56 Colo. 130 | Colo. | 1913
delivered the opinion of the court.
Lucy F. Wood, for herself and others in like interest, brought suit in the district court of Montrose county against the Lilylands Canal and Reservoir Company, to have certain amendments, increasing the capital stock of the company and enlarging its objects and purposes, declared void and their enforcement enjoined. The cause was tried by Phillip W. Mothersill, Esq., referee, who reported findings of both law and fact, upon which judgment was entered for plaintiff as prayed, and the defendant brings the cause here for review.
It is unnecessary for the purposes of this opinion to rehearse in detail the manifold claims and contentions of the parties. The only serious fact conflict is found in the charges of fraud and conspiracy, concerning which the referee found that there was no evidence to charge the plaintiff and others like interested. The findings of fact by the referee are supported by the evidence, were favorable to the contentions of the plaintiff and will not he disturbed. A brief summary of the history of the controversy and a statement of the issues follow.
In March, 1906, plaintiff, Lucy F. Wood, with C. A. Wood, her husband, and I. D. McFadden, incorporated under the laws of this state the Lilylands Canal and Reservoir Company, for the purposes suggested by its name, with a capital stock of 100,000 shares of the par value
“To the Lilylands Canal & Reservoir Co.
In consideration for all rights and title in the Lily-lands Ditch & Reservoirs, now on file in the office of the State Engineer at Denver, Colo., and in the Co. Clerk of San Miguel Co., Colo., I hereby agree to accept Twenty Five Thousand shares of the capital stock of your company and I hereby agree to pay all just claims against the rights so transferred up to March 8th, 1906.
In consideration of the acceptance by your company of the above proposal I hereby agree to purchase Seventy Four Thousand Nine Hundred and Ten shares of your*133 Company’s capital stock at the price of one dollar, cash, per share to he paid for as called by the directors of said company, not exceeding two per cent in any one month. The certificate for the entire amount to be issued to me, and I will deposit with the L. C. B. Co. certificates for 80,000 shares, the same' to be held by the company as collateral security that I will make payment for the said certificates as per agreement; the certificates so paid for to be released and delivered back to me dollar for dollar as rapidly as redeemed.
Signed this 17th day of May, 1906.
C. A. Wood”
McFadden owned a one-half interest in the Wood rights. Stock was issued to Wood in conformity with the contract, 25,000 shares full paid, and 74,910 shares at $1.00 each were charged to him upon the books of the company, and certificate No. 2 for 80,000 shares was thereupon returned by him To the company, to be thereafter issued on his order as paid for at par, in conformity with the terms of the contract. On the same day Wood assigned one-half of that certificate to McFadden, and new certificates issued for 40,000 shares each, the old certificate was canceled, and appropriate entries were made upon the company books debiting the one account and crediting the other. It appears that there was a bona fide attempt to thus launch the company and dispose of and finally deliver stock out of the 74,910 shares as the company should receive cash, or its equivalent, therefor. As soon'as the organization was complete, sales of stock began to be made in small blocks, desert filings on government land were made, and after the lapse of about three years and a half from the date of the organization of the company practically $65,000 from all sources had been paid in cash to it for stock out of the 74,910 shares, from the proceeds of which a large amount of construction
“That at said meeting (November 3, 1909) the officers of the company held that there were outstanding and entitled to vote on said amendment only 68,177 shares of stock; that shares of stock in said company amounting to 21,068 standing in the names of various parties were refused the right to be voted on the question of said amendment; that the number of shares voted for said amendment was 48,377; and that the stock allowed to vote was considered full paid.
“That besides the 6,874 shares standing in the name of C. A. Wood which he was refused the right to vote on said amendments the following is the list of persons, the number of shares standing in their names respectively, the date when acquired and the amounts paid by each on the shares not allowed to vote on said amendments.”
Then follows the list, aggregating 14,194 shares, with a credit of $4,434.16 paid thereon. A similar finding was made as to the meeting of September 21st, 1909. The court, upon the findings of the referee, declared the amendments void, enjoined the company from issuing any shares in excess of the original capital, from exercising the additional power granted by the second purported amendment, and from selling, renting and disposing of water to the lands of persons not holding stock under the original issue of 100,000 shares.
