32 La. Ann. 1069 | La. | 1880
The opinion of the Court was delivered by
The plaintiff, liquidator of the late firm of C. E. Girardey & Co., brought suit against the defendants, liquidating commissioners of the New Orleans Insurance Association, in which he prayed for judgment against the said commissioners, individually in solido, and also in their capacity aforesaid, for the sum of fifteen hundred dollars with interest from judicial demand, which sum he claimed as the amount due the late firm of C. E. Girardey & Co. for its share of the profits realized by the late New Orleans Insurance Association from the time it went into operation up to the date of its dissolution, this in the event of said commissioners refusing or neglecting to comply with plaintiff’s demand in his petition, that they should file a full and final account, as liquidators, showing how they have settled the affairs of the Association and the net amount of profit to be distributed among the stockholders, and that they should be ordered to pay over to plaintiff the amount found due to his late firm upon the rendition of the account, plaintiff alleging that said firm was a stockholder in said Association to the extent of twenty shares, at one hundred dollars per share. As the grounds on
For answer to plaintiff’s petition, defendants, after denying, 'generally, the allegations thereof, averred that on or about the 22d of March,
The sole question, then, raised by the pleadings, and submitted for decision, is that of abandonment and forfeiture of the rights and interest of the said firm in the assets and profits of the Association.
The evidence in the record discloses that on the 23d of March, 1872, a date subsequent to the dissolution of the old Association, a receipt was given by J. H. O’Connor, who was then the book-keeper and cashier of the firm, as follows :
“Ree’d, New Orleans, March 23d, 1872, one stock note for 20 shares, canceled by mutual consent, and also $25.75 for rebate of 15 per cent, on $165.
(Signed) O. E. Gibabdey & Co.,
Per J. H. O’Oonnoe.”
It is contended that this receipt operated as a cancellation of the firm’s subscription to the capital stock, and thereby ceasing to be a stockholder, it was not entitled to share in the profits of the Association, but abandoned and forfeited such right, and in the instance recited in the receipt, accepted the rebate of fifteen per cent on certain premiums paid, which rebate was paid in lieu of any right or interest, or claim in the accrued profits to which, as a stockholder, it would have been entitled. It appears that the old Association, by the vote required under its charter, had, on the 12th of April, 1871, been dissolved, and a new corporation was established, into which the stockholders of the old had a right to enter, and into which many of them did enter. The right of dissolution under the terms and stipulations of the charter was clear ] and indisputable; but we cánnot recognize the right to transfer its shareholders without their assent to the new corporation. The capital stock of the old Association was represented by the notes of the stockholders in the amount of their several subscriptions, which notes were made payable on the 31st of December, 1871, and it was provided in the charter that “ the notes furnished as above provided for, shall be reduced by a credit thereon of the net profits made by the Association in the first and second year ; ” also, “ at the maturity of said notes, if the net profits of the Association for the first and second years have not ex
On the 12th of April, 1871, a general meeting was held, at which, by a vote representing 9001 shares of the capital stock, out of 10,000 (the whole number of shares), the dissolution and immediate liquidation of the affairs of the Association were ordered. On the 14th of April, 1871, Messrs. Samuel Henderson, Jules Aldigé and D. Bouligny were duly appointed Liquidating Commissioners.
The first point for our consideration is : Had the majority of two-thirds of the stockholders the right to alter the original charter of the association, as affected by the amendment above recited, whereby the
We think the amendment was a fundamental change of the original •charter, and could have no effect as to the rights of the stockholders who did not give their assent to such change. The firm of Girardey & Go. did not assent thereto. The terms and conditions under which it subscribed to the stock and became members of the corporation, and by which it became liable for the amount of its subscription, and entitled to a participation in the profits, are clearly set forth .in article 4 of the charter, and constituted a contract. The proposed change virtually and radically affects fixed and established rights, and could not be forced upon an unwilling stockholder. This principle is declared in 3 Caldwéll .(Tenn.) B. 488, where the court held: “ A charter of a corporation is, after acceptance by the persons incorporated, an inviolable contract between the corporation, as it is also between the corporation and stockholders. Neither can disregard its obligations, or alter its essential franchises, without the unanimous consent of the stockholdersand “if the alterations proposed in the charter of a private corporation by legislative enactment are merely auxiliary and not fundamental, they may be accepted by a majority of the corporators; and when so assented to, they are binding on the whole; but it is otherwise when the alterations are fundamental, radical, and vital, the acceptance must then be unanimous.”
In 2 Metcalf (Ky.) B. 314: “ An amendment which materially and fundamentally changes the responsibilities and duties of the company, or which superadds an entirely new enterprise to that which was originally contemplated, may be resisted by the stockholders, unless such amendments are provided for in the charter itself, or in the general laws of the State in force at the time the act of incorporation was passed.” See, .also, 11 Ga. 438; 11 Mich. 155 ; 8 Mass. 268 ; 9 Ill. 177.
In this case the plaintiff’s firm entered into a contract, whereby he furnished his note, rendered himself liable therefor, and this with the express agreement on the part of all the corporators, that the net profits profits of the corporation, made during the first and second years, of its operations, should be in a certain and clearly defined manner apportioned between them, by application thereof to the notes furnished by the stockholder corporators. The 'proposed change, whereby these profits were to be divided pro rata among the stockholders, as to the amounts of earned premiums paid by them respectively, was a material, essential, and fundamental alteration and change, violative of the contract between all the members of the corporation.
But it is contended by the defendants that the firm of Girardey & Co. canceled its original subscription to the capital stock of the late New Orleahs Association ; accepted in return their stock note, and received settlement in full of all claims, interest and benefits, which had accrued to them, and thereby abandoned, forfeited and lost all rights, interest and benefit to which they may have been entitled.
It appears from the evidence, that J. H. O’Connor, the book-keeper and cashier of Girardey & Co., on the 23rd of March, 1872, called at the-office of the Insurance Associadon, on business other than that connected with the stock note, or referring to the matters involved in this-litigation. The subject of the cancellation of the stock note was brought-forward by the Secretary of the Association, who asked O’Connor what the firm of Girardey & Co. would do about their subscription, and if they were going to cancel it ? O’Connor replied that he thought it better to cancel it. Whereupon'the following receipt was given :
“Received, New Orleans, March 23d, 1872, one stock note for twenty shares, canceled by mutual consent, and also $25.75 for rebate of fifteen-per cent on $165.
(Signed): 0. E. Girakdby &-Co.,
Per J. H. O’Connor.”
On this receipt defendants rely in support of their defense of abandonment and forfeiture by the firm of Girardey & Co.
There is no proof of any special authority in O’Connor to enter into any such agreement as is claimed, and we do not think he was competent to bind the firm without such power or authority. The mere receipt of the note and its cancellation were rights to which that firm was entitled, and the receipt of the.$25.75, for rebate of fifteen per cent on premiums paid by it, cannot be regarded by us under the facts and circumstances of the case, as being accepted by O’Connor in satisfaction or full settlement of Girardey & Co’s claims as stockholders of the-old Association. Their rights were fixed and known to the Association, if not fully known as to the amount by Girardey & Co., and we cannot, under the evidence of O’Connor, construe the receipt of this comparatively insignificant amount as being intended by O’Connor, even if he had
The Chief Justice recuses himself in this case, having been consulted at the time as counsel in the subject-matter involved.