148 Tenn. 388 | Tenn. | 1923
delivered tlie opinion of the Court.
In order to meet the growing demands of modern business, the legislature passed, in 1875, a general act to provide for the organization of corporations. Acts 1875, chapter 142. Sections 1 to 4, inclusive, provided for the organization of charitable, religious, and other general welfare, or not for profit, corporations. Section 5 provides:
‘'That the general powers of all corporations chartered for purposes of individual profit, the provisions of and restrictions in said corporations'shall be as follows,” and proceeds to set out the general powers, subject to expressed limitations, to be granted to all corporations of this class which may obtain charters in the manner prescribed in section 26 of the act. The first paragraph of this latter section reads as follows:
“Be it further enacted, that any five or more persons, over the age of twenty-one, desiring to form corporations for any of the foregoing purposes, shall copy the form of charter aforesaid adapted to the purpose, filling the necessary blanks, and append to' the same an application in these words: ‘We, the undersigned, apply to the State of Tennessee, by virtue of the laws of j:he land, for a charter of incorporation, for the purposes, and with the powers declared in the foregoing instrument. Witness our hands, the-day of-, 18 — ’ (to be signed by the applicants).”
The section then provides that when this instrument has been duly registered and a certificate given by the Secretary of State under the great seal of the State the formation of the company as a body politic shall be com
Now in preceding sections, 6 to 25 included (excepting sections 19 and 20, which relate to amendments and publication of lists by the Secretary of State), forms had been set forth for the use of persons desiring to form corporations for any one or more of the various purposes indicated. Section 18 reads as follows:
“Be it further enacted, that the form of a charter for a hotel in a city or town, or at a mineral spring, or other watering place, shall be as follows:
“ ‘State of Tennessee — Charter of Incorporation.
“ ‘Be it known, that (here insert the names of five or more persons above the age of twenty-one years) are hereby constituted a body politic and corporate, by the name and style of (here insert the name of the corporation), for the purpose of erecting, furnishing and keeping a hotel for the entertainment of guests and invalids, at or near a mineral spring in the county of-, or for the purpose of erecting or. furnishing a Hotel in a town or city’ (here describe the county and locality of the tract of land or lot upon which the hotel is already situated or to be built, and also the metes and bounds of the tract of land belonging to the corporation).”
The general powers, etc., are contained in section 5.
Then follow certain specific provisions applicable to this particular form of charter, for hotels, just as other
Since 1875, in response to demands as they arose, from time to. time, by amendments to this General Act the legislature has provided forms for additional charters, always restricted to purposes specifically defined and always expressly providing that the form of charter for the purpose designated “shall be as follows,” thus apparently intentionally limiting the charter in every case to the particular form described for the specific purpose.
However, with the evident purpose of eliminating the necessity of repeated amendments to the act of 1875, in 1903 the legislature passed an act, being chapter 474, the opening paragraph reading as follows:
“Be it enacted by the general assembly of the State of Tennessee, that all private corporations, excepting those now specifically provided for by existing statutes, for the transaction of any lawful business, or to promote or conduct any legitimate object or purpose for individual profit, may be formed and a charter obtained in the following manner. Any five or more persons over the age of twenty-one years, desiring to form such a corporation shall copy the following form of charter:
“State of Tennessee. Charter of Corporation. Be it known, that by virtue of the general laws of the land (here insert the names of the' incorporators); are hereby constituted a body politic'and corporate, by the ñamé and style of (here insert the name of the corporation), for the purpose of (here state specifically the purposes of the corporation, and amount of capital stock).”
Then folloAvs, first, section 5 of the act of 1875, in harmony with the forms for the various purposes provided
With this brief preliminary review we come now directly to consider the questions presented on this appeal.
The bill in this case alleges that — “The Whittle Springs Company Avas incorporated under the laws of the State of Tennessee on or about July 8,1916, with a capital stock of |80,000, and that on or about October 3, 1917, the capital stock of said company was increased to $150,000. The said company was organized for the purpose of erecting a a hotel at Whittle Springs in the suburbs of Knoxville, and said hotel was actually, in fact, erected and put in operation.”
It then charges that the charter of Whittle Springs Company contains a provision to this effect, namely: “If the indebtedness of said company shall at any time exceed the capital stock paid in, the directors assenting thereto shall be individually liable to the creditors for said excess.”
