17 Wis. 13 | Wis. | 1863
This action was brought upon a subscription to the capital stock of a railroad company chartered to build a road from the city of Kenosha to Beloit. Chap. 60, Pr. Laws of 1858. Afterwards, by chap. 22, Pr. Laws of 1857, the legislature changed the enterprise from that of building a road to Beloit, to one of building a road to the state line between this state and Illinois, at or near Genoa, in Walworth county. This change was obtained by the company, which acted under it, and, under still another law, consolidated with an Illinois company, which was authorized to build a road from Eockford in that state to the same point on the state line. This action was brought by the consolidated company.
After/the evidence of both parties had been introduced, the defendant moved for a nonsuit, for the reason, among others, that this was such a radical change in the enterprise as released him from his subscription. The motion was granted upon another ground, but we think it was properly granted upon this.
Considered independently of the effect of the power reserved in our constitution to the legislature, to amend or repeal the charters of all incorporations, all authorities concur in stating the general rule to be, that a radical, fundamental change in the character of the enterprise releases the stock subscriber who does not assent. In applying this rule many cases are found where the particular change made-was held not to be of this character. But we think the plain implication from the reasoning in all of them is, that a change like the one here in question would be so held. Thus in Banet vs. R. R. Co., 13 Ill., 504, the change made only straightened the original route, leaving it between the same termini. The court held that this was not a radical change, but that it left the enterprise substantially unchanged. But they say expressly that if the change had been to authorize a road from Alton to Vandalia, or Shelbyville, it would have been a different enterprise. But it will be seen by a reference to the map that á change to a
The supreme court of Indiana has recently held that the mere consolidation with another company under an act of the legislature releases non-assenting subscribers. McCray vs. R. R. Co., 9 Ind., 358; Booe vs. R. R. Co., 10 id., 93. I should not wish to adopt that conclusion without further examination. Eor although it may be within the principle of R. R. Company vs. Croswell, 5 Hill, 383, and other cases of a similar character, still there seems to me to be a fair distinction between such changes as only add something to the original enterprise, which becomes tributary to it, and makes its operation more perfect and successful, and changes which abandon the original undertaking for a new .one. There is certainly some ground for saying that changes of the former character may be deemed to be fairly within the scope of the original object, as it may reasonably be assumed that every association which undertakes the accomplishment of a particular enterprise, intends to make such changes as experience may show to be necessary for its most successful prosecution. And if this may be assumed, then, although such changes were of course not originally provided for, yet they may fairly be regarded as so far incidental to the original purpose as to be within the scope of the authority which each member has conferred upon the corporation, to bipd him by its action whenever the necessary legislative assent is obtained. And if this can be regarded as a correct rule, I should not be prepared to say that'a consolidation with another company whose road ran from either terminus in the same general direction, or the connection of a line of steamboats with the road, when one of the termini was on
The question then remains, whether the power reserved in the constitution to amend, alter or repeal charters should prevent that effect. Some of the cases seem to place great stress upon the existence of this power, and to intimate that under it the non-assenting stock subscriber may be bound by a change, the effect of which would otherwise be to release him. I am wholly unable to see that it should have any such effect. The occasion of reserving such a power either in the constitution or in charters themselves, is well understood. It grew out of the decisions of the supreme court of the United States, that charters were contracts within the meaning of the constitutional provision that the states should pass no laws impairing the obligation of contracts. This was supposed to deprive the states of that power of control over corporations which was deemed essential to the safety and protection of the public. Hence the practice, which has extensively prevailed since those decisions, of reserving the power of amending or repealing charters. But this power was never reserved upon any idea that the legislature could alter a contract between a corporation, and its stock
The result of my views upon this point is, that an amendment of this kind, merely authorizing the substitution of a new enterprise for the old, has precisely the same effect that it would have had if there had been no power reserved to amend the charter. The legislature does not profess to make it obligatory. They grant it as a power to be accepted if the company chooses to accept it; otherwise not. This is just what they might have done if the power of amendment had not been reserved. And it seems to me that the question whether an individual subscriber was bound or not by the corporate assent, should be determined by the same principles in either case. The power of amendment was never reserved with ref-, erence to any question between the corporation and its stock' subscribers, but solely with reference to questions between the corporation and the state, when the latter desired to make compulsory amendments against the wish of the former.
The effect of this reserved power is discussed in the matter of Oliver Lee & Co.'s Bank, 21 N. Y., 20, 21, by Judge Denio. The amendment there made did not attempt to change the corporate enterprise, but belonged to the class I have referred to, of amendments designed for the better protection of the public. It was a case where new liabilities were imposed on the stockholders, arising from the continued _ exercise of the corporate powers originally conferred. There being, therefore, no question in the case of a radical change of the original enterprise, I cannot think the judge intended that his remarks should be applicable to such a case. I cannot think that he intended to say that any person who subscribes for the stock of a corporation chartered for a special enterprise, where the power to al
This plainly implies that if the act had abandoned the orig-nal project, the subscriber would not have been bound. For the judge had no occasion to make the argument he did to show that the change was within the scope of the power of amendment, if that power was unlimited.
Pierce, in his work on railroads, p. 98, gives it as the result of the authorities, that even when the power of amending is reserved, it is not unlimited, but “that such a radical change in the company as diverts it from its original purpose ” is not binding on a dissenting shareholder. But if the power is not unlimited, where is the limit ? By what principles is it to be established ? I know of none except those I have already
The judgment must be affirmed.