National Express & Transportation Co. v. Morris
National Express & Transportation Co. v. Morris
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the Court:
This action was brought by the National Express and Transportation Company, a corporation formed under the laws of the State of Virginia, against the defendant, Martin F. Morris, executor of the late Richard T. Merrick, deceased, to recover an assessment of 50 per cent, on certain shares of the capital stock of said corporation, alleged to have been subscribed for and held by said Merrick in his lifetime. The action is brought in the name of the corporation as legal plaintiff, for the use of George G. Carey, as substituted trustee, appointed by a decree of a court of chancery in the State of Virginia, and which assessment of stock was made by a decree of the Circuit Court of thb County of Henrico, of that State, dated March 26, 1886, in the case of W. W. Glenn’s Administrator against the National Express and Transportation Company.
The declaration alleges that Merrick was the holder of the fifty shares of stock assessed, and therefore liable to pay said assessment when lawfully required so to do; but the special circumstances under which the stock was acquired are- not alleged in the declaration. It is not alleged that Merrick subscribed for the stock of the National Express and Transportation Company after the charter of that company was obtained and the- corporation organized thereunder; nor is it alleged that the stock was assigned or
Several defenses were interposed, and among them the general issue pleas of never promised as alleged, and never indebted as alleged. The question, however, as to any special defense is quite immaterial on this appeal, as the court below, at the conclusion of the plaintiff’s evidence, directed a verdict to be entered for the defendant, upon the ground of the insufficiency of the evidence to support a verdict for the plaintiff, and this ruling of the court is the only ground of error assigned on this appeal.
At the trial the plaintiff placed in evidence a subscription list of the subscribers to the stock of the National Express Company, made at Georgetown, D. C., which is as follows:
“ Subscription list of the stock of the National Express Company.
“We, the undersigned, hereby subscribe the amount and number of shares opposite our names to the stock of the National Express Company, and bind ourselves, our heirs, etc., to pay said amount in such instalments as may be called for by said company, and to pay one per cent, at the time of subscription.”
To this heading appears the name, among others, of R. T. Merrick for fifty shares, of the aggregate amount of |5,000.
On this list were the names of twenty-eight subscribers, and the aggregate amount of stock set opposite their names was one thousand and ten shares. To connect the subscription of R. T. Merrick, one of the names on this list of subscribers for the stock of the National Express Company, to the stock of the National Express and Transportation Company, subsequently incorporated, the plaintiff proved the signature of Merrick to the subscription list to be genuine, or, rather the genuineness of the signature was not denied by the defendant; and then offered in evidence a large number
As will be perceived, there is no date to the list of the Georgetown subscribers to the stock of the National Express Company given in evidence; but, from the circumstances of the case, it is made quite clear that such subscription must have been made some time before the 30th of October, 1865. At the time of this subscription taken there was no law of Virginia authorizing the organization of the National Express Company, but there was a special statute of that State, entitled “ An act to incorporate the Southern Express Company,” passed March 22, 1861. It was under that act that the National Express Company was, or was attempted to be, organized. By that act certain persons named therein, their associates, successors and assigns, were declared “to be a body corporate and politic by the name of the Southern Express Company, for the purpose of an express transportation company.” The capital stock of the company was fixed at $500,000, with power to increase the amount from time to time as might be deemed necessary, not to exceed $1,000,000, but such increase was required to be sanctioned by vote in person or by proxy of two-thirds in amount of all the stockholders of tho company present. The company was authorized to commence business as soon as its capital stock was fully» subscribed and $50,000 of the same was paid in; and upon such subscription being made, a stockholders’ meeting could be called “ by serving a notice signed by the stockholders calling the meeting, of the time and place of such meeting, twenty days at least before the time of holding the same, on each stockholder personally, or by leaving it at his residence, or by
