Mexican Gulf Railway Co. v. Viavant
Mexican Gulf Railway Co. v. Viavant
Opinion of the Court
The administrator of the estate of Antoine Bienvenu, deceased, sued for the amount subscribed for by the deceased to the capital stock of the Mexican Gulf Railway Company, pretends, among other matters 'by him pleaded in his defence, that the charter of the said company, by providing “ that if any stockholder shall fail or neglect to pay any instalment required to be paid for the period of thirty days nexP after the same shall have become due and payable, the stock on which such instalment shall have been called in, shall he forfeited to the company, (see page 56 of Laws of 1837,) precludes the plaintiffs from recovering the amount of the shares subscribed for, or in other words, that the company lias no other remedy than the forfeiture of the stock.
There was judgment below in favor of the plaintiffs, and the defendant appealed.
The facts established by the evidence show, that Antoine Bienvenu subscribed for twenty shares of the capital stock of the Mexican Gulf Railway Company, amounting to $2000, no part of which was ever paid by the subscriber; that nine calls were made
We concur with the Judge, a quo, in the opinion, that the faculty allowed by tjie charter, of declaring such forfeiture, can only be considered as a penal clause, which the plaintiffs might or might not avail themselves of, but which, if they did not choose to avail themselves of it, by notifying the stockholders of their determination to do so, did not deprive them of the right of requiring the execution of the obligation contracted by the stockholders respectively, and of instituting an action against the defaulting stockholders for that purpose. The question here presented is, between the Company and one of the stockholders; and, under the, 15th section of the charter, we are perhaps free to admit, that, as between themselves, at least, the remedy is alternative; that is to say, that the charter makes it optional with the Company to exact the penalty, by declaring that the stock, or the sums paid in, shall be forfeited, in case of non-payment, within thirty days, of any of
We conclude that the plaintiffs are entitled to recover the amount of the twenty shares subscribed for by the deceased.
With regard to the objection urged by the defendant’s counsel, that no books were ever opened according to the charter, and that, if .opened, they never were exhibited or shown to the deceased, who subscribed for his shares upon a list, or loose sheet of paper, presented to him by three persons who called upon him for that purpose, we think it is untenable. The evidence shows, that the deceased knew the nature and object of the obligation which he was contracting ; that he subscribed with his eyes open, and for the very object contemplated and provided for by the charter; that although he refused subsequently to pay the amount of his subscription, or to give his notes with interest, he was willing to give his notes without interest for the whole amount of his stock ; and we think it does not lie in the mouth of the administrator of his estate, to dispute the validity of an obligation contracted in good faith by the deceased. A very similar question was lately decided by us in the Western District, in the case of the Red
Judgment affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- The Mexican Gulf Railway Company v. Auguste Viavant, Administrator of the Succession of Antoine Bienvenu
- Status
- Published