168 Mo. 316 | Mo. | 1902
— This appeal comes up on a copy of the judgment and of the order granting the appeal in lieu of'h full transcript, and the printed abstract filed by appellant gives what purports to be the substance of the pleadings and of some of the orders of the court, including an order of reference, the report of the referee, - the exceptions to the report, the rulings on the exceptions and the judgment. The evidence before the referee is not given. The respondents file a motion to affirm and a motion to dismiss the appeal for alleged insufficiency of the abstract and failure to comply with the rule of court in that respect.
Since appellant has failed to bring up the evidence he can not ask this court to consider any of his exceptions relating to the findings of fact by the referee, but must accept those findings and can complain only of the conclusions of law drawn from those facts. Respondents have no ground to complain of this because the findings of the referee are in the main in their favor. The motions to affirm and dismiss are therefore overruled.
The suit is by the receiver of the Ozark Onyx Company against the stockholders of that corporation, to recover balances he claims to be unpaid on their several stock subscriptions.
The case was referred to Hr. P. Taylor Bryan, who made an elaborate report, which is set out in the printed abstract,
The corporation was formed under the laws of this State in 1891 with a nominal capital of $300,000, stated in its articles to have been all subscribed and fully paid in cash. None of the subscriptions, however, were paid in cash, but the organizers were the owners of certain lands in Pulaski and Crawford counties, believed to contain valuable onyx deposits which, pursuant to the understanding among them from the beginning, they put into the concern at a valuation of $200,000, as in payment to that extent of their subscriptions, and one subscriber, being the owner of certain onyx works and machinery in Vermont, put the same in at a valuation of $90,000, as in payment of his subscription to that extent. On the subject of the actual values of these properties the referee in his report, after referring to the deposits of onyx on the lands, said: “The conclusion of the referee on these facts is that these deposits added little, if any, real value to the land.' There was no evidence before the referee sufficient to enable him to determine accurately what was the real value of the lands of the Leighton syndicate and Rood. While they were worth probably more than what was received for them at the receiver’s sale, the referee would not be justified in finding that the lands turned in by the Leighton syndicate were, in fact, of any greater value than the amount which Leighton paid for them, namely, $4,000 or $4,500, or that the lands turned in by Rood were of any greater value than the amount which Rood paid for them, namely, $3,000.”
And on the subject of the value of the property turned in by the Vermont man, the referee after discussing it in detail says: “The referee concluded, therefore, that the real value of the entire property of all kinds, turned in by Reynolds in payment of the $90,000 worth of stock originally subscribed by him, did not exceed the value of the plant and machinery and that portion of the. supplies which were turned in by him.
But in spite of those facts the referee found that these men verily believed that they had onyx mines of wonderful wealth on their lands, and that the same were worth at least the amount at which they were turned'into the company in payment for their stock, namely, $200,000. And the referee was also satisfied that they believed that the advantage to. the new corporation that would accrue from having the Vermont concern break up its established business in that State and remove with its machinery, its business, its secret processes in handling onyx, its prestige, its good-will, was worth the $90,000 at which the company took the same in payment of the stock issued therefor.
Then the referee, coming to the question of fraud, said:
“The referee has, at the expense of trying the patience of the court, gone into each fact which has been urged by the plaintiff as showing fraudulent intent in incorporating this company. He has done this because the case is one where the property transferred to the corporation was, as subsequent events have disclosed, of a small value as compared to the capi*324 tal stock issued therefor. Rut after a thorough examination of the facts, and though the referee believes that in many respects the original subscribers to stock-acted incautiously he has not been able to arrive at the conclusion that the incorporators were guilty of any intentional deception as to the public or creditors of the corporation. In valuing the property which was transferred to the corporation, they valued it on the theory that the lands taken in connection with the plant and processes and management of Reynolds would yield a dividend of six per cent at least upon the valuation; and while it is probable that neither the land by. itself, not the plant of Reynolds by itself, nor any one of the items of property which went to make up the entire amount of property turned into the corporation, could have been sold even at that time in the open market at the value placed upon them, yet when taken together it is readily conceivable that they might have been considered worth, in the minds of the incorporators, the price at which they were turned into the corporation. If the lands in Pulaski and Crawford counties had been really lands having large deposits of onyx of good quality, they might well have been thought worth the par value of the stock issued for them.”
