Handley v. Stutz
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the court.
1. Although the resolution of May 31. 1886, increasing the stock of the company from $120,000 to $200,000, was not formally entered at that- time upon the books of the company, and nothing but a pencil memorandum was then made of the proceedings of the meeting, no objection can be taken to its validity by reason of such omission. The testimony shows clearly what took place at this meeting. It appears from the memorandum made by Mr. Allen, the acting secretary, to have been “ unanimously resolved that the capital stock of the company be increased to $200,000 as authorized by the charter, the purposes for which said stock is issued being the betterment of the present plant, and the construction of a new plant for coking purposes.” This resolution was subsequently, and in 18S8, when the omission to record the same appears to have been first discovered, formally entered upon the minute book of the corporation. The failure to enter this resolution at the time it was adopted did not affect its validity, as most corporate acts can' be proved as well by parol as by written entries. Moss v. Averell, 10 N. Y. 449.
2. Nor were the proceedings of such meeting any less binding upon those participating in it by reason of the fact that it was held without call or notice, and outside the boundaries of the State under the laws of which the company was incorporated. By an act of the legislature of Kentucky of March 3, 1876, General Statutes, page 769, “all elections for directors and other officers, by private corporations, etc., shall be held within the territorial limits of the State of Kentucky. . . . Any such elections held outside of Kentucky shall be void.” Beyond the election of offi iers, however, there is no statutory restriction of corporate action to the limits of the State, and in the absence of such inhibition the proceedings of such meeting would, within the rule laid down by this court in Galveston Railroad v. Gowdrey, 11 Wall. 459, with regard to directors’
3. It is further claimed that this issue of stock was invalid by reason of the fact that there was no amendment of the charter authorizing such increase ever recorded or published, as required by the law of Kentucky. The proceeding for the organization of incorporated companies is found in chapter 56 of the General Statutes of Kentucky, the fifth section of which requires a notice to be published for at least four weeks in some newspaper as convenient as practicable to the principal place of business, specifying several particulars, among which is the amount of capital stock authorized, and the times when, and the conditions upon which, it is to be paid in. Section six is as follows : “ The corporation may commence business as soon as the articles are filed for record in the office of the county court clerk, and their acts shall be valid if the publication in a newspaper is made, and the copy filed in the office of the Secretary of State, when such filing is necessarjq within three months from such filing in the clerk’s office. No change in -any of the foregoing particulars shall be valid, unless recorded and published as the original articles are required to
In the case under consideration, however, the articles of incorporation did provide that the capital stock should be $120,000, with power to increase to $200,000 by a majority vote of the stockholders, and there was no statutory inhibition, as in Kansas, against any such increase as it might be thought advisable to make. Here, then, Avas the power to increase the capital stock to the precise amount fixed' by the stockholders, at their meeting at Nashville, and the defect Avas merely in the failure to record and publish such change, as required by section six of the statute in question.
It is insisted by the appellees, and the learned judge of the Circuit Court so held, that the failure to record and publish this increase of the capital stock, Avhich Avas in fact, if not in name, an amendment to the original articles, which had fixed the capital stock at $120,000, was a mere irregularity and informality in the proceedings to effect the increase; such a one, as Avas said by this court, in Chubb v. Upton, 95 U. S. 665, 667, to constitute no defence to a subscriber, to such increased
So far as the question of liability to the proposed assessments is concerned, these defendants, with respect to their relations to this corporation, are divisible into two distinct classes: First, those of the original stockholders who received the $30,000 increased stock as a gift; second, those who subscribed to the $50,000 bonds, and received an equal amount of stock, as a bonus or inducement to make the subscription.
