103 Ga. 145 | Ga. | 1897
Arnold brought suit against the Albany Fertilizer & Farm Improvement Co., alleging that such company was indebted [to him $148.80, besides interest from January 1st, 1895, being the amount of a dividend alleged to have been declared to be due by the company to the plaintiff as a stockholder in said company, on certain shares held by him. The defendant in its answer admitted that Arnold was a stockholder, as was alleged, a,nd that a dividend had been declared by the company as alleged; but averred that before the 'dividend was paid the directors of said company found that it had been illegally and improperly declared, because the company did not at the time it was declared, nor when it became due and payable, have money in profits from the business of the company with which to pay the same; and that on December 31, 1894, the directors of the company rescinded the resolution declaring such dividend, because it was illegally declared. The petition in the case was filed in the office of the clerk of the superior court on the 16th day of September, 1895. It appeared from the evidence, that on the 6th day of June, 1894, the directors of the fertilizer company declared a dividend, which was to be paid on January 1, 1895, to the stockholders. Whether or not there were net profits from the business of the company sufficient to have declared and paid that dividend, is a question about which the evidence is conflicting. But whether or not the company did have such net profits on hand at the time the dividend was declared, it is not now necessary to decide, as we put the case on another and different ground. Be that as it may, on the 31st of December, 1894, the stockholders of the fertilizer company, by a resolution, revoked the declaration of the dividend declared on the 6th of June, reciting that that dividend was declared on the presumption that the earnings of the company would warrant the declaration and payment of the dividend, but that at that time, December 31, 1894, it was plainly evident that the dividend could only be paid by borrowing money, and that the earnings of the company would not justify it. It seems that the defendant in error was present at that meeting, and entered a protest to this revocation, and that in September thereafter He brought suit