148 Tenn. 168 | Tenn. | 1923
delivered the opinion of the Court.
The Dixie Rubber Company, an investment corporation organized under the laws of the state of Mississippi, brought this suit against John H. McBee to collect a note of $1,000 which he had executed in part payment for a subscription by him to the capital stock of said company.
The defendant resisted the payment of the note upon several grounds, one of which is that the execution of the note was procured by fraud and misrepresentation of the agent of the company who sold him the stock, in that it was represented that the company had $100,000 as the proceeds of the sale of its stock. Still another defense is that the note was without consideration, in that McBee would be permitted to pay the same by the sale of machinery. A third defense is that the plaintiff being a foreign corporation had not filed its charter in the office of the secretary of State, nor complied with the requirements of the Blue Sky Law.
On the trial below it was stipulated that a transcript of the record in th esecretary of State’s office, marked Exhibit A, and certified to by the secretary of State' as a true copy of the Blue Sky application file of the Dixie Rubber Company as recorded in the office of the secretary of state, together with a letter attached to said transcript, dated April 1, 1922, from the secretary of State, “stating that a permit to sell its securities in Tennessee was issued to the Dixie Rubber Company on March 29, 1920, and that
From an examination of this transcript of the documents and papers on. file with the secretary of State, it is found that it does not contain a statement in full detail of the plan upon which the company proposed to transact business; it does not contain an itemized account of its actual financial condition and the amount of its property and liability. There is a financial statement showing generally the assets of the company to consist of bills receivable, real estate, cash, commissions paid to fiscal agents, and unsold stock, but this is far short of an itemized account of its actual financial condition and the amount of its property and liabilities. This.transcript does not show that there was filed with the secretary of State a copy of the laws of the State under which it was incorporated, nor of its constitution and by-laws.
The defendant insists that under chapter 31, Acts of the First Extra Session of 1913, failure of the complainant to furnish to the secretary of State the papers referred to renders the sale of this stock to' him void, and prevents the complainant from enforcing the collection of said note. Upon the other hand, it is contended by the complainant that the permit issued by the secretary of State, authorizing if to sell its stock, is conclusive that complainant had in all respects complied with the conditions and requirements of the statute to entitle.it to offer its stock for sale.
The act in question specifically provides that before of
Under these provisions of the statute, the sale of this stock to the defendant was a violation of the law, expressly prohibited by the act, and no action could be predicated by the investment company on the note executed for stock thus sold, and the complainant would be repelled from this action, unless it can be said that the permit issued by the secretary of State concludes an examination into that fact. The contention of the complainant for the affirmative of that proposition is based upon section 5 of the act. That section makes it the duty of the secretary of State to examine the statements and documents- filed; it authorizes him, if he deems advisable, to make or have made a detailed examination of the company’s affairs, and if he finds the company is solvent, its articles of incorporation, its constitution and by-laws, and its proposed plan of business and proposed conduct, provide for a fair and equitable plan for the transaction of business, and in his judgment promises a fair return on the stocks or securities offered for sale, he shall issue to the company a statement
It will be observed that to entitle the secretary of State to issue a permit there must not only be on file in his office the statements and documents referred to, but he is required, if deemed advisable,’ to make a detailed and full examination, and determine therefrom that the proposed plan of business provides for a fair, just, and equitable plan, and that in his judgment it promises a fair return on the stock-. To the extent that this discretionary power is vested in the secretary of State his action could not in a collateral proceeding of this sort be brought into question. The duty of filing these documents and papers is imposed by the act upon the investment company, and the secretary of State has no power or discretion to excuse the filing of such documents. The act specifically prohibits the offer or attempt to sell stock by the company until these documents have been filed. Of course, it cannot transact business in the State without the permit of the secretary of State, but it cannot offer or attempt to sell any stocks without first having filed these particular documents, and a violation of this requirement is made a misdemeanor punishable by large fines and imprison
In this view of the case, complainant cannot recover on the note, and, without determining the defense of fraud and lack of consideration, complainant’s bill must be dismissed, with cost, and the chancellor’s decree accordingly reversed.