40 Mo. App. 318 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1890
delivered the-opinion of the court.
The plaintiff is the assignee of the Paragon A vvning and Manufacturing Company, a business corporation organized under the laws of the state of Illinois, and as such assignee he instituted this action against the defendant on several promissory notes, executed by the defendant, and made payable to that company. In the body of each note is the following statement: “ The same being a payment of five per cent, on my purchase of five hundred shares of stock of the Paragon Awning and Manufacturing Company, which is held by them as collateral security for the payment of this note.”
The defense was that the stock issued to the defendant by the awning company was an over-issue of its capital stock, and that, for this reason, the notes given by him in part payment thereof were without consideration. The cause was submitted to the court, and judgment was entered against defendant for the full amount of the notes. From this judgment the defendant has prosecuted an appeal.
There is no dispute about the facts, and they may be stated as follows : On the twenty-second day of January, 1887, the defendant, Henry W. Smith, E. C. Newkirk, and others were stockholders in the Paragon Awning Company, another Illinois corporation. Charles L. and H. S. LaBarge were the owners of certain patents or inventions, which, at that date, were supposed to be very valuable. An agreement was entered into between Charles L. LaBarge on the one side, and Henry W. Smith and other stockholders pf the last-named company on the other, in which it was agreed to
The objection made by defendant’s counsel, that the stock issued to defendant was an over-issue by the Paragon Awning and Manufacturing Company, is, in our opinion, untenable. The determination of this question, however, does not necessarily fix the defendant’s liability, but it is made to depend upon the validity or legality of the agreements leading up to the incorporation of the company. It is true, as claimed by defendant, that the law of Illinois requires the entire capital stock of a proposed corporation to be subscribed, but we are of the opinion that this law was strictly complied with in the incorporation of the Paragon Awning and Manufacturing Company. The organization of this corporation was, in effect, a re-organization of the Paragon Awning Company, and the object was to increase the capital stock, and secure control of the inventions belonging to Charles L. and H. S. LaBarge. To accomplish this an agreement was entered into by LaBarge on the one side, and Henry W. Smith and E. C. Newkirk, representing the old corporation, on the other, by which LaBarge was to subscribe for ten thousand shares of the new corporation, and Smith and Newkirk were to subscribe for the remainder, to-wit,
However, as before stated, the defendant’s liability does not depend solely upon this question, but the question still remains whether such an agreement, when ratified by the stockholders of the old company and carried out by delivery of the stock to the hew company, was repugnant to the laws of the state of Illinois.Our examination of the Illinois decisions has led us to the opinion that this contract or arrangement was hot ultra vires under the law of that state. There are numerous cases of the supreme court of that state, which hold that a corporation may purchase its own stock, and violate no duty to its own stockholders. Chetlain v. Ins. Co., 86 Ill. 220; Chicago, etc., Railroad Co. v. President, 84 Ill. 145. In the Qhetlain case the court held that if A. subscribed for ten shares of the capital stock of a corporation, and, having paid twov hundred dollars, was willing to receive a certificate
Prior to the incorporation of the company, but, in contemplation of it, and for the purpose of carrying out the plan devised for the sale of the ten thousand shares, the defendant and others signed a paper in which they agreed to purchase the entire ten thousand shares at the price of one dollar per share. This agreement to purchase inured to the benefit of the new company after it completed its organization. Griswolk v. Trustees, 26 Ill. 41. The defendant agreed to buy five hundred of the shares, and this contract of purchase was subsequently' carried out by him by the execution of the notes sued on.
There is no'principle of law known to us, which would release the' defendant from his liability to pay these notes. No question of “fraud or misrepresentation is urged; in fact the record shows that the plan of incorporation, and especially the plan adopted 'for the sale of the stock .was devised by the defendant himself. He was an officer and director of the corporation and took an active part in the management of its business, and he is, therefore, in no position to claim that he was over-reached or in any way deceived in the purchase of the stock or in the execution of the notes.
As we find no error in the record, the judgment of the circuit court will be affirmed. All the judges concurring, it is so ordered.