The main defense is that the incorporators entered into a conspiracy in the original formation of the company, to secure to them&elves without consideration its total capital stock, and then sell it to innocent third parties at greatly advanced prices, to their own profit and not for the benefit of the company. A reversal of the
“No corporation shall issue stock or bonds, except for labor done, service performed, or money or property actually received, and all fictitious increase of stock or indebtedness shall be void.” * * *
The substance of this contention, if sound and enforced, would nullify every share of stock of this company, not only those of which complaint is made, but the entire issue, except ninety shares, for the balance was all issued under the Wood proposal. If a part of this stock is void because the original issue is illegal, then it is all void. If the -contract upon which the original issue is based is to be held invalid as to a part of the stock, it must be so held as to all of it; and unless the company is able to restore parties to their original status, which it manifestly cannot now do, the contract should be upheld and enforced, at least against the company’s complaint. The defense urged is nothing more or less than a collateral attack upon the very existence of the company. It is offered in an equitable action brought by some of the stockholders seeking to redress alleged wrongs, perpetrated by the company in excluding them from participation in the conduct of its internal affairs. Even if relief such as this defense suggests, were proper in a proceeding like this, no court would be warranted, upon this record, in declaring that the stock issued pursuant to the Wood contract was not issued upon valuable and adequate consideration, or that the transaction was fraudulent. It is at least manifest that the company itself has not been-thereby imposed upon or misled.
The plaintiff contends that by assent to, acquiescence
It must be borne in mind that the defendant in this case is the company itself. No individual stockholder or creditor is here complaining. If there were, an entirely different situation would be presented and different questions would arise. The company accepted the Wood proposal, treated it as a valid and binding subscription, issued stock on it, reaped large benefits therefrom, built some four or five miles of ditch through proceeds derived from it, and now, after purchasers have acquired rights
Defendant cites Old Dominion Copper M. & S. Co. v. Bigelow, 203 Mass. 159, 89 N. E. 93, 40 L. R. A. (N. S.) 314, in support of the contention that the issue of 25,000 shares of its stock for the property rights of Wood, under the contract, was a fraudulent transaction, because the rights conveyed thereunder were of comparatively little value. In our view of this case it is unnecessary to consider or determine this question, for the company is,°as already indicated, in no position to urge it. Research has led to a consideration of a companion case to the one above referred to, namely, Old Dominion Copper M. & S. Co. v. Lewishon, 210 U. S. 206, 52 L. Ed. 1025, 28 Sup. Ct. 634. The defendants in these cases were joint tortfeasors, living in Massachusetts and New York respee
“The argument for the petitioner is that all would admit that the promoters (assuming the English phrase to be well applied) stood in a fiduciary relation to it, if, when the transaction took place, there were members who were not informed of the profits made and who did not acquiesce, and that the same obligation of good faith extends down to the time of the later subscriptions, which it was the promoters ’ plan to obtain. It is an argument that has commanded the assent of at least one court, and is stated at length in the decision. But the courts do not agree. There is no authority binding upon us and in point. The general observations in Dickerman v. Northern Trust Co., 176 U. S. 181, 44 L. Ed. 423, 20 Sup. Ct. Rep. 311, were obiter, and do not dispose of the case.*140 Without spending time upon the manj dicta that were quoted to us, we shall endeavor to weigh the considerations on one side and the other afresh.
“The difficulty that meets thé petitioner at the outset is that it has assented to the transaction with the full knowledge of the facts. * * * The contract had been made and the property delivered on July 11 and 12, when Bigelow, Lewishon, and some other members of the syndicate held all the outstanding stock, and it is alleged in terms that the sales were consummated before the vote of July 18, to offer stock to the public, had béen passed. * * * It is difficult, without inventing new and qualifying established doctrines, to go behind the fact that the corporation remains one and the same after once it really exists. When, as here, after it really exists, it consents, we at least shall require stronger equities than are shown by this bill to allow it to renew its claim at a later date because its internal constitution has changed. * * * If we should undertake to look through fiction to facts, .it appears to us that substantial justice would not be accomplished, but rather a great injustice done, if the corporation were allowed to disregard its previous assent in order to charge a single member with the whole results of a transaction to which 13/15 of its stock were parties, for the benefit of the guilty, if there was guilt in anyone, and the innocent alike.” 3 Cook on Corporations, 6th Ed., § 729, pg. 2386.
So here, the defendant company, with full knowledge of the entire situation, having accepted the contract as valid, received and retained benefits accruing from it, is estopped in this connection to attack the legality, of the transaction. The Lewishon case, supra, having been decided on facts and circumstances so closely analogous to those in the case at bar, is direct authority for our conclusion here, that the defendant company cannot be
The controversy is therefore narrowed to a single question: Was the stock of plaintiff and others in like interest, though not fully paid for, wrongfully excluded from voting upon the proposed amendments submitted at the September and November meetings?
