Commonwealth Bonding & Casualty Ins. Co. v. Curry
Commonwealth Bonding & Casualty Ins. Co. v. Curry
Opinion of the Court
Thomas and J. J. Curry filed this suit against the appellant company and R. T. Stuart, seeking to cancel a certain promissory note, in the sum of $1,875, and to require the delivery to them of 62 ⅛ one-tenth shares of stock in the Bankers’ Trust Company, alleged to be in the possession of the defendant, Commonwealth Bonding & Casualty Insurance Company. They prayed in the alternative for judgment for the value of said stock, in the sum of $625. It is alleged that the contract for the purchase of this stock was entered into with R. T. Stuart, in August, 1910; that payment therefor was made by one note for $625 and the note for $1,875, mentioned above, and that said stock in the Bankers’ Trust Company was to be issued and attached to the last-named note as security; that they refused to purchase, and would not purchase, stock in the said Comm,onwealth Company. The grounds alleged as a basis for the cancellation of the note and the recovery of the stock, or its value, were that Stuart, as agent and promoter of the Bankers’ Trust Company, fraudulently induced plaintiffs to take stock in the Bankers’ Trust Company and to execute in payment therefor the notes above described; that said Stuart subsequently fraudulently delivered the note for $1,875 to the defendant Commonwealth Bonding & Casualty Insurance Company, together with plaintiff’s stock in said Bankers’ Tfust Company, which was attached to said note as collateral. The particular allegations of fraud are that Stuart represented that the Bankers’ Trust Company would be organized under the laws of Texas with a capital stock of $100,000, and a surplus of $300,000, for the purpose of loaning,. borrowing, and reloaning money on real estate in Texas, and that said Trust Company and said Stuart would furnish to plaintiffs $100,000 in loans, according- to the proposed plan. It was further alleged that the Bankers’ Trust Company, when organized, had a capital stock of only $100,000, and that it had no surplus fund whatever, whereby plaintiff’s stock in-said company was worth only $625, instead of $2,500 as it would have been had said company possessed a surplus of $300,000; that plaintiffs had procured customers who desired to borrow money on good and sufficient securities, and that application was made to defendant Stuart to furnish such money with which to supply such customers; but that said Stuart and Bankers’ Trust Company refused to furnish any money whatever. That the officers and managers of the said Commonwealth Company knew that plaintiffs had not subscribed for stock in said company; and that, on learning that the said Commonwealth Company held their note for which it had issued to them its stock, plaintiffs immediately notified it of said false and fraudulent representations made to them, and informed it that they *3 would not accept stock In It and would not pay therefor, and demanded the release, cancellation, and delivery to them of said note.
The Commonwealth Company answered, denying specially plaintiffs’ allegations of fraud and notice; alleging that it purchased said note of $1,S75 from the Bankers’ Trust Company for a valuable consideration before maturity and in the regular course of trade, without knowledge of any fraudulent representations made to the plaintiffs by any person, and without knowledge of any infirmity, and was therefore an innocent holder thereof, together with the securities attached to the same. Further, by way of es-toppel, it is alleged that the plaintiffs, after the issuance to them of its stock, and after the purchase by it of plaintiffs’ said note, and after plaintiffs were notified and after plaintiffs had full knowledge of the issuance to them of the stock in the defendant company, and of its ownership of their said note, plaintiffs exercised and asserted ownership of and title to said certificate of stock, and waived any right to complain of the matters set forth in their petition.
By supplemental petition, plaintiffs pleaded that they never knew of the issuance of stock in the Commonwealth Company at the time of its issuance and for a long time thereafter; that they never at any time, with knowledge of the facts, asserted ownership or title to said stock; nor gave defendant company any instruction as to the management or disposition of said stock; that if any such instruction was received from) plaintiffs it was procured by misrepresentation, fraud, and concealment; that at the time this note was delivered to defendant it knew the purpose and consideration for which said note was given; that it was given in payment of stock; that the transaction was illegal and void, and that the issuance of stock by the Commonwealth Company for and in consideration of the delivery to them of the note in controversy, was a transaction illegal and void; that the consideration for which said note was given had utterly and totally failed, in that the Bankers’ Trust Company was not organized so that its capital stock would be worth four for one, but was organized with only $100,000 capital and without any surplus, so that its stock was only worth the face value.
The case was tried before a jury and submitted on special issues. Upon plaintiffs’ motion for judgment, the court decreed'the cancellation of the note, rendered judgment against the Commonwealth Company for the delivery and possession to them of the shares of stock, and in the alternative, that if said shares of stock were not delivered to plaintiffs they should recover from the Commonwealth Company the sum of $625, with 6 per cent, interest from date.
“In order to charge subscribers, it must appear that their subscriptions were made to the particular corporation on account of which the liability is claimed, or that they have in some manner recognized their liability.”
Id. par. 45:
“The rule is not only founded in reason, but it has been expressly decided, that no person can be made a stockholder of a corporation without his consent, express or implied.”
The further point is raised by appellees that the Commonwealth Company issued its stock to them and that the only consideration therefor was the note in controversy. This note was intended by the makers to be turned into the Bankers’ Trust Company, and, when paid, to be a part of the proposed $300,000 surplus of that company. It had been diverted by Stuart, and taken by the Commonwealth Company in payment for shares of stock issued by that company. If it was understood that the note was taken in payment for the stock, both the note and the stock are clearly void, under the Constitution. Mason v. Bank, 156 S. W. 366; Sturdevant v. Falvey, 176 S. W. 908; San Antonio Irrigation Co. v. Deutschmann, 102 Tex. 201, 105 S. W. 486, 114 S. W. 1174. The transaction as between Curry and the Commonwealth Company cannot be considered as a subscription for stock, since they positively refused, when solicited by Stuart to do so, to take any stock in that company. So we think, regardless of the question of fraudulent representations, the issues should have been submitted to the jury.
What is here said disposes of the various contentions in appellant’s brief. We find no reversible error, and the judgment is affirmed.
<®s=>Eor other oases see same topie and KEY-NUMBER in all Key-Numbered Digests and Indexes
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Reference
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- COMMONWEALTH BONDING & CASUALTY INS. CO. v. CURRY Et Al.
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