Opinion by
Thе material facts in this case, all of which appear in the bill
The record does not disclose any' change of оwnership in the stock or any controversy of any kind among the stock
We do not think the exact question before us is as broad as it is stated by the able counsel for the appellant. He deals with the question largely, if not exclusively, as if we had nothing before us in the nature of individual action, by persons owning property and regulating its future disposition, but rather as if we had simply a by-law of a corporation, adopted by a majority of its stockholders, which undertook to regulate, perhaps interfere with, the ordinary rights of property of the individual stockholders of such corporation. If we were dealing merely with an ordinary by-law, we would doubtless be obliged to hold that no such law could be effective if it were unreasonable, or if it were forbidden by sound public рolicy. Many cases in other jurisdictions have been cited which seem to hold that a
But, in our view of the case, we have something more before us than merely a by-law, adopted in the usual form by the stockholders, or a majority of them, of the corporation. There was сertainly no incapacity on the part of any one of the five gentlemen, who afterwards became the incorporators of the defendant company, to agree among themselves how the corporation should be organized, and how its stock should be held and transferred, to the end that they might reasonably be able tо foresee where the control and management of the corporation would rest. As long as they violated no statutory law or rule of public policy, they had the right to agree to whatever they deemed most likely mutually to subserve their future interests. At the same meeting, and as part of the same act, they subscribed for the amount of stock which, it was mutually agreed, each should take, and fixed the conditions upon which that stock should thereafter be held. There can be but little doubt as to the nature of their act in subscribing for the stock. That they thereby assumed a contractual relation towards each other, as well as towards the corporation thereafter tо be created, has been frequently stated. The effect of such an act is thus described in Minneapolis Threshing Machine Co. v. Davis, 3 L. R. A. (Old Series) 796: “A subscription by a number of persons to the stock of a corporation to be thereafter formed by them constitutes: First, a contract between the subscribers themselves to become stockholders when the corporation is formed upon the conditions expressed in the agreement, and as
In New England Trust Co. v. Abbott,
In the present case the aid of a court of equity is invoked to compel an executor to violate an agreеment entered into by his testator. But it may be said that the purchaser of the stock in the Massachusetts case found the by-laws printed on the back of his certificate and therefore had knowledge of them before he bought, and consequently was bound by them. So far as the purchaser in this case, the present plaintiff, is concerned, he too had express notice of the situation that was before him, and that the corporation would not transfer the stock to him in violation of the agreement that had been made by his predecessor in title.
But it seems to us that the question has been very largely settled adversely to the plaintiff by the Supreme Court of our own state. In Fitzsimmons v. Lindsay,
Now if Wm. G. Vernon and his associates had entered into an agreement in form and executed it with their hands and seals, the case would be on all fours with that just cited. Certainly the nature of the agreement has not changed because of the form in which the parties chose to stipulate with each other. The intention to agree, of each to bind himself, is just as apparent as if it had been clothed in the most solemn and formal of instruments. If in essence and substance the object they had in view was neither unreasonable nor opposed to public policy, it can hardly be said to become so because it was after-wards adopted as a by-law, by the corporation not then in existence, but whose future welfare was then being provided for. The learned court below has carefully analyzed and compared many cases outside of the state and cited others from other states which we think support the conclusion he has reached. We are constrained to agree with him that the plaintiff has shown no such equity as should move the court to enter the decree prayed for, and therefore the bill was properly dismissed.
Decree affirmed.