4. With regard to the first class, namely, the original stockholders, who voted for this increase of 800 shares, and then distributed among themselves 300 of those shares, without the shadow of right or consideration, it is difficult to see why they should not be called upon to respond for their value. The .only claim made upon their .behalf is that they never agreed to contribute or pay for the same; that the stock was expressly declared to be “fully paid ” and “free from all claims or demands upon the part of the company;” that there was no evidence tha^jthe creditors of the company knew of, or relied, upon, this increase, in their dealings with the company ; and that they had a right to return and surrender the same,
Ever since the case of Sawyer v. Hoag, 17 Wall. 610, it has been the settled doctrine of this court that the capital stock of an insolvent corporation is a trust fund for the payment of its debts; that the law implies a promise by the original subscribers of stock who did not pay for it in money or other property to pay for the same when called upon by creditors ; and that a contract between themselves and the corporation, that the stock shall be treated as fully paid and non-assessable, or otherwise limiting their liability therefor, is void as against creditors. The decisions of this court upon this subject have been frequent and uniform, and no relaxation of the general principle has been admitted. Upton v. Tribilcock, 91 U. S. 45 ; Sanger v. Upton, 91 U. S. 56; Webster v. Upton, 91 U. S. 65; Chubb v. Upton, 95 U. S. 665; Pullman v. Upton, 96 U. S. 328; County of Morgan v. Allen, 103 U. S. 498; Hawkins v. Glenn, 131 U. S. 319; Graham v. Railroad Co., 102 U. S. 148, 161; Richardson v. Green, 134 U. S. 30.
It is simply in affirmance of this general principle that section 14, chapter 56, of the General Statutes of Kentucky declares that nothing in the act conferring corporate franchises, or permitting the organization of corporations “ shall exempt the stockholders of any corporation from individual liability to the amount -of the unpaid instalments on stock owned by them.” If the corporation has no right as against creditors, to sell or dispose of this stock with an agreement that no further assessment shall be made upon it, much less has it the right to give it away, or distribute it among shareholders, without receiving a fair equivalent thérefor, and thereby induce the public to deal with it upon the credit of such shares, as representing the assets of the corporation. Union Mut.
5. Somewhat different considerations apply to those who subscribed for the bonds of the company, with the understanding that they were to- receive an amount of stock equal to the bonds as an additional inducement to their subscription. The facts connected with this transaction are substantially as follows : Some three years after the company was organized it became apparent that the enterprise, as originally contemplated,- namely, the mining and selling of coal for steam anti domestic purposes, was not likely to be a success, owing to the inferior character of the product; and the only hope of the company lay in the manufacture of the coal into an iron-making coke, that is, a coke containing a percentage of sulphur low enough to admit of the manufacture of merchantable pig iron. To embark in this, however, money was needed, and as
The case then resolves itself into the question whether an active corporation, or as it is called in some cases, a “ going concern,” finding its original capital impaired by loss or misfortune, may not, for the purpose of recuperating itself and providing new conditions for the successful prosecution of its business, issue new stock, put it upon the market and sell it for the best price that can be obtained. The question has never been directly raised before in this court, and we are not, consequently, embarrassed by any previous decisions on the point. In the Upton Cases, arising out of the failure of the Great Western Insurance Company; in Hatch v. Dana, 101 U. S. 205, and in Hawkins v. Glenn, 131 U. S. 319, the defendants were either original subscribers to the increased stock, at a price far below its par value, or transferees of such subscribers; and the stock was issued, not as in this case to purchase property or raise money to add to the plant, and facilitate the operations of the company, but simply to increase-its"original stock
To say that a corporation may not, under the circumstances above indicated, put its stock upon the market and sell it to the highest bidder, is practically to declare that a corporation can never increase its capital by a sale of shares, if the original stock has fallen below par. The wholesome doctrine, so many times enforced by this court, that the capital stock of an insolvent corporation is a trust fund for the payment-of its debts, rests upon the idea that the creditors have a right to rely upon the fact that the subscribers to such stock have put into the treasury of the corporation, in some form, the amount represented by it; but it does not follow that every creditor has a right to trace each share of stock issued by such corporation, and inquire whether its holder, or the