In September, 1865, á scheme was conceived by certain parties in Virginia, for organizing an express company, under the act just referred to, of March 22, 1861. With that purpose in view, a meeting was held in Richmond on the 18th and 19th of September, 1865. In explanation of the movement it was stated in that meeting that the parties concerned proposed to make the act of Virginia of March 22, 1861, the basis of the corporation proposed to be organized, but as a much larger capital would be necessary for it than that authorized in the charter referred to, and as other provisions not contained in that charter would be required, application would be made to the then next legislature, which would, as thought, no doubt grant the company a modified charter adapted to its objects and the magnitude of its plans. At that meeting a committee was appointed to take the necessary steps to bring about the organizatien of the corporation, and to open books for the subscription to the
At a meeting of this executive committee, held in Richmond, on the 12th of October, 1865, it was ordered that certain gentlemen be appointed to visit certain of the principal cities of the country, to promote the interest of the company, and to solicit subscription to the stock thereof, and to appoint agents to take subscriptions to such stock. And at that meeting it was resolved that the capital stock of the National Express Company be increased to $10,000,000, and that subscriptions to that amount be received, subject to the ratification of the next general meeting of stockholders. And it was further resolved that the next general meeting of stockholders should be held in the city of Richmond on the 30th day of October then instant, and that ten days’ notice thereof be given by publication in the'daily papers in certain named cities, but no notice was required to be published in the cities of Washington or Georgetown, in the District of Columbia, where Richard T. Merrick resided.
At the stockholders’ meeting, called pursuant to the previous resolution of the executive committee, and held on the 30th and 31st of October, 1865, the stockholders then assembled proceeded to organize the corporation and to elect a board of directors ; and the board of directoi’s then elected immediately thereupon elected Gen. Joseph E. Johnston president of the company. The stockholders also, at that
The amended or substituted charter was obtained from the legislature as proposed, having passed the legislature December 12, 1865. It is entitled “an act to amend and re-enact an act to incorporate the Southern Express Company, passed March 22,1861.; and to incorporate the National Express and Transportation Company.” It does not appear to have been accepted and adopted until January 16, 1866. On that day, it appears there was a meeting of the stockholders at Richmond, for the purpose of organizing under the new charter; and the organization was effected by the election of the then existing provisional board of directors, as directors in the new organization. At that meeting it was stated by the treasurer pro tem. that $4,329,100 of the stock of the company had been subscribed, and $173,687 of it had been paid in. There is, however, no evidence whatever that there was any previous notice given of this stockholders’ meeting.
By the amended or substituted charter of the 12th of December, 1865, it is provided that certain persons named, and their associates and successors, should be a body corporate by the name of the National Express and Transportation Company, for the purpose of doing an express and transportation business; that the capital stock of the company should be $5,000,000, with power from time to time to increase
But, instead of primary and direct p'roof that he did participate in such meetings and the organization of the corporation under the new charter of December 12, 1865, or consented in some binding form to become a stockholder in the latter corporation by virtue of his subscription to the projected corporation under the act of March 22, 1861, by the name of the National Express Company, the plaintiff proposed and attempted to establish the obligation of Merrick to pay for the stock so subscribed for, by showing and proving the entry on the stub in the stock book of the National Express and Transportation Company, which entry, with the blanks therein, is as follows:
“No. 146. Fifty shares. Date: Dec. 21st, 1865.
Issued to Richard T. Merrick, of Georgetown, D. C.
Received certificate as above described......18— Receipt on file.
Forwarded by express to Georgetown, D. C., December 22, 1865.”
