25 Mo. 547 | Mo. | 1857
delivered the opinion of the court.
This corporation was organized under the act “ to authorize the formation of associations to construct plank roads and macadamized roads,” approved February 27, 1851. (Sess. Acts, 1851, p. 259.) The original articles of association were signed by the defendant, who subscribed for eight shares to the stock of the company, and, after a part of the road had been made, he was required by the directors to pay instal-
The directors are merely agents of the corporation. They do not own the stock subscribed, and can not sue for it; and therefore a defence that might be made to a suit, brought in their names and for their personal benefit, would not be responsive to an action in the name of the corporation. This suit is in the corporate name of the company that represents all the stockholders, each one of whom is interested in the proper administration of the assets of the company ; and the suit is practically for their benefit. The real question is, whether a stockholder is discharged from the payment of his subscription and from his duty to bear the part he has assumed of a common burden with other stockholders, because his and their agents in some particular may transcend their authority.
If the- directors contract a debt beyond the scope of their power, which they pay, and then call upon a stockholder to contribute his part to reimburse them — if it was simply a controversy between the principal and his agents — contribution
The recognition of the principle asserted in the answer would tolerate repudiation by a corporation of its honest debts in every case where it relies for means on the collection of its stock subscriptions, and the stockholders could discover that the directors in any manner had violated their charter. If it is a good defence that the directors violated the charter, any other unlawful act would justify a like refusal to pay; and creditors of a corporation, who advance money or perform labor on the faith of the capital stock subscribed, would be the sufferers by tlio improper conduct of directors, rather than those who clothe them with authority and authorize them to contract for the corporation.
The motion to strike out the answer was properly sustained, and the judgment will be affirmed with the concurrence of the other judges.