82 So. 439 | Ala. | 1919
Appellant, Minge, owned a cotton oil mill at Faunsdale which was mortgaged to its full value. He proposed to form a corporation with a capital stock of $50,000 to operate the mill, and as inducement to appellee, Clarke, to put $12,000 into the corporation, for which the latter was to receive stock at par, he entered into a contract with Clarke in which he (Minge) agreed to transfer to Clarke $13,000 of stock in addition to the $12,000 paid for, and further agreed to purchase Clarke's entire holding ($25,000) for the sum of $12,000 with interest, less any dividends earned in the meantime, if at the end of two years the corporation should have failed to make a net earning of $24,000. Plaintiff, appellee, sued on this contract, alleging that at the end of two years the corporation had failed to make a net earning of $24,000. Defendant pleaded a number of pleas, including plea 11, which last-named plea alleged that the contract sued on was null and void in this:
"In the year 1911 a corporation was organized in the state of Alabama under the name and style of the Faunsdale Oil Mill, and a large amount of the stock of said corporation was issued to the plaintiff in this cause, and it is for an alleged contract of sale of all or a part of said stock by plaintiff to defendant which is the foundation of this suit. And defendant avers that the issuance of said stock to plaintiff was contrary to and in violation of section
This plea is in identical language with plea 7 shown by the report of Minge v. Clarke,
Defendant's contention that plea 11 was proved cannot be allowed. Plaintiff paid $12,000 in real money for the stock he got, and, while the sum so paid was only 50 per cent. of the face of all the stock, it is clear that his stock was in part at least based upon money and represented actual capital. It is not true, therefore, that "said stock" was not issued for money, labor done, or property actually received.
If it be conceded that the corporation received from defendant, as consideration for the stock issued to him, only property which was mortgaged to its full value (this being the reliance of the pleas other than that one numbered 11), and if it be assumed that plaintiff knew defendant's equity in the property was of no value (a consideration of which the pleadings take no account), still these facts did not render plaintiff's stock void or valueless nor even the stock issued to defendant. Plaintiff, as we have stated, paid $12,000 for his stock, and every share of stock issued by the corporation represented a proportionate interest in that fund, and to that extent at least had value, was a legitimate subject of barter and trade. As the court observed in the analogous case of Beitman v. Steiner Bros.,
"No corporation shall issue stocks or bonds except for money, labor done, or property actually received."
This provision and the statute enacted in consonance therewith confer rights upon creditors as against stockholders, and in some cases, as in Fitzpatrick v. Dispatch Publishing Co.,
If, as appellant contends, there was error in sustaining demurrers to his pleas for the reason that they were not demurrable for any cause of demurrer assigned against them, such rulings were harmless to appellant; for, had the rulings been otherwise, the agreed statement of facts shows that the pleas could not have been sustained.
Affirmed.
ANDERSON, C. J., and McCLELLAN and GARDNER, JJ., concur. *191