After the formation of the corporation the original incorporators transferred to the treasurer of the concern as trustee, each one-third of his stock, to be sold to raise a working fund for the benefit of the corporation.' Some of this treasury stock was sold to certain of the defendants in this suit at fifty cents on the dollar of its face value, and the plaintiff seeks to hold those purchasers in this proceeding liable for the remaining fifty per cent. The referee finds that those men purchased the stock in good faith believing it had been originally fully paid.
There were also some private sales by the original stockholders of part of their shares. The referee does not know from the evidence how much was paid at such sales except in the case of Mr. Rrown who paid forty per cent of the face
The concern ran about two years, during which its efforts to develop its onyx mines resulted.in disappointment, became involved in debt and was finally brought to an end by a suit at the instance of the assignee of the Providence Jewelry Company, a creditor, in which suit a receiver was appointed to take charge of the corporation and wind up its affairs. After the appointment of the receiver, creditors were notified to come in and prove up their claims, whereupon creditors came in and claims were proven up and allowed by the receiver, who under order of the court was acting as auditor of claims, to the amount of $25,258.85. Of that amount, $19,487.49 was allowed in favor of the assignee of the Providence Jewelry Company. One of the original incorporators of the Ozark Onyx Company was the defendant, James E. Leighton, who owned 6,000 shares of the stock which he had paid for with part of this Pulaski county land, and he was the president and chief business man of the concern. He _was also the president and chief business manager of the Providence Jewelry Company. It was he who advanced the money to the onyx company which made the debt allowed in favor of the assignee of the Providence Jewelry Company. The referee could not find from the evidence whether the money so advanced was the money of Mr. Leighton or that of the jewelry company of which he was president. It was advanced from time to time in various sums, and finally put in the shape of notes signed by the Ozark Onyx Company and J. F. Leighton-, president, payable to J. F. Leigh-ton, and by him indorsed in blank and turned over to the Providence Jewelry Company, and these were found by the assigneo among its assets after it made an assignment.
None of the other creditors who proved up their claims had any such connection with the onyx company as rendered them chargeable with notice, when they extended the credit,
The referee takes up the subject of the conduct of the business and points out that it was conservative, guarding as far as possible against incurring debts, calls attention to the fact that the total amount of debts established did not exceed the value of the property turned in by the stockholders according to the actual prices they paid for it, and that of the debts incurred the largest part was advanced by Mr. Leighton himself. Then the referee concludes that subject thus:
“The referee finds, therefore, that the original subscribers to the capital stock of the company did not intend to deceive the future creditors of the company; nor were they actuated by any improper motive in paying for their stock with the property in question. . The referee further finds that though the incorporators may have been guilty of a lack of caution in valuing the property which was turned into the corporation, yet it can not be said that they had no reason for their belief as to the value of the property, nor was their action so utterly reckless as to convince the referee that they were indifferent as to what was the actual value of the property. The referee, therefore, finds that in the organization of the company there was no actual fraud.”
After the amount of the indebtedness had been thus ascertained the receiver was ordered by the court to sell the assets of the corporation for the purpose of paying its debts. Under that order the receiver sold all the property of the company including the lands in Pulaski and Crawford counties, and the machinery, plant, etc., and realized at the sale about $4,500, out of which he paid a dividend of a small fraction less than seven per cent to the creditors. Then the court ordered the receiver to proceed to collect from the stockholders by suit if necessary the amount owing by them for stock issued to them, in pursuance of which order this suit was brought.
The referee, after a learned discussion of the subject and
I. Respondents in their brief say that the judgment should be affirmed for failure of proof, particularly on two points, first, that the plaintiff here was appointed receiver, second, that he gave the notice required by order of the court to be given to the stockholders to come in and pay the amounts due on their stock subscriptions before bringing this suit.
' The abstract purporting to represent the record states that the St. Louis Trust Company was originally appointed the receiver, that it resigned and the plaintiff was appointed in its stead. Respondents have filed no counter abstract and have not.disputéd that fact.