This proposition is discussed in the case of Water Works Co. v. Holme, supra, as follows:
“Our statutes seem to recognize that an accepted subscriber to the capital stock of a corporation becomes a stockholder by the mere act of subscription, regardless of whether the subscription is paid or not. Section 241 of the Gen. Stats. 1883, and, as it was amended, section 480 Mills’ Ann. Stats., section 850 Rev. Stats. ’08, provides, among other things, that subscriptions shall be made payable to the corporation in such installments as may be determined by the directors; that an action may be maintained to recover any installment due and unpaid for twenty- days after demand therefor, and, speaking with reference to a written demand upon the delinquent, the section does not describe him as a subscriber, but as a delinquent stockholder. The same section provides that the proceeds of any sale, over the amount due on the shares sold,' shall be paid to the delinquent stockholder. No installment may have been paid, yet, under this section, the delinquent stockholder would be entitled to the proceeds of the sale over the amount necessary to pay his subscription. It might well be asked, if he was not the- owner of the shares, why should this surplus be paid to him? Section 486 Mills’ Ann. Stats., section 873 Rev. Stats. ’08, says that each stockholder shall be liable for the debts of the corporation to the extent of the amount that may be unpaid upon the stock held by him. This*142 section seems to recognize a subscriber who has not paid Ms subscription as a stockholder. In the light of these statutes, were it necessary to hold that an accepted subscriber to the capital stock is a stockholder, the following authorities, which say that the effect of an ordinary accepted subscription to the capital stock of the corporation makes the subscriber a stockholder and it is not necessary that he should have paid for his stock, would be worthy of consideration: A. & S. C. R. Co. v. Hill, 20 Or. 177 [25 Pac. 379]; 1 Thomp. Corp. sec. 1139; Wheeler v. Millar, supra, 99 N. Y. 353; Mitchell v. Beckman, 64 Cal. 117 [28 Pac. 110]; Schaeffer v. Mo., etc., Ins. Co., 46 Mo. 248; The W. & M. R. Co. v. Dwyer, 49 Iowa, 121.”
The general rule is also stated in that opinion to the effect that where a sale of personal property is made on credit, unless a different intention is shown by agreement or otherwise, the property in the goods passes to the buyer on delivery, and, in absence of delivery, the property may pass, except as to third persons, although the seller retains the right of possession until the price is paid. 35 Cyc. 323.
In A. R. L. T. & Co. v. F. L. & T. Co., 13 Colo. 587, 22 Pac. 954, the court said:
“Such contracts (of subscription), when based upon a consideration, and enforceable, constitute the sole test by which the question can be determined whether a person claiming to be a stockholder is such in fact. There must be mutuality. The stockholder must be in á position to enforce his rights, and compel the corporation to recognize him as a stockholder. The corporation must be able to enforce the subscription agreement.”
And in 10 Cyc., at page 390, the rule is stated as follows:
*143 “Whenever the subscriber pays, or obligates himself to pay, he is the owner of stock in the company. It is the payment, or the obligation to pay, that makes him a shareholder, with all the rights of one, if the certificate were not issued at all.”
2 Clark and Marshall, Private Corporations, sec. 383, says:
“In the absence of an express charter or statutory requirement, the stock of a corporation need not be paid in in cash at the time of its organization, or within .any particular time after its organization, but assessments or calls may be made upon the subscribers, as the money is needed. Neither payment nor the issue of a certificate is necessary, in the absence of an express provision, to make one á stockholder with all the rights and subject to all the liabilities of a stockholder.”
The conclusions of the referee on this branch of the case correctly state the law applicable to the facts. They are, in effect, that the promise of Wood to pay the company $1.00 cash per share for 74,910 shares in installments as called for by the directors, but not to exceed two per cent per month, and the issuance to Wood of such shares, undoubtedly created an enforceable contract as between the company and Wood, and between creditors and Wood; that the assignments from Wood to other parties were subject to payment to the company of certain'designated sums as called for by the company; that the assignees obtained the same rights relative to the stock assigned as Wood had; that Wood was entitled to vote the stock standing in his name prior to assignment, and consequently his assignees were entitled to vote the stock assigned to them, for which they had paid or were bound to pay, so long as their rights had not been cut off
It was not within the power of the company to declare through a by-law that only such stock as had been full paid should be represented and allowed to vote at stockholders’ meetings. Such embargo upon the stock was unwarranted, and is in that respect in conflict with our statutes and the decisions upon the subject. Sections 853 and 865, Revised Statutes 1908; People’s Bank v. Superior Court, 104 Cal. 649, 38 Pac. 452, 29 L. R. A. 844, 43 Am. St. 147; and 2 Cook on Corporations, 6th Ed.,' § 622.
The record discloses no equities in favor of the defendant company worthy of consideration. The judgment is right, and is affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.
Chief Justice Musseb and Mr. Justice White concur.