It is insisted, however, on the part of the plaintiff, that the entries in the stock book of the National Express and Transportation Company should be received as primary evidence per se of the fact that Merrick was a stockholder in that company. To this we can not assent. For while it is clear, that if it be established that the party'charged is a member of the corporation, the entries in the books of the corporation, made in the regular course of the business of the company, would be admissible against the member to show the amount of stock subscribed for, the amount due thereon, and when the calls were made for payments; yet such entries are not, per se, evidence sufficient to establish the fact of membership, and to charge the party as a stockholder of the corporation. But if such books and entries were accompanied with other proof, such as that the alleged •subscriber to the stock attended the meetings of stockholders or otherwise participated in organizing the company; or applied for, or received the certificate of stock of. the National Express and Transportation Company after it was
This principle is held, and very fully and clearly illustrated, in the case of Keyser v. Hitz, 133 U. S. 138, 149. That was the case of an action brought to recover an assessment of stock of a national bank. The assessment was made upon the stockholders equally and ratably; and it was averred in the declaration that the defendant held or owned at the time of the bank’s suspension, 200 shares of its stock; and that, by reason thereof, the plaintiff was entitled to recover the amount of the assessment. The defendant pleaded not indebted as alleged, and that she did not at any time hold or own any stock in said bank; and that the entries in the books of the bank showing her to be a stockholder were without her authority and fraudulent. Under the instruction of the court below the verdict of the jury was found for the defendant. On writ of error, the Supreme Court of the United States reversed the judgment, but in their opinion they said:
“We must not be understood assaying that the mere transfer of the stock on the books of the bank to the name of the defendant imposed upon her the individual liability attached by law to the position of shareholder in a national banking association. If the transfers were, in fact, without her knowledge and consent, and she was not informed of what was so done — nothing more appearing — she would not be held to have assumed or incurred liability for the debts, contracts and engagements of the bank. <But if, after the transfer, she joined in the application to convert the savings bank into a national bank, or in any other mode approved, ratified or acquiesced in such transfer, or accepted any of
The plaintiff, however, contends that, upon the special circumstances of this case, the fact that the name of Merrick appears on the stock book of the National Express and Transportation Company, when taken in connection with the previous subscription to stock in what was called the National Express Company (though at the time of such subscription there was no such legally organized corporation in existence) should be held sufficient to give rise to a prima facie presumption that Merrick was or had become a stockholder in the National - Express and Transportation Company. But this proposition can not be maintained to the extent contended for, and does not relieve the case of the difficulty under which the plaintiff is placed in respect to the proof required to be supplied to establish the fact that Merrick was a stockholder in the plaintiff corporation. There must be proof, legal and competent, to establish the existence of a contract of subscription to the stock of the plaintiff; and while it is true that such contract maybe shown to exist without formal subscription in writing, yet the evidence must be such as to establish the legal existence of a binding contract for the stock of the plaintiff corporation. It is not pretended that there was any formal written subscription to the stock of the National Express and Transportation Company; and the only evidence offered upon which to base the finding of a binding contract of subscription to the capital stock of that corporation is the previous subscription by Merrick to the stock of what was called the National Express Company, and the books, with the entries therein, to which we have referred, of the subsequently organized corporation of the National Express and Transportation Company. And upon this evidence it is gravely
It is-true, in the case of Finn v. Brown, 142 U. S. 67, and also in the case of Hammond v. Straus, 53 Md. 1, 15, and in certain other State decisions, the dictum of Justice Clifford is referred to with apparent approval. But in neither the case of Turnbull v. Payson, or Finn v. Brown, or that of Hammond v. Straus, was the dictum of Mr. Justice Clifford at all essential to the decision of the case. In eaoh of those cases there was abundant evidence, without the aid of the presumption stated, to maintain the action against the defendant. What was said, therefore, by Mr. Justice Clifford and apparently cited with approval in the subsequent cases, was nothing more than a mere obiter dictum, and such as plainly contravenes the .first principles of evidence.