person of whom he purchased, has paid its par value for it. It frequently happens that corporations, as well as individuals, find it necessary to increase their capital in order to raise money to prosecute their business successfully, and one of the most frequent methods resorted to is that of issuing new shares of stock and putting them upon the market for the best price that can be obtained; and so long as the transaction is bona fde, and not a mere cover for “ watering” the stock, and the consideration obtained represents the actual value of such stock, the courts have shown no disposition to disturb it. Of course no one would take stock so issued at a greater price than the original stock could be purchased for, and hence the ability to negotiate the stock and to raise the money must depend upon the fact whether the purchaser shall or shall not be called upon to respond for its par value. While, as- before observed, the precise question has never been raised in this court, there are numerous decisions to the effect that tlie general rule that holders of.stock, in favor of creditors, must respond for its par
Thus in New Albany v. Burke, 11 Wall. 96, a city subscribed to the stock of a railroad, and issued bonds for a part of the subscription, agreeing to issue them for the rest of it, when the road should be built to a certain point. The road relied mainly upon these bonds to raise the necessary money. The validity of the bonds being denied by taxpayers, who had filed bills to enjoin the raising of a tax to pay the interest, their value in the market was largely impaired, and it was found they could not be sold without a sacrifice. Under these circumstances the company applied to the city to pay a certain sum which had been borrowed by the road upon the pledge of the bonds already issued, with sundry other moneys, and in consideration thereof the city obtained from the company a large number of bonds which had not been negotiated, and a cancellation of the subscription. In a suit brought by a judgment creditor to enforce the original subscription, it was held that the compromise was legal, and the payment of such subscription would n.ot be enforced, although it subsequently turned out that the bonds were w'orth more than they could have been sold for. Said Mr. Justice Strong, speaking for the court: “ Had the company sold to a stranger, and then the city become a purchaser from the stranger, it will not be contended that any creditor of the company could complain. And it can make no difference whether the purchase was made directly or indirectly from the first holder of the bonds, assuming that there was no fraud. -• The transaction . . ■ . was, in substance, plainly nothing more than a purchase by the city of its own bonds, some of which had been issued and others of which it was under obligation to issue, at the call off the vendor. . . . Looking at it in the light of subsequent events, it was no doubt an advantageous purchase for the city; and, if the uncontradicted evidence is to be believed, it was deemed at the time an advantageous sale or arrangement for the company. . . . We may add, the evidence is convincing that -the contract between the city and the company was made in the utmost good faith, with no intention to wrong
So in Coit v. Gold Amalgamating Company, 119 U. S. 343, it was held that where the charter of a corporation authorizes, the capital stock to be paid for in property, and the shareholders honestly and in good faith pay for their subscriptions in property instead of money, third parties have no ground of complaint, although a gross and obvious over-valuation of such property would be strong evidence of fraud in' an action by a creditor to enforce personal liability. The court held that where full-paid stock was issued for property received there must be actual fraud in the transaction to enable creditors of the corporation to call the stockholders to account. In delivering the judgment of the court in that case at the circuit, 14 Fed. Hep. 12, Mr. Justice Bradley observed: “That trust (in favor of creditors) does not arise absolutely in every case where capital stock has been issued, and where it has been settled for by arrangement with the company. It is not as if the stockholders had given their promissory notes for the amount, these notes being in the treasury of the company; but there are often equities to which the stockholders are entitled — on which they are to stand.” As one of them, he mentioned the case of stock dividends fairly made in consideration of profits earned and of accumulations of the property of the company, and observed:. “ It is not true that it is in the power 'of a creditor in every case, and in all cases, as a mere matter of right, to institute an inquiry as to the valuation of the amount of the consideration given for the stock, and disturb fair arrangements for its payment in other ways than by cash. If the stock has been fairly created and paid for, there is an end of trusts in favor of anybody ; and this does not affect the general proposition that, unpaid subscriptions of stock are a trust fund to be administered for the benefit of creditors after a corporation becomes insolvent.”
