91 Ky. 94 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1891
delivered the opinion oe the court.
The appellee, D. B. Bayless, brought this action, on September 3, 1885, to compel the appellant, the American Wire-Nail Company, to transfer to him upon its books eighty-nine shares of its capital stock, of the par value of one hundred dollars each, purchased by him of the appellee, J. L. Stephens, on July 30, 1885, and evidenced by two certificates, one for forty-four shares, dated November 7, 1883, and the other for forty-five shares, dated January 14, 1884. The company, although proper demand for the transfer was made, resisted upon the ground of a fraudulent issue of stock to Stephens, and that Bayless was not an innocent purchaser. It also made its answer a cross-petition against Stephens and the appellee, Mecklenborg, claiming judgment against them for the alleged fraudulent stock issued to them, and that the judgment it might obtain against Stephens be liquidated pro tanto by a cancellation of the stock improperly obtained by him according to its face value.
The appellant corporation was created in 1875; the corporators appear not to have been numerous; the
It is maintained by the Hedges that Stephens and Mecklenborg represented to them that they had paid into the concern thirty thousand dollars, or that the company had that much paid-up capital; that the subscription of B. H. Hedge would increase it to forty
The direct evidence upon this issue between the parties is very conflicting. Resort may, therefore, well be had to the conduct of the parties to the transaction and all the attending circumstances. Thus tested, we
In 1883 the two Gfedges and Stephens bought out Mecklenborg, and divided his stock, amounting to eleven thousand six hundred dokars, in certain proportions between them. B. H. Gfedge had become a director in the company soon after coming into it in 1882. In August or September, 1883, he became its book-keeper, and, in November following, its secretary. The stock certificates which were issued upon the division of the Mecklenborg stock were attested by him as secretary, and the certificate for the forty-four shares thus obtained by Stephens and then issued to him is one of the two that were assigned to the appellee, Bayless. The other was subsequently issued to Stephens for profits coming to him from, and not drawn out of, the corporation in money, but taken in stock; and this certificate is also attested by B. EL Gfedge as secretary.
The issual of this stock was not, as to the corporation, ultra vires. It was not an issue of stock beyond that authorized by its charter. It is only claimed that it was a fraudulent issue brought about by the fraud of the beneficiary. This being so, if the appellée, Bay-less, be an innocent holder, he is in law protected, even if' the stock was issued through fraud, because it does not lie in the mouth of a corporation, after issuing-stock, to say to a bona, fide holder that it is void.
The Hedges had an opportunity, when they became stockholders, to examine into the condition of the company’s business. One of them, soon after he became a stockholder, was made a director. He afterward became the book-keeper, and then the secretary of the company. Both of them united in the purchase of the Mecklenborg stock, and the evidence shows that they have sold the stock thus gotten, or a part of it, since they say they discovered
Under section 606 of the Civid Code the deposition of Mecklenborg was not competent. The depositions of others, not parties to the action, had already been taken in chief. True, it was taken for Stephens, but the witness was also really testifying for himself. He was a party to the action, and interested in the result. The issue made by the answer of Stephens was for both, because it was of such an inseparable character that the answer operated for each of them. Disregarding the testimony of this witness, however, the evidence still preponderates in favor of the appellees.
It matters not upon what ground the lower court decided the case. If the result there reached be correct, the judgment will be affirmed.
Complaint is made that, although Mecklenborg did,
The defense is, that the stock was fraudulently issued. The appellant proceeded upon this ground. It sought relief against Stephens and Mecklenborg for this reason. If it was not fraudulently issued, then, upon its own statement, it was not entitled to any relief against either of them. Their positions were identical. The answer of Stephens puts every thing as to both of them in issue. It operated like a plea of payment would for his co-defendant, Mecklenborg, who did not answer.
Not only does the evidence sustain the view asserted by the appellees, but the conduct of the appellant is
'In view, therefore, of the laches of the appellant, its silence and conduct as to this stock until this suit
The judgment is affirmed.