This is an appeal from a judgment of non-suit in favor of the defendants, Neeland and Beggs, in an action brought by the plaintiff, as the trustee of a bankrupt corporation, to recover, under the trust fund theory, the difference between the sums paid on a subscription agreement for stock in the corporation and the par value of said stock, irrespective of the terms of the agreement. (See
Vermont Marble Co.
v.
Declez Granite Co.,
The pleaded facts of the plaintiff’s case pertinent to the points presented on the motion for a nonsuit are these: On January 8, 1915, the defendants entered into an agreement in writing with the Admiral Automatic Water Heater Company, a corporation, and certain individuals interested therein, for the formation of a new corporation to be known as the Admiral Manufacturing Company. The agreement provided in part “that said Neeland and Beggs agree to subscribe and purchase from the said Admiral Manufacturing Company 96 shares of its capital stock at the sum of $25.00 per share, to be paid as follows: $400.00 on the first day of January, 1915, and a like sum on the 1st day of each and every month thereafter to and including the 1st day of June, 1915, and upon the payment of each $400.00 when the same becomes due there shall be issued to said Beggs and Neeland 16 shares of the capital stock of the Admiral Manufacturing Company.” Thereafter, so the complaint alleged, in accord with the terms of said subscription agreement, the defendants paid for said stock the sum agreed to be paid therefor.
The Admiral Manufacturing Company was organized with an authorized capital stock of one hundred thousand dollars, divided into ope thousand shares of the par value of one *3 hundred dollars each. It does not appear from the complaint when this company was organized. At all times from the organization of said corporation it was insolvent, and its insolvency was known to the defendants. No certificate of stock was ever issued to said Neeland and Beggs, or either of them, but on December 1, 1915, they directed that a certificate for ninety-six shares be issued to A. E. Warming-ton, and, pursuant to such direction, such certificate was issued on December 11, 1915. On said last-mentioned dates, and at all intervening times, said Warmington was insolvent, and known to be so by the defendants. No demand has ever been made by the board of directors of said corporation for the unpaid balance of the purchase price of said stock and no assessment levied.
On April 6, 1916, said Admiral Manufacturing Company filed a voluntary petition in bankruptcy and plaintiff was appointed trustee. Claims against the bankrupt estate were allowed aggregating $13,402.12, while the available assets amounted to but $349.17. On June 28, 1917, the referee in bankruptcy directed the plaintiff, as trustee, to call in all unpaid subscriptions, and, upon failure of the stockholders to make payment to sue therefor. Each of the defendants refused to make payment, and plaintiff thereupon brought this action.
The defendants, after denying generally their ownership of the stock in question, by their answers admitted that they signed said subscription agreement, alleging, however, in that behalf, matters and things which, if true, and had they been established in evidence as part of the defendants’ case, might have tended to show that said A. E. Warmington, and not the defendants, was the real subscriber for the stock, and was to be the actual owner thereof, when it was issued. With the latter phase of the case, however, we are not concerned upon this consideration of the merits of the motion for nonsuit.
The defendants did not deny the allegation of the complaint that they had paid to the corporation the sums agreed to be paid for the said stock in keeping with the terms of the subscription agreement. This being so, it may be taken as an admitted fact that the defendants paid to the corporation the price agreed upon for the purchase of the stock. No denial was made of the allegation of the, plaintiff’s com *4 plaint that pursuant to defendants’ direction on December 1, 1915, the stock subscribed for was issued on December 11, 1915, to said Warmington, and that likewise may be taken as an admitted fact in the case. It was also an expressly admitted fact in the case that no permit authorizing the sale of the corporation’s stock was issued by the commissioner of corporations until September 10, 1915, and that this permit was superseded by an amended permit issued and dated October 24th of the same year. The amended permit provided, among other things, that the applicant was permitted “to sell 600 shares of its preferred stock at $30 per share,” upon the condition, among others, “.that the total compensation, commission or expense to be paid or incurred by said applicant in the sale of any of said shares of preferred stock shall not exceed 20 per cent of the selling price thereof.”
The bill of exceptions shows, as a part of the plaintiff’s case, that it was stipulated by and between the parties that the subscription agreement in question was made prior to the organization of the corporation, and “that the plaintiff had offered evidence tending to prove all the allegations of the complaint except that in regard to the allegations that the defendants Neeland and Beggs were stockholders or subscribed to the stock, the only evidence offered was that already in the record and the admissions of the pleadings.” Upon the record thus made plaintiff then rested his case, whereupon the defendants moved for a nonsuit “upon the ground [that] the subscription agreement purported to have been made was made at a time anterior to the issuance of any permit by the Corporation Commissioner in violation of the Investment Company’s Act as it was in force in January, 1915; and further that it appears from the terms of the subscription agreement itself that the stock was sold for less than the sum authorized by the Corporation Commissioner to sell it.”
At this point it may not be amiss to note that the stipulation of the parties applied as a matter of course to, and sufficiently supports, as against a motion for a nonsuit, the allegation of the complaint that the corporation and Warmington, the nominee of defendants to whom the stock was issued, were at all times insolvent and known to the defendants to be so.
Of course, the parties to the transaction could not, nor did they, as a matter of law, by their adoption of the agreement ratify and thereby validate as of the time of its original making or any time thereafter an agreement which may have been void in the first instance. But the parties could, and we think they did, when the bar of the statute to the
*7
making and acceptance of a valid agreement had been removed, elect to adopt and accept and stand upon the subscription agreement already signed as embodying—even though it may have been ineffectual at the time it was signed ■—the terms and conditions of a new agreement by which their future dealings were to be governed.
(Montgomery etc. Co.
v.
Montgomery etc. Co.,
So considering the subscription agreement in question, it must be held that it did not fall within the claimed inhibition of the statute, and, therefore, the motion for a nonsuit was improperly granted upon the ground of the alleged invalidity of the agreement.
It seems to be conceded by the respondents, as we think it must be, that the proviso in the permit of the corporation commissioner “that the total compensation, commission or expense to be paid or incurred by said applicant in the sale of any of said shares of preferred stock shall not exceed 20 per cent of the selling price thereof” should be construed as meaning that it “permitted the corporation to pay compensation, commission or expense” of the sale of the stock “out of” and “up to 20 per cent ... of the price of $30 per share,” at which the corporation was authorized to sell the stock. This being so, it must be held that the sale of the stock was made to the defendants in substantial accord with the provisions of the permit. Obviously, the purpose of the law and the object of the permit were fulfilled when the corporation received a net price in excess of the minimum named in the permit. The subscription agreement provided for the payment of twenty-five dollars a share, and the stock admittedly was sold at that price, which is one dollar per share more than the minimum net price fixed by the corporation commissioner for the sale of the stock. This being so, the ground for the motion for nonsuit in this particular was nonsubstantial and will not suffice to support the judgment.
For the reasons stated the judgment is reversed.
Sloane, J., Wilbur, J., Waste, J., Lawlor, J., Shurtleff, J., and Shaw, C. J., concurred.
