as against the company, and, therefore, against the appellants, that the company had the corporate capacity to make the contract on which the judgment was based, then if the company had not such corporate capacity after April 20, 1892, as assumed by appellants’ counsel, the court was fully warranted by the record of the lawsuit in finding that the liability of the company was incurred prior to April 20, 1892.
“In support of the contention that no liability occurred prior to April 20, 1892, counsel for appellants rely on the averment in the declaration, ‘that on the first day of June, 1892, in consideration that said plaintiffs, at the request of said defendant," would procure a purchaser,’ etc. But it is elementary that a statement of the precise time is not necessary and that a plaintiff is not bound to prove the precise time stated. ‘Thus, in assumpsit upon a contract, the day upon which it is made being alleged only for form, the plaintiff is at liberty to prove that the contract, whether it be express or implied, was made at any other time. ’ (1 Chitty’s PI. — 9th Am. ed. — 257; see, also, Kipp v. Bell, 86 Ill. 577.) Such being the law, it can not be assumed that the precise time laid in the declaration was the time proved on the trial.
“Section 1 of ‘An act to amend an act entitled ‘Abatements, ’ approved March, 1845, and to extend the time for closing up the affairs of corporations, ’ in force March 24, 1869, (Sess. Laws of 1869, p. 1,) is as follows: ‘Be it enacteé by the People of the State of Illinois, represented in the General Assembly: That all corporations created by special acts or under general laws, and whose charter or acts of incorporation may have expired for any reason whatever, shall continue their corporate capacity during the term of two years for the sole purpose of collecting the debts. due to said corporation, selling and conveying the property and estate thereof.’ If this act applies to the Singer & Talcott Stone Company, then that company had power, for at least two years after April 20, 1892, to sell and convey its property; but appellants’ counsel, basing their argument on the words ‘may have expired,’ contend that it does not apply to that company but only to corporations created prior to its passage, and that the Singer & Talcott Stone Company was organized April 20, 1872, subsequently to the passage of the act. We cannot accede to this view. The act is general, applies in terms to all corporations, and is in part amendatory of chapter 1 of the Revised Statutes of 1845, entitled ‘Abatements, ’ which is a general law; and section 1, quoted supra,- confers a special privilege, namely, an extension of corporate life for two years beyond the time fixed by the charter. No reason is perceived why, the legislature should discriminate in favor of corporations organized prior to the passage of the act and against those thereafter organized. In Ramsey v. Peoria Marine and Fire Ins. Co. 55 Ill. 311, the court, commenting on the act in question, say: ‘It was evidently the intention of the legislature to preserve to corporations whose charters might be forfeited or their organization dissolved, the right to collect their debts and sell their property,’ etc. (Ibid. p. 316.)
“In Life Association of America v. Fassett, 102 Ill. 315, one of the questions presented was, whether the corporate life of the association, which was a Missouri corporation, had become extinct by reason of a decree of the circuit court of St. Louis, entered October 16, 1879, declaring it insolvent and dissolving it. October 15, 1879, prior to the entry of the decree, an attachment had been levied on the land of the association in this State. The court, after referring to sections 10 and 25 of chapter 32 of the statutes, by the former of which sections the corporate capacity of corporations is extended as by section 1 of the act of 1869, say: ‘From these and other provisions of the statute it clearly appears that it is a part of the settled policy of the State, at least so far as domestic corporations are concerned, that upon their dissolution, however that may be effected, they shall nevertheless be regarded as still existing for the purpose of settling up their affairs and having their property applied for the payment of their just debts, and we see no sufficient reason why the same policy should not, so far as practicable, be extended to foreign corpofations that have property here and are located among" us for business purposes. ’
“We have no doubt that section 1 of the act of 1869 applies equally to corporations organized before and after its passage, which being true, the Singer & Talcott Stone Company had ample power to sell and convey its property at any time between April 20, 1892, and April 20, 1894, and it evidently acted with this understanding, the deed of the land from the company to Chapin being dated January 3, 1893, and sealed with the corporate seal of the company. And if it had power to sell it had power to employ an agent for that purpose. Indeed, being a corporation, it could act only by an agent.
“The special count in the declaration in the lawsuit is for commissions earned by appellees in the procuring the purchaser of the company’s property, and the copy of the account sued on, which is, in substance, a bill of particulars, is for commissions earned in procuring the purchaser for the property, describing it, and limited appellees to proof of that claim. What has been said disposes of appellants’ second and third objections.
