46 Barb. 432 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1866
The defendants’ counsel moved for a nonsuit, at the circuit, upon several grounds there specified, and the circuit judge granted the motion, and directed a non-suit without putting his decision upon either of the particular grounds mentioned. Upon the ground that the plaintiff had not proved that the Geneva Coal Company was ever a corporation duly organized or incorporated pursuant to the laws of the state of Pennsylvania, I do not think the non-suit can be sustained. The general acts authorizing the formation of corporations for manufacturing purposes had been, I think, substantially complied ivith in the organization of the company. The company had an organized existence; was a corporation de facto; was allowed by the authorities of that state to exercise corporate franchises for several years j and no steps were taken by the state to annul its charter or deprive it of its assumed corporate rights. The act under
It was for the plaintiffs to establish affirmatively the liability of the intestate. The answer denied each and every allegation of the complaint, so that, in addition to the other necessary evidence, it devolved on the plains tiffs to show that the defendants’ intestate was a stockholder of the corporation which was primarily their debtor. For
The principal place of business of the corporation Was in Luzerne county^ Pennsylvania, and from the testimony it appears that it commenced its business operations there in April, 1865. By the certificate of the organization of the company, which was filed in pursuance of the statute of Pennsylvania under which the company was organized, on the 13th of April, 1865, and which was also produced in evidence, it appears that the capital stock of the company Was $50,000, divided into 2500 shares of $20 each, and that the whole number of shares had then been subscribed and taken, and one fourth of the whole amount actually paid in. There is nothing to show that any of these -shares thus subscribed and taken and partly paid for had ever been forfeited,. or in any way transferred, after they were originally taken. The whole stock having been subscribed for and taken, at the time the articles of incorporation were filed and the company became a legal being, it is manifest that subsequent subscribers, by merely writing their names in the corporation book, and affixing a number of shares to their respective names, could acquire no right to any shares of stock, or become by such an act stockholders of the corporation. There was then no stock left for them to take; and as they could get nothing, the subscription would be wholly nugatoiy. A person who subscribes regularly to the stock of a corporation becomes a stockholder in virtue of his subscription, and espe
A new trial must therefore be denied.
Welles, P. J. concurred.
New trial denied.
Welles, Johnson and A Darwin Smith, Justices.]