A case nearer in point is that of Clark v. Bever, ante, 96, decided at ihc present term of this court. In tins case, a rail
So in Fogg v. Blair, ante, 118, also decided at the present term, it Avas held to be competent for a railroad, exercising good faith, to use its bonds or stock in payment' for the construction of its road, although it could not, as against creditors
In Morrow v. Nashville Iron and Steel Co., 87 Tennessee, 262, 275, 276, the Supreme Court of Tennessee held, that a contract with a subscriber to stock of a corporation, that for every share subscribed he should receive bonds to an equal amount, secured by mortgage on the company’s plant, is void as against creditors, and also between the subscriber and the corporation. But the court drew a distinction between such a case and sales of or subscription to the stock of an organized and going corporation. It said: “ The necessities of the business of an organized company might demand an increase of capital stock, and if such stock is lawfully issued, it may very well be offered upon special terms. In such case, if the market price was less than par, it is clear that a purchaser or subscriber for such stock at its market value would, in the absence of fraud, be
The liability of a subscriber for the par value of increased stock taken by him may depend somewhat upon the circumstances under which, and the purposes for which, such increase was made. If it be merely for the purpose of adding to the original capital stock of the corporation, and enabling it to do a larger and more profitable business, such subscriber would stand practically upon the same basis as a' subscriber to the original capital. But we think that an active corporation may, for the purpose of paying its debts, and obtaining money for the successful prosecution- of its business, issue its stock and dispose of it for the best price that can be obtained. Stein v. Howard, 65 California, 616. As the company in this case found it impossible to negotiate its bonds at par without the stock, and as the stock was issued for the purpose of enhancing the value of the bonds, and was taken by the subscribers to the bonds at a price fairly representing the value of both stock and bonds, we think the transaction should be sustained, and that the defendants cannot be called upon to respond for the par value of such stock, as if they had subscribed to the original stock of the company. Our conclusion upon this-branch of the case disposes of it as to those who were héld liable by virtue of their subscription to the bonds.
6. ¥e have no doubt the learned - circuit judge held correctly that it was only subsequent creditors who were entitled to enforce their claims against these stockholders, since it is only they who could, by any legal presumption, have trusted the company upon the faith of the increased stock. First National Bank of Deadwood v. Gustin Minerva Consolidated
7. With regard to the special defence set up by Neely, that he never consented to nor received certificates for increased stock, we agree with the circuit judge that it is not sustained. He did not live in Nashville, but had given a proxy to one
There are several minor points made in the briefs of counsel with regard to the claims of certain creditors, which we do not find it necessary to discuss at length. We think there was no error in the rulings of the court in these particulars.
It results that the deofee of the court below must be
Heserved, ••and the cause remanded for farther proceedings in conformity with this opinion.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting.
When the capital stock of a corporation has become impaired, or the business in which it has engaged has proven so unremunerative as to call for a change, creditors at large may well demand that experiments at rehabilitation should not be conducted at their risk.
My brother Lamar concurs with me in this dissent.
Reference
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- The failure to enter a vote of stockholders in. a corporation in the corporation records at the time when it was adopted does, not affect its validity. A resolution of stockholders in a corporation organized under the laws of Kentucky to increase the capital stock' of the corporation, passed at a meeting held without the limits of that State, is binding upon the members present and voting for it. An increase by a Kentucky corporation of its capital stock within the amount authorized by law is not invalidated by reason of the fact that no amendment of the charter authorizing such increase was ever recorded ; or published as required by the laws of that State. When a stockholder in a corporation who assents to an. increase in the capi- ■ tal stock of the corporation and its gratuitous distribution among the shareholders, receives such stock as full.paid stock, an obligation arises to pay for it in full, when called, upon to do so by creditors whose debts are subsequent to the authorization of the increase: but this equity does not exist in favor of a creditor whose debt was contracted prior to such authorization. An active corporation, finding its. original capital impaired by loss or misfortune, may, for the purpose of recuperating itself, and of producing new conditions for the successful prosecution of its business, issue new stock, and put' it upon the market, and sell it for the best price that can be obtainedand in such case no such trust in favor of a creditor arises against the purchaser who, in good faith, buys for less than par.