As to the failure of proof that notice was given, it is immaterial in the present stage of the case. The only purpose of the notice was to afford the defendants an opportunity to come in and pay up without being put to the expense of a suit, and if any of them had desired so to do they could have so expressed in their answers when sued, and upon showing that
H. The main proposition, however, upon which reliance is had to sustain the judgment of the circuit court, is, that a stockholder who has turned into the corporation property in payment of his stock which has been accepted by the corporation as the equivalent of the face value óf the stock and who has been guilty of no actual fraud, can not be called to account by creditors of the concern or made to pay in satisfaction of debts, the difference between the value of the property turned in and the face value of the stock. This proposition as contended for, under the facts of this case, also draws a distinction, in favor of the stockholder, between actual fraud and legal fraud and leaves him on the safe side of the line, although the property he turned in was in fact worth less than five per cent of the face value of the stock, provided we find that his mind had been so excited by indications of prospective mineral wealth that he really believed that, when the unexplored caverns should be opened, mines of fabulous value would be disclosed.
If that is the correct interpretation of the law of Missouri on this subject, then the manifest efforts of the framers of our Constitution and the makers of our statutes to authorize the establishment of only conservative and reasonably safe business corporations has been in vain. Our Constitution ordains that “no' corporation shall issue stock or bonds, except for money paid, labor done or property actually received.” [Art. 12, sec. 8.] The money, the labor, and the property mentioned, are on a plane, and signify equivalents. If property worth five per cent of the face value of the stock can be taken as full payment then five per cent in money is equally available, and the Constitution affords the people no protection against the wildest schemes. This clause in the Constitution puts a limit on the power-of the Legislature, so that if that
In Shickle v. Watts, 94 Mo. 410, it was held that when one agrees with a corporation to take its stock in payment of labor, only the reasonable value of the labor will be regarded as payment, and that in the interest of creditors an agreement by the corporation to pay more than the value (in that case the stock had been taken at fifty cents on the dollar of its face value) would be disregarded and held for naught. “And this is the case, even though no fraud be proven.”
In Woolfolk v. January, 131 Mo. 620, the sentence just quoted is disapproved, but subsequently, in Van Cleve v. Berkey, 143 Mo. 109, the subject was again before the court and the cases of Shickle v. Watts and Woolfolk v. January were distinguished and the criticism of the former in the opinion in the latter is said to have been obiter and that the doctrine of Shickle v. Watts was so wholesome and salutary that it ought not to be weakened or impaired by what was said of it in Woolfolk v. January. In Van Cleve v. Berkey, supra, the authorities are reviewed and the law clearly defined in an exhaustive opinion by Brace, J., in which all concurred, including the writers of the opinions in the two other cases. We feel that nothing is needed now to add to what is said in that opinion to demonstrate that our Constitution and statute mean that when property is taken in payment of stock the stockholder is liable at the suit of a creditor to account for the difference, if any, in value between the price at which the property was turned in to the company and the face value of the stock, and this is so even though no actual fraud be shown.
The following quotation from the opinion of Judge
When men are carried away by a mining, prospect, they have a right to take such chances in speculation as they see fit in order to develop the prospect, provided they involve only themselves. But when they attempt to hide their individual liability in a corporation and launch upon the business community a company which they proclaim as solemnly as men can proclaim anything, has a full-paid capital of $300,000, and invite confidence accordingly, when they well know that, so far as then developed, it has not five per cent of the amount available for use in the treasury, they violate both the letter and spirit of our laws on this subject and render themselves individually liable, to creditors who have been misled, to the extent of their unpaid stock.
The referee found that these incorporators on the faith of having seen some samples of onyx taken from these lands, samples neither large in size nor pure in quality, honestly be
We hold that the original incorporators are liable in this suit for the difference between the real value of the property they respectively turned into the corporation in alleged payment of their stock and the face value of the stock they respectively received to the extent that may be necessary to pay off the debts of the concern to creditors who extended credit without knowledge of the fact that the corporation had accepted the property in payment of th,e stock, and to the extent also of the cost of this proceeding.
III. The report of the referee shows that those defendants who bought shares of the treasury stock, bought it in good faith believing it had been fully paid, although they paid only fifty per cent of its face value.