The same contention was made and strongly urged by .this same plaintiff in the case of Carey v. Williams, on review in the Circuit Court of Appeals for the second circuit, before Mr. Justice Peckham, Circuit Justice, and Wallace and Shipman, Circuit Judges, April 18,1897. 79 Fed. Rep. 906. That was a case, like the present, of an action brought against an alleged stockholder of the corporation to recover an assessment upon stock. In that case the plaintiff sought
“Inasmuch as there was no evidence of the alleged admission of the defendant, the only evidence in the case tending to prove that he was a stockholder was that consisting of the entries in the books of the corporation. We are thus brought to the important question in the case, which is, whether the entries contained in the corporate books of the company afford prima facie evidence that the defendant was a stockholder. The relation of corporation and stockholder is a contractual one, and can only be created with
“It is an elementary rule of the law of evidence, that a party can not make evidence in his own favor, of a contract, by his own statements or declarations of its existence or its terms. They are evidence against him but not for him. Accordingly, it has uniformly been held that entries in the books of a co-partnership, in the nature of declarations showing who are the persons that compose the firm, are not evidence in behalf of the partners, as against a third person, for the purpose of showing that the latter was a member of the firm. There is no reason why a different rule should be applied to the entries in the books or records of a corporation which tend to charge a party with the responsibilities of a stockholder. Corporations are not exempt from the ordinary rules of evidence, and there is no stronger presumption of honesty, or regularity, or accuracy, as to their books or. records than there is in the case of natural persons.
“Prior to the case of Turnbull v. Payson, 95 U. S. 418, in which Mr. Justice Clifford made an observation to the contrary, there was no respectable authority for the proposition that, without the aid of some statute changing the ordinary rule of evidence, the appearance of the name of a person on the books of a corporation as a stockholder, without other evidence, created a presumption, as against him, of his ownership of the stock. The only reported decision in which it had been so declared was the nisi prius case of Hoagland v. Bell, 36 Barb. 57. The opinion consisted merely of the statement that the appearance of the defendant’s name on the stock book as a shareholder was prima facie
In a subsequent part of the opinion the court say: “The remark of Mr. Justice Clifford in Turnbull v. Payson has been cited in several subsequent adjudications as authority for the general proposition which it embodies (Lewis’ Adm. v. Glenn, 84 Va. 947; Vanderwerken v. Glenn, 85 Va. 9; Railroad Co. v. Applegate, 21 W. Va. 172), in all of which cases it was unnecessary to decide the proposition, because there was other evidence tending to show a subscription for or purchase of shares by the defendants, and in Liggett v. Glenn, 51 Fed. Rep. 381, where the point was not necessarily in question, the judgment proceeded upon the ground of the erroneous reception of evidence.
“Read in connection with the facts of the case, it is by no means clear that Mr. Justice Clifford meant to imply that the prima facie presumption would arise merely from the appearance of the name of the alleged stockholder on the books of the corporation. The case was one where the name properly appeared upon the books, and it is to be presumed that the observation was addressed to the state of facts under consideration. In any other view it was obiterUnder the circumstances we do not feel constrained to con' sider the proposition as fully decided by Turnbull v. Payson, and we think it is such á departure from principle that it should be rejected. In many cases its application might be most dangerous and unjust. Where the alleged stockholder
The principle of the case just cited and quoted from was fully adopted and followed in the case of the Iron Company v. Green, 88 Fed. Nep. 207, in the same Circuit Court-of Appeals that decided the case of Carey v. Williams. And in the case of Chase v. Railroad Co., 38 Ill. 215, the question was whether the corporate books were admissible against a defendant in an action to recover for unpaid shares; and the court were unanimously of the opinion that they were not, in the absence of proof that the defendant was a member of the corporation. Chief Justice Breese, in delivering the opinion of the court, placed the decision upon the principle that a party can not make evidence for himself against a third party. See, also, the cases of Rudd v. Robinson, 126 N. Y. 113, and Bryce v. Joynt, 63 Cal. 375.
The text-writers upon the principles of evidence would seem to be all of one opinion upon the subject, and to maintain that eutries in the books of a corporation are not admissible in evidence,per se, to charge a party as shareholder. In Thompson on Corporations, Sec. 1924, it is said that “on principle, the books and records of the corporation are not •competent evidence to prove that the defendant is a stockholder; for the general rule is that one party to an alleged contract can not prove the existence of a contract by its own private memoranda or record. The mere statement of this principle ought to be enough to convince one of its correctness without argument.” The same principle is laid down, as settled law, in Whart. on Ev. (3d Ed.), Sec. 662, where it is said that, in suits by corporations against its members, its books can not be used as proving on behalf of the corporation its self-serving entries.