. Predicating liability upon this charter provision, the bill then seeks to recover from defendants as directors certain large sums of indebtedness, the corporation being insolvent, alleged to have been assented to by them, in excess of the capital stock paid in. The issue is raised by demurrer; the grounds being thus stated:
“It is shoAvn by the allegation of the original bill that the Whittle Springs Company was incorporated for the purpose of erecting and operating a hotel, and that it was incorporated under the laws of the State of Tennessee. At the time of said organization and incorporation the Acts of the General Assembly of Tennessee of the year 1875, chapter 112, section 18, and of 1897, chapter 32, had provided a form of charter under Avhich a corporation of that*394 character could and must be organized, and no other form of charter could be issued to a hotel company.. It is alleged by paragraph 2, p. 2, of the bill that the charter of the Whittle Springs Company contained the following provision :
“ 'If the indebtedness of said company shall at any time exceed the capital stock paid in, the directors assenting thereto shall be individually liable to the creditors for said excess.’ And it is upon this provision in the charter that the complainants seek to hold this defendant and two of the other directors of the corporation individually liable for its indebtedness in excess of the amount of the capital stock paid in. It appears from an examination of the acts of Tennessee authorizing the incorporation of hotel companies that the charter prescribed by law for a hotel company contains no provision, and if, as a matter of fact, the charter of incorporation of the Whittle Springs Company did contain such a provision then it was a mere surplusage, and will be read out of the charter and treated as a nullity in the same manner as the court will read into a charter of incorporation a provision that the act providing for the organization thereof required to be inserted therein.”
Shall this director liability clause be given effect as a legally authorized provision of the charter granted to Whittle Springs Company? The charter of this company was granted, as charged in the bill and as appears from the charter itself, for a hotel at a watering place. This clause is not among the specific or special powers, liabilities, or limitations set forth in the form prescribed in section 18 of the Acts of 1875, authorizing the granting of charters for such a purpose, and it is to this extent, at
“Be it further enacted, that the form of a charter for a hotel in a city or town, or at a mineral spring, or other watering place, shall be as follows.”
It is well settled that matter included, not prescribed by the specific forms adopted by this act and its amendments, adds nothing legally, and in construing the charter, will be read out of it; and, as a corollary, that the inclusion of such unauthorized matter does not impair the validity of the charter. Williams v. Railroad Co., 9 Baxt., 488; Tenn. Automatic Lighting Co. v. Massey (Tenn. Ch. App.), 56 S. W., 35; Shoun v. Armstrong (Tenn. Ch. App.) 59 S. W., 790; Heck v. McEwen, 12 Lea, 97.
The form of charter of Whittle Springs Company as actually issued substantially conforms in its general powers to the requirements of the act of 1875. After embodying section 5 of the act as called for, the further language of section 18 is omitted and other language substituted. The omitted clauses are five in number — two conferring privileges, the right to a deputized peace officer and the right to borroAV money, but this latter right had been included in the general powers under section 5. The two liabilities of stockholders to servants and of directors for illegally declared dividends are, in substance, incorporated in added paragraphs. The fifth omitted clause is a declaration of the applicability of existing laws regulating hotelkeepers, and innkeepers, which applied whether so incorporated in the charter or not.
It will thus be seen that this charter is in substance and in essentials a valid charter in accordance with the requirements of the act of 1875. The variations from the
Is it a contract for the benefit of creditors, binding upon these subsequently elected officers of the corporation, from the repudiation of which they are estopped? Suffice it to say that this is not the theory of the present suit, that there is no allegation that these complainants dealt with this corporation with actual knowledge of such a clause in its charter, and, being an unauthorized and illegally included clause, they had no constructive notice of it, and, not having relied upon it, no estoppel can be pleaded by them. Moreover, whatever may be true as to the applicants signing this charter, it may well be insisted by these defendants that they also were without actual or constructive notice of the existence of this unauthorized clause, and have incurred no obligation by reason of it.
But it is insisted, with great earnestness on behalf of complainants, that this charter conforms in its terms and provisions to the act of 1903, to which reference has been made, and that it is apparent that the application svas made and the charter obtained under that act, and this form does include the director liability clause relied ou. It is true that the language of the Whittle Springs Company charter follows the language of the form prescribed
It is insisted that, included in this charter, is a power to ship and sell water, and that this power is one not recognized or provided for in the hotel charter form under the act of 1875, and that this fact supports the insistence that this charter is issued under the general 1903 form act. This clause also must be read out of the charter as an unauthorized inclusion, but, while unnecessary here to decide, it is plausibly insisted that the right to; sell the water of the mineral spring at or near which the hotel is authorized by the charter to be conducted is an implied right of power incident to and growing out of those powers expressly granted. Doty v. Telephone & Telegraph Co., 123 Tenn., 329, 130 S. W., 1053, Ann. Cas., 1912C, 167, and authorities cited. But, however this may be, the inclusion of this clause is insufficient to change the funda
It follows from what has been said that the decree of the chancellor must be reversed, and the demurrer sustained, and the bill dismissed.