This treasury stock stood in the name of Jos. T. Bascom, trustee, and that fact was an indication to the purchasers that it had been previously issued and that their purchases were not original takings of the stock. There was nothing in the fact that it was sold by the company at a discount to cause the purchaser tó know that it had not been originally paid in full. Such stock is liable to fluctuation. If they had purchased with knowledge of the fact that the stock was unpaid they would assume towards the creditors of the concern the liability of the original subscriber, jointly with him or severally as the creditor might elect, but that is not the fact as to these purchasers, and we hold that they are not liable in this suit. The same is
IY. What is above said in regard to the rights of creditors is based on the idea that they gave credit to the concern on the faith of the showing that it had a capital stock of $300,000 which was fully paid. But that is not the fact in reference to the debt allowed in favor of the assignee of the Providence Jewelry Company. The lending of the various sums of money that make up that debt wás conducted by Mr. Leighton for both lender and borrower. He was president and chief business man of the Providence Jewelry Company and president and chief business man of this company. Whether the money loaned was his individually or that of the jewelry company the referee did not know. He executed the notes himself some time after the loans had been made,' and indorsed and transferred them to the jewelry company. If he was using the jewelry company’s money, the jewelry company, so far as this record shows, was acting through him and was chargeable with knowing whatever he knew. On the books of the onyx company it appears as loans from Leighton to the company, was evidenced by notes of the company to Leighton and by him indorsed to the jewelry company, and as such proven up. We are not justified from anything that appears on this record in concluding that the money loaned belonged to the jewelry company. The record is vacant on that point, and the only thing from which even a conjecture could be made is the fact that Leighton transferred the notes to the jewelry company, but if we are driven to conjecture we might as well conjecture that he transferred the notes to give them a better standing in a suit like this than they would have if held by himself. • The view taken of the matter by the referee is thus expressed in the report: “Their claim against the shareholders of the company is therefore subject to all the defenses which would exist if Leighton were the claimant, and this is true, of course, whether it be prosecuted by the jewelry company directly, or
This view is sustained by the decision in Woolfolk v. January, 131 Mo. 620, before referred to.
If a person, knowing that a corporation has accepted certain property in full payment of its stock, sees fit with that knowledge to lend money to the corporation, he has no more right to call the stockholder to further account for his debt than would the corporation itself.
The creditors who are entitled to the relief prayed for in this case are:
Name of Claimant. Date when indebtedness accrued. Amount.
National Bank of the Republic. Between January 18,1893, to Febraary 7, 1893____ $4,175 12
F. O. Sawyer Paper Co ...... March, 1893............ 11 81
St. Louis Granite Wall Plaster Co.......................... May, 1893, to December 1, 1893.............. 21 96
Koken Iron .Works......... April and May, 1893...... 2 75
Moser Express and Messenger Coi.................. May, 1893.............. 17 75
C. W. Wall, assignee......... Between April 11, 1893, and May 24, 1893...... 90 00
J. M. and W. F. Robb.. During the early part of 1893................. 10 00
Huttig Sash & Door Co., From April to December, 1893 ................... 1,441 67
V. The point is presented in the brief of respondents that a receiver can not maintain a suit like this to recover for
A receiver stands in a different position in respect to the right in question from that of an assignee. The assignee derives his authority from the assignor, and, except where the statute makes different provision, he has no greater power than the assignor. A contract, therefore, that the assignor could not attack, the assignee can not attack.
But a receiver derives his authority from the court, which in a case like this, has ample authority and jurisdiction to adjudge the rights of all the parties and enforce them. The receiver is the officer of the court, and when thereto directed represents the interest of either and all the parties to the record. The receiver of an insolvent corporation may, under the direction of the court, maintain a suit to collect assets of the corporation which the corporation had wrongfully put beyond its own power to collect, when such assets are required for the payment of its debts and the winding up of its affairs. This power is in the general equity jurisdiction of the court. [Thompson v. Greeley, 107 Mo. 577; Morawetz on Corp., sec. 868.]
VI. It is finally insisted that the receiver and the creditors are estopped from demanding of these defendants the-relief prayed for, because under an order of the court the property turned in to the corporation in payment of the stock has been sold by the receiver and distributed in a dividend to the creditors.
' The theory advanced is that the receiver should have first tendered back to the stockholders the property they put in and then proceeded to rescind the contract under which the corpo; ; tion accepted it in payment of the stock. Eespondents say f creditors can not have the proceeds of the property and redíate the contract under which the corporation acquired it.-
The creditors have nothing to do with the rescinding : the contract. When the corporation is in a winding-up i
The judgment is reversed and the cause remanded to the circuit court with directions to proceed to adjust the rights of the parties in accordance with the law as herein expressed.