118 Ky. 588 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1904
'Opinion of the court by
Affirming.
The matter in controversy is as to the right of the Louisville Gas Company to guaranty certain bonds of the Louisville Lighting Company, which the first named company owns. The Louisville Gas Company was chartered by an act of the Legislature approved March 16, 1888. There are two acts amendatory of its charter — one approved April
The Louisville Gas Company is a trading corporation, its •chief business being to manufacture and sell gas and electricity. The rule is well recognized that corporations, other than those organized for governmental purposes, have the right to contract debts or borrow money for the purpose of accomplishing the purposes of their organization. This power exists, although not expressly granted by their charters, as fully as possessed by individuals. They also' have the ■power to give the customary evidences of debt, and the •customary security therefor. This power is only limited by provisions of their charters or statute. It would be a meaningless thing to grant a corporation a charter empowering it to conduct a certain enterprise, and then say that the
It is urged that because the charter of the gas company provides that it may issue bonds for $500,000, and execute a mortgage on its property to secure them, and' that their proceeds shall only be used in improving the plant, it hereby
In Greenbay & M. R. Co. v. Union Steamboat Co., 107 U. S., 100, 2 Sup. Ct., 223, 27 L. Ed., 431, the court said: “The charter of a corporation, read in connection with the general laws applicable to it, is the measure of its powers, and a contract manifestly beyond those powers will not sustain an action against the corporation. But whatever, under the charter and other general laws, reasonably construed, may fairly be regarded as incidental to the object for which the corporation is created, is not taken to be prohibited.” This rule of construction is approved in Rhorer, Receiver, v. Middlesboro Town & Land Co., 103 Ky., 150, 19 R., 1788, 44 S. W., 448. In Merchants’ National Bank v. Citizens’ Gaslight Co., 159 Mass., 505, 34 N. E., 1083, 38 Am. St. Rep., 453, the court had under consideration a question very similar to the one here for solution. It was an action on a promissory note. The statute construed reads as follows: “No gas company, unless specially authorized by the Legislature, shall hereafter issue any bonds
It is conceded that the gas company was authorized to consummate the deal which resulted in its rightful ownership of the $1,600,000 of the light company’s bonds. As the gas company owns the bonds, its right to sell them necessarily exists. It owes debts, and is under a legal obligation to pay them. In the judgment of the corporation, it is best to sell the lighting company’s bonds which it ownsi for that purpose. If it has' the right to sell them, it certainly has the right to apply their proceeds to the payment of its debts. If it can apply the proceeds to that purpose, it can sell them to its creditors, and thus discharge its debts. The bonds, not having a market value, can not be sold at their real value unless the gas company gives the guaranty to which we have alluded. As the gas company acquired the bonds in carrying out the legitimate purposes- of its organization and desires to sell them- in furtherance of the same purpose, it follows that, if the guaranty is necessary to make the proceeds available, it has the right to make it. It surely creates a personal liability. If it had the power to contract debts, and thus create a personal liability, it certainly has the power to create another personal liability to meet the former one. An objection is made because the bonds did not mature until 1918. This objection can only go to the question of the advisibility of creating an obligation to continue-during that period, which question alone mnst be
In Railway Co. v. Howard, 7 Wall., 412, 19 L. Ed., 117, the court said: “Abundant proof exists in this record that railway companies may issue their own bonds to raise money to carry into effect the purpose for which they were created, and it is difficult to see why they may not guaranty the payment of such bonds as they lawfully received from cities and counties, and put them upon the market, instead of their own, as the means of accomplishing the same end. Undoubtedly they may receive such bonds under the laws of the State, and, if they may receive them, they may transfer them to others; and, if they may transfer them to purchasers, they may, if they deem it expedient, guaranty their payment, as a means of augmenting their credit in the market, and saving the corporation from the necessity of issuing their own bonds to accomplish the same purpose. Considered, therefore, as an open question, the court is of the opinion that the objection is without merit. Private corporations may borrow money, or become parties to negotiable paper in the transaction of their legitimate business, unless expressly prohibited; and, until the contrary is shown, the legal presumption is that their acts in that behalf were done in the regular course of their authorized business.” In Frankfort Bridge Co. v. City of Frankfort, 18 B. Mon., 45, the court, in effect, held that, if the charter and statutory ' law is silent upon the'subject of the power to make a contract, it may be implied on the part of the corporation, when directly or indirectly necessary to enable it to fulfill the purposes of its existence. In section 775, Cook on Corporations (5th.Ed.), it is said: “One of the most important and yet difficult branches of railroad corporation law is the
By a provision of the charter, the city of Louisville has an option to purchase the gas company’s property at the expiration of the charter. It is urged that, if the liability resulting from the guaranty of the bonds exist at the time its right to purchase accrues,' it would be embarrassed thereby. It is difficult to see how it will affect the rights of the city as a purchaser, not stockholder, because the amount of outstanding liabilities would have to be deducted from the purchase price ascertained in the manner provided by the charter. However, the question before us is not whether the city of Louisville will be able to become a purchaser of the property of the gas company, but it is whether the gas company proposes to exceed the power which we find it to possess when we read its charter in connection with general laws applicable to it.
We concur in the conclusion reached by the learned circuit judge in his able opinion.
The judgment is affirmed.
Petition for rehearing by appellant overruled.