29 Mo. 64 | Mo. | 1859
delivered the opinion of the court.
This was an action, commenced before a justice of the peace by the plaintiff in error, to recover an assessment or call on the subscription of the defendant to the stock of the company. There was judgment for plaintiff, from which defendant took an appeal to the circuit court, where the judgment being for defendant plaintiff brings the cause to this court by writ of error.
The plaintiff is a corporation organized under the law of the state authorizing the formation of associations to construct plank roads, approved February 27, 1851. The facts appearing on the trial are, that at the time defendant made his subscription of stock — six shares, or three hundred dollars — one "Whitman, one of the corporators, who obtained the subscription from defendant, told him that he would not be required to pay his share of the subscription unless the road should be built, and upon this agreement the subscription was made. It further appeared that afterwards the company was organized in the manner required by law; proceeded to have the route of the road surveyed, expending some sixteen hundred dollars thereon, and made three several calls of two and a half, five and seven per cent, on the stock subscribed to pay for the same; also twenty per cent, damages on the amount of said calls, according to the by-laws of said company; that the road ,has not been completed, but abandoned. The law under which this company was organized, in regulating the payment of capital stock, provides that the directors may require payment, from subscribers to the capital stock, of the sums subscribed by them, at such times and in such proportions and on such conditions as they shall deem proper, under the penalty of the forfeiture of their, stock and of all previous
The question presented by the record is, as to the effect of the agreement entered into between defendant and Wait-man, another subscriber, annexing the condition already stated to the subscription ; whether, the enterprise for which the company was organized haying been abandoned without completing the road, the defendant is discharged by virtue of that agreement from the payment of the assessment made upon his stock. This agreement was a private one between the parties, known only to themselves, in which one of the subscribers, without authority from the other subscribers or the company, assumed to permit defendant to limit his liability, and so to qualify it as in a certain event to release him entirely from all obligations as a stockholder. The subscription of the defendant to the articles of association upon its face was unconditional, and he incurred thereby, with the other subscribers thereto, a common liability, and was in all respects upon an equal footing with them. In all such undertakings the respective subscriptions are contributions for a common object, in which each stockholder invests his money upon the faith of a like investment by the others, and especially in the confidence that the engagements and liabilities of each subscriber are what they purport to be. The assurance others held out, of a common participation in the burthens no less than the benefits, is among the chief inducements.
It is evident, from this view of the relation that stockholders sustain to each other, that to give effect to an agreement like that relied on as a defence in this case would be a fraud upon the other subscribers ; that it would sanction the principle, that, by a secret stipulation entered into between these parties, they could so modify the contract as to relieve the defendant from a liability which the other subscribers believed he had really assumed, and also of his due share of the bur-then which he ostensibly took upon himself by the contract to which he and they in common became parties.
The other judges concurring, the judgment will be reversed and the cause remanded.