45 Kan. 164 | Kan. | 1891
Opinion by
The Arkansas Valley Agricultural Society was incorporated on the 5th day of June, 1880, with a capital stock of $5,000, divided into one thousand shares of $5 each, and had its place of business at Wichita, in
It is claimed that at the time of the issuance of the last stock, all the property of the corporation had been sold, which had consisted of thirty-six acres of land on the west side of Wichita, and known as the “Fair Grounds,” and the proceeds were then in the hands of the directois and officers of this association; that the shares were worth, about this time, including the entire issue of stock, $55 per share, and not including the four hundred and ten shares, about $93 a share; that the directors and officers knew, at the time they took and paid for said stock at the par value of $5 per share, the exact value of the stock of the society and the property it then held; that after all the shares had been issued, a dividend was declared on the one thousand shares of $25 per share; and that the total assets of the corporation were about $56,-900.
On the 26th day of April, 1887, the defendant in error, one of the stockholders of the society, commenced this action in the district court of Sedgwick county to enjoin the directors and officers from paying any dividend or dividends on the stock claimed to have been fraudulently issued, and that the same might be canceled, and for further equitable relief in the premises. Upon the filing of his petition, a temporary injunction was allowed, which was made perpetual upon a final hearing, by the court below. The plaintiffs in error bring this case here, and claim that the taking of the stock in a corporation stands
This rule, as applied to the directors or officers of a corporation, cannot be upheld. The principle of public policy forbids transactions of this kind. It appears from the evidence that the property owned by this corporation had been sold, and the proceeds sold held by its officers. The assets at the time of the sale belonged to the then stockholders, and the directors and officers had no right to subscribe for the remaining stock at par, and enrich themselves to the detriment and loss of the other shareholders. The directors cannot lawfully benefit or favor any particular shareholder or class of shareholders. Every authority possessed by them is a power and discretion in the directors, who are trustees for the benefit of all the shareholders alike, which is to be exercised for the benefit of all of them. (1 Waterman, Corp., p. 620; Harris v. N. D. Rld. Co., 20 Beav. 384.)
The effort on the part of the directors and officers of a society to obtain the unsubscribed stock at par, when they knew that each share of the stock already issued was worth eighteen times its face value, was clearly a fraud upon the rights of the other stockholders, and a flagrant violation of their duties as directors and officers of such association. The officers and directors of a corporation are trustees of the stockholders, and in securing to themselves an advantage not common to all the stockholders, they commit a plain breach of duty. (Koehler
The judgment of the court below should be affirmed.
By the Court: It is so ordered.