4 La. Ann. 316 | La. | 1849
The judgment of the court ( King, J. absent,) was pronounced by
The plaintiffs were subscribers for sixty shares, of one hundred dollars each, in the stock of the Architects’ Company, and had paid four instalments. In 1834, being unable to meet a call of two-tenths, they applied to the board of directors for indulgence, and were allowed further time. At its expiration, they failed again to pay; and after a considerable interval, they still remaining in default, their stock was declared to be forfeited at a general meeting of the stock-holders. The company, ceased its operations in 1836, and went into liquidations. After reducing the assets to cash, the stock-holders were enabled to realize their capital, and a small excess of about six per cent. The stock-holders, although they have got back their capital and this small excess, are still virtually large losers, when we taire into consideration the loss of interest upon the investment of many years. The plaintiffs were excluded from a participation in the distribution of the assets, and brought the present action, in 1847. They alleged no tender of the unpaid instalments, at any time since the declaration of the forfeiture. The defendants pleaded the forfeiture, insisted upon its legality, and also prayed that, if the declaration of forfeiture be considered illegal, it might be judicially pronounced, and judgment rendered for the defendants.
The charter of the company does not contain the grant of power, not uncommon in charters, and which is found in several granted by this Staté, namely, that of declaring the forfeiture of the shares of a defaulting stock-holder. It may be conceded that an incorporated company has not the power to create, through its board of directors, a by-law subj ecting stock-holders to such a forfeiture, unless the power to pass such by-law be expressly granted by the charter. See the Matter of the Long Island Rail Road Company, 19 Wendell, 37. But, in our opinion, the question presented here is one of contract, and not of corporate power under the charter. After the organization of this company a meeting of stock-holders was held, and by-laws were adopted, of which one was in these words: “Tout actionnaire qui manquera d’effectuer son paiement sur une ou plusieurs actions, perdra, au profit de la compagnie, tous les paiemens qu’il aura deja fait sur les dites actions ”. The plaintiffs do not appear to have been present at the meeting; but it is obvious from the evidence that, the by-law or rule received the general acquiesence of the stock-holders, and, among them, that of the plaintiffs. The very certificates of stock offered in evidence by the plaintiffs, show the terms upon which they embarked their money in the common undertaking. The certificates are in a printed form, filled up with tire names of the plaintiffs and the amount of shares, acknowledging payment of the first instalment, and signed by the president and secretary. At foot is printed the by-law above stated. The acceptance of the certificates in this form is a tacit acquiescence in, and submission to, the by-law; and became the law between the plaintiffs and their fellow stock-holders. When the plaintiffs adressed a letter to the board, in 1834, asking indulgence, they expressly acknowledged the rights of the corporation to forfeit the stock,, and appealed only to the liberality of the directors.
We know of no rule of law which forbids stock-holders to form with each other a convention of this nature. It is not forbidden by the terms of the charter, and certainly cannot be held to be against publio policy. The necessity of prompt and punctual performance of this duty by stock-holders, in order to accomplish the corporate objects for which they have associated, had suggested the specific; grant of power to boards of directors which is found in so many charters; and»
Regarding this question then as one of contract, have the plaintiffs presented an equitable claim for relief. They have clearly assented to the agreement, in common with their fellow-stockholders, that they would lose, for the benefit of the rest, all instalments paid, in case of failure to pay any future instalment. This agreement was framed with a prudent view to the success of the common enterprize, that so the corporation might be enabled to accomplish the purposes of its charter, and shelter itself from sacrifices, in case of emergency, by the prompt obedience of its members to a call for funds. The other stockholders did their duty ; the plaintiffs failed to perform theirs, were confessedly in default, and, after a lapse of several years, without a tender of performance at any period of this long interval, ask to bo placed upon an equal footing with their associates in the distribution of assets, which, but for the punctuality of those associates, might now have no existence. If there be a power in the court to relieve a parly, under such circumstances, from a penalty for his default, stipulated by himself, it is at most a power resting in the sound discretion of the court, and not to be exercised unless the penalty appear excessive, and the court have also the means of decreeing a just compensation for the breach.
. We are of opinion that the present case is not one in which we could relieve the plaintiffs, with the certainty that we would not be doing injustice to the punctual stockholders. The penalty, in reference to the nature and object of the contract, does not' appear to us excessive or unjust; and the plaintiffs are therefore left to those consequences of their own default, to which they agreed to submit themselves.
It is therefore decreed that, the judgment of the court below be reversed, and that there be judgment in favor of the defendants, .with costs in both courts.