“The objection that it was error to dismiss the bill against some of the defendant stockholders, and that the decree should have been that the claim of appellees should be paid by all the stockholders, they contributing ratably, is untenable. This is a creditor’s bill, and not a bill under section 25 of the Incorporation act to dissolve and close up the business of the corporation, and it is not necessary to make all stockholders defendants. Young v. Farwell, 139 Ill. 326; Palmer v. Woods, 149 id. 146; Bartlett v. Drew, 57 N. Y. 587; Hatch v. Dana, 101 U. S. 205.
“The case of Bartlett v. Drew, supra, (approved in 104 Ill. 35,) was in its facts similar to the case at bar. In that case the plaintiffs had recovered a judgment against the New Jersey Steam Navigation Company, and an execution had been issued on the judgment and returned unsatisfied. Prior to the commencement of the suit in which the judgment was recovered, the navigation company had sold three of its steamboats and distributed the proceeds of the sale, $750,000, among its stockholders. The action was brought against the corporation and Daniel Drew, a stockholder, who had received as his share in the proceeds of the sale a much larger amount than the plaintiff’s judgment. Drew objected, as do the appellants here, that the suit should be against all the stockholders, to the end that each might contribute his proportion of the plaintiff’s judgment. The court overruled the objection, saying, among other things: ‘We are of opinion that the plaintiff’s right of action rests upon a very plain principle of equity. This is not a proceeding to dissolve and wind up the affairs of a corporation, or to marshal its assets, but the ordinary proceeding to collect a debt from a debtor unwilling to pay. * * * It is a very plain proposition that the stock and property of every corporation is to be regarded as a trust fund for the payment of its debts, and its creditors have a lien and the right to priority of payment over any stockholder. When stock and property have been divided between stockholders before all the debts of the corporation have been discharged, if any one stockholder is compelled to pay more than his fair share of any unpaid debt he may resort to his associates for equitable contribution; but with that proceeding the creditor has nothing to do, unless he chooses to intervene' to settle equities that may exist between his debtors.’
“That the capital stock and property of a corporation is a trust fund for the payment of its debts is fundamental in equity, and has been expressly recognized by the Supreme Court. (Clapp v. Peterson, 104 Ill. 26; Coleman v. Howe, 154 id. 458.) Equity regards the assets of a corporation in the hands of stockholders as the property of the corporation and subject to the claims of creditors of the corporation. In Bartlett v. Brew, supra, the court say: ‘Drew had a larg'e amount of the assets in his possession which belonged to the corporation when the plaintiff’s demand accrued, and some portion of which should have been applied in discharg-e of its obligation to the plaintiff. ’ The Supreme Court of this State has also decided that a judgment creditor, complainant in a creditor’s bill, has nothing to do with the equities as between the stockholders, and that when part, only, of the stockholders are made defendants, their remedy, if they desire equitable distribution of burden, is to lile a cross-bill. (Clapp v. Peterson, 104 Ill. 26; Coleman v. Howe, 154 id. 458.) In the present case no cross-bill was filed nor was leave asked to file one. If it be suggested that this was unnecessary because all stockholders were originally parties to the bill, the obvious answer is, that appellees, having the right to proceed against part of the.stockholders, clearly had the right to dismiss as to any of them, and the appellants were not warranted in presuming that they would not so do, and in omitting, on such presumption, to file a cross-bill. However, the remedy of appellants for equitable distribution of the burden of payment is not lost by this omission. They may file an- original bill for that purpose, if they see fit so to do.
“Appellants further object to the refusal of the court to permit cross-examination of the witness Post, and to the exclusion of evidence offered by them on the merits of the claim of appellees which was reduced to judgment. All of Post’s evidence having been excluded except that part of his testimony that the complainants in the present suit were the plaintiffs in the lawsuit, which evidence was unnecessary, the names being the same, the case stood as if Post had not been examined, and there was no ground for cross-examination. The evidence offered by appellants was properly excluded, because, the judgment being conclusive against them, they had no right to a re-trial of the suit at law. The evidence showed that each of the appellants has in his possession money of the Singer & Talcott Stone Company in amount largely in excess of the judgment against the company.”
The judgment of the Appellate Court will be affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.