30 Conn. 565 | Conn. | 1862
The defendant was factorized as the debtor of the New York and Boston Railroad Company; but his counsel claimed on the trial of this action, which is an action of scire facias founded upon that attachment, that there never was a legal organization of any such corporation, and that
2. Another point raised by the counsel for the defendant was, whether his subscription was binding, in consequence of its having been made upon a subscription book, in the hands of an agent, sent into towns on the line of the proposed railroad east of the city of Middletown for the purpose of obtaining additional subscriptions to enable the company to complete and extend the road, and not upon the regular subscription book, opened for the purpose of receiving subscriptions to the stock by the persons authorized to open subscription books on giving such notice of the times and places when and where they were to be opened, as they, or a majority of them, might deem reasonable. As this proceeding took place after the organization of the corporation, it of course could not in any way affect the legality of that act; and we are therefore not
3. We perceive no objection to the charge in respect to the meetings of the directors at which the calls for installments were made. The records of these meetings showed a quorum to have been present, and the meetings we think should be presumed to have been legally warned or notified unless the contrary was shown. Sargent v. Webster, 13 Met., 497.
4. The original charter required four directors to be present at a directors’ meeting, to constitute a quorum for the transaction of business. But thei’e was a union of a company chartered by the legislature of Rhode Island with the Connecticut company, under authority from the legislatures of the two states, the new or united company taking the name of the company chartered by this state, and the defendants claimed that after the union, as the Rhode Island charter made no provision as to the number of directors that should constitute a quorum, it became immediately subject to the general rule of law, requiring for that purpose a majority of the directors to be present. But by the agreement of the two companies, which was sanctioned and confirmed by an act of the legislature of Rhode Island, the Woonsocket Railroad Company
5. There was appended to Mr. Brainerd’s original subscription the words “ to be expended between the Connecticut river and the east line of the state,” which words, it is claimed, constitute a condition precedent, which has never been performed. And as the corporation has become so hopelessly insolvent that there is no probability that it can be performed, it is insisted that he is absolved from any liability which he might otherwise be under to pay his subscription. The court however instructed the jury, that this was not a condition which prevented Mr. Brainerd from becoming a stockholder. Perhaps it may be true that these words might be used in such a sense as to bear the construction claimed for them, but if so, they are, as we think, equally liable to be construed as words of direction or request;. that is, as the expression of a desire on the part of the subscriber to the stock, that the amount of his subscription should be expended east of Connecticut river. Considering then that the object of the company was to obtain
7. There was another point made, though not very much pressed, in reference to the rejection of the testimony of the original defendant, on another trial in a former suit between him and a Mr. Bishop. The defendant having died since the commencement of the suit, and the defense having devolved upon his executors, who have been made parties, they attempted to obtain the benefit of his testimony by showing what he testified on the former trial. As that was a trial between different parties, having different rights, and with whom the plaintiff had no privity, and as he had no opportunity to- examine or cross-examine the witnesses, it would be contrary to the first principles of justice to bind or in any way affect his interests by the evidence given on that occasion, however identical the questions or some of them may have been with the questions which arise in this case.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.