110 Mo. App. 355 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1905
— This suit was commenced on the 25th of June, 1901. The defendant is a mining corporation with an organized capital of $10,000 divided into one hundred shares of the par value of $100 each, but thirty-three shares thereof have been cancelled, leaving sixty-seven shares representing the present capital stock. Shares Nos. 25, 26 and 27 were issued to one H. C. Brandon. The plaintiff claimed to be the owner of these shares but the defendant company re
Avery testified that he had no recollection of plaintiff’s request, immediately after the election in 1896, to make an entry on the company’s books of the assignment by Brandon to him of said shares. But he did recollect that such request was made by plaintiff after the levy upon them by the officer under the execution mentioned, but that he refused to make the transfer on the books because of said levy. The stock was after-
Plaintiff asks that the mining company be compelled to transfer said shares of stock on its books to him and for a judgment for the amount of unpaid dividends. ■ The court rendered judgment in favor of plaintiff and defendants appealed. The contention of of appellants is that as the consideration for the sale of the stock in question was unlawful, a court of equity will not interfere to aid plaintiff in consummating it.
Section 3424,Revised Statutes 1899, is: “Any person who shall lose any money or property at any game or gambling device may recover the same by civil action.” Section 3925, idem, gives the right of recovery to the heirs, executors, administrators and creditors of the person losing against the winner, as provided in the preceding section. Section 3430 makes betting on an election gaming within the meaning of this act. Section 3432 requires that such action be commenced within three months from the time the cause of action accrued. Section 2211, idem, makes betting on elections a misdemeanor punishable by fine.
On the other hand, plaintiff, although admitting the principle that “where the establishment of plaintiff’s cause of action requires the proof of an illegal transaction to sustain it, the courts will deny the plaintiff any aid, but, if the plaintiff can establish his cause of action without proof of an illegal transaction, although his first connection with the subject of the transaction may have been in violation of positive statute, or against public policy, the doctrine of ‘clean hands’ does
The appellants to support their theory of the case cite Woolfolk v. Duncan, 80 Mo. App. 422, where the action was to recover on a note given as a settlement of a bet on the result of an election. It was, therefore, an effort to enforce the collection of a demand, the consideration for which wqs illegal. The court held that the contract was void and: “No action lies upon an unlawful consideration and a contract growing out of an illegal or immoral transaction,” etc. Morris v. White, 83 Mo. App. 194, is a case where suit was brought upon a promissory note by an innocent holder, the consideration for which was. a gambling debt. The plaintiff was not permitted to recover because the
The appellants have cited numerous other decisions, none of which sustain their position; and we do not deem it necessary to' specifically notice them in this opinion. It will be perceived that those given are cases where the courts have refused to enforce unlawful contracts or afford relief from such contracts. They differ materially from the one in hand, as the latter is not to enforce an illegal contract, but is based upon a showing independent of the anterior illegal transaction. At the time plaintiff presented the certificate of stock to said secretary he was the absolute owner of the same as against the world, and the refusal of the company to enter the transfer on his books in no way affected his title.
It is true defendant’s by-laws provide that the stock of the association shall be transferred on its books, and section 965, Revised Statutes. 1899, provides that the stock of all corporations shall be transferable in the manner provided by their by-laws. But neither said statute nor by-laws was intended to prevent the alienation of corporation stock. But the object of such regulations was to enable corporations to deal with intelligence with its stockholders. By such means corporations are enabled to know to whom to pay dividends, who are entitled to vote for directions and other
Appellant contends that the court committed error in adjudging that the company pay to plaintiff the sum of $13.65 on the basis that it had in its treasury the sum of $152.48, it being his proportionate share of the same. The finding of the court is, that the company has disposed of all its property and effects except said sum of $152.48 and that the same belongs to the owners of the stock. The chief objection to the action of the court is that shareholders are not entitled to any share in the capital stock, nor to any dividends, until all the debts of the corporation are paid; and that the holders of stock would become personally liable to creditors if a dividend should be declared under the circumstances. But there is no evidence of indebtedness by the company. The evidence indicates that it had gone out of business having disposed of most of its property, and the legitimate inference is that it had paid its indebtedness. In any event, plaintiff, who was shown to be solvent, would be liable to a creditor for his proportionate share of said dividends. The error, if one, is too insignificant to authorize the disturbance of a judgment otherwise for the right party.
Affirmed.