Smith v. Prior

Minnesota Supreme Court
Smith v. Prior, 58 Minn. 247 (Minn. 1894)
59 N.W. 1016; 1894 Minn. LEXIS 392
Buck, Mitchell, Sick, Toon

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Smith v. Prior

Opinion of the Court

Mitchell, J.

This was an action by the assignee of an insolvent corporation to recover from its stockholders unpaid stock subscriptions, the allegations of the complaint being merely that no part of the stock owned and held by the several defendants had been paid, except a certain specified sum. The pleading must be construed as declaring on a cause of action due from the stockholders to the corporation and founded on contract.

1st. Upon the trial, the plaintiff offered evidence tending to prove that the corporation had accepted, as full payment for the stock, property that was greatly overvalued and grossly inadequate in value to the par value of the shares.

This evidence was properly excluded, as not being admissible under the pleadings. The cause of action thus attempted to be proved was not one in favor of the.corporation, and founded on contract, but one in favor of creditors, and founded on fraud. Hospes v. Northwestern Mfg. & Car Co., 48 Minn. 174, (50 N. W. 1117.) The facts constituting the fraud on creditors should have been alleged. There is nothing in the Hospes Case inconsistent with this rule. In fact, the particular question of pleading here raised was not raised at all in that case.

2nd. The plaintiff then asked leave to amend his complaint by setting up the facts which he had thus sought to prove.

Assuming, without deciding, that the proposed amendment went far enough to be available to plaintiff, the change of base was so radical, and the facts sought to be pleaded as a cause of action so entirely different from those alleged in the complaint, that, assuming that it was a matter within the discretion of the court, we certainly *252could not hold that it was an abuse of that discretion to disallow such an amendment on the trial.

It is suggested that the answers of some of the defendants aided the complaint. We think not. They simply alleged payment in full for the stock in property, and in reply to this the plaintiff interposed a general denial.

Order affirmed.

Buck, J., absent, sick, toon no part.

(Opinion published 59 N. W. 1016.)

Reference

Full Case Name
John Day Smith v. Charles H. Prior
Cited By
3 cases
Status
Published