The plaintiff’s action is for five hundred dollars. There was a demurrer to the petition on the ground that it did not state a cause of action. The trial court sustained the demurrer. The plaintiff refused to plead further and appealed. The petition alleged: “That on or about the fifteenth day of November, 1902, the said defendant received from this plaintiff the sum of five hundred dollars ($500.00) in payment for purchase by .plaintiff of defendant of one thousand (1,000) shares of stock of the defendant, which said shares of stock were evidenced by certificate numbered 369, issued by said defendant. As part of the same transaction and as an inducement thereto, the defendant did issue to this plaintiff its agreement numbered 94, wherein it is agreed that the said transaction might be regarded as a loan from the plaintiff herein to the defendant on the following terms, to-wit: “That the said Sonora Development Company acknowledged itself to be conditionally indebted to this plaintiff, C. N. Boley, in the sum of five hundred dollars ($500.00), and did agree, among other things, that at the end of two (2) years from the said fifteenth day of November, 1902, it would pay to this plaintiff the said sum of five hundred dollars ($500.00) with interest thereon at the rate of six (6) per cent per annum, payable semi-annually, upon the following conditions, to-wit: that this plaintiff, within twenty (20) days after the fifteenth day of November, 1904, should give written notice to the secretary of said company at Kansas City, Missouri, to the effect that this plaintiff had exercised and did exercise the said option and should elect to treat the said transaction as a loan and should, within twenty (20) days from the 15th day of November, 1904, deliver to the said secretary the said stock certificate of defendant herein-
The effect of the contract is that the defendant sold to plaintiff certain shares of its stock for five hundred dollars which were duly issued and delivered to him. The effect of the further agreement was that defendant would, upon plaintiff’s election to sell, buy the stock back from him at the price he paid. The result being that the directors of the defendant company have released the plaintiff from his responsibility as a stockholder, and whether this is attempted by what might, in some sense, be termed a rescission or as a surrender of the stock it cannot be lawfully done. And it is not alone creditors who may complain as intimated by plaintiff, but it is equally a fraud upon other stockholders and cannot be done without their consent. The Supreme Court in Gill v. Balis,
And in Banking Co. v. Mfg. Co.,
We regard the ruling of the trial court as supported by the law and affirm the judgment.