The same principle is applicable in regard to the non-admissibility of the corporate books and the entries therein, as is applicable in the case of partnership, where it is sought to establish the partnership relation as against a particular
As conclusive to show that, by the common law and according to the general principles of evidence, the books of private corporations and the entries are not admissible per se to establish the fact that a particular individual is stockholder in the corporation, we may refer to the fact that in England and in some of the States of this country legislation has been had, providing that stock books or registers of private corporations may be received as prima facie evidence of the defendant being a stockholder, and of the number and amount of shares, in actions for calls made upon the stock. We have an example of this in the English Statute of 8 & 9 Viet., Ch. 16, Sec. 28. But ip regard to such legislation, even by the British Parliament, it has been said, that “it is a strong measure to make a book kept by -the company evidence against third persons; and therefore the requisite of the statute ought to be strictly pursued.” Railroad Co. v. Brownrigg, 4 Exch. 426, 429. And it is said by Taylor in his work on Evidence, Vol. 2, page 1516: “Parliament having, in these instances, disregarded the common law rule
But it is contended by the plaintiff that the statute of Virginia, which provides that “A person in whose name stock or shares stand on the books of a company shall be deemed the owner thereof as regards the company,” authorized the introduction of the books of the corporation as evidence against the defendant. To this we can not agree. It is manifest, we think, that this provision of the statute has no application to a case like the present. It does not profess, in terms, to make the books of the company admissible as evidence in favor of the company in actions against third parties. And as was said by the court in the case of Carey v. Williams, supra, where the same contention was urged as is urged here: “This statute only means that a corporation which has acknowledged such a person as stockholder and admitted him to be such upon its records, shall not be at liberty to dispute the relation. Its language does not require any broader meaning to be given it.”
If, however, it were conceded that the courts of Virginia would so interpret this provision of the statute as to admit the books and entries therein as evidence in favor of the corporation against a defendant sought to be charged as stockholder, it would not by any means follow that courts of other States and jurisdictions would so hold. But apart from the mere construction of the statute, the statute relates to a question of evidence, and not to the law that governs the making and interpretation of the contract; and it is a well settled principle, that the law of the State or country
It follows therefore that the judgment of the court below must be affirmed; and it is so ordered. Judgment affirmed.
Mr. Justice Morris did not sit with the court in the hearing of this cause, his place being taken by Mr. Justice Cox, of the Supreme. Court of the District of Columbia.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- THE NATIONAL EXPRESS AND TRANSPORTATION COMPANY v. MORRIS
- Status
- Published
- Syllabus
- Evidence ; Corporations ; Stock and Stockholders ; Conflict of Laws. 1. In an action to recover an assessment upon an alleged siibscription to the capital stock of a corporation, if it be established that the party whose estate is sought to be charged was a member of the corporation, the entries in the books of the corporation, regularly made, are admissible in evidence against his estate to show the amount of stock subscribed for, the amount due thereon, and when the calls were made for payments; but such entries are not, per se, evidence sufficient to establish the fact of membership and to charge the party as a stockholder. 2. The fact that the party whose estate is so sought to be charged signed a subscription to stock in the National Express Company, which had no legal corporate existence, will not render entries in the stock books of the National Express and Transportation Company admissible in evidence as tending to show his membership in the latter company. 3. A statute providing that “A person in whose name stock or shares stand on the books of the company shall be deemed the owner thereof as regards the company,” will not, in such a suit, justify the admission of the entries in the books of the corporation as prima facie evidence of the membership in the corporation of the party whose estate is sought to be charged. 4. The law of the State or country where a contract is sought to be enforced, and not that of the State or country in which it was made, governs the question of the admissibility of evidence in a suit upon such contract.