This action was brought by plaintiff against the Keith-O’Brien Company, a corporation engaged in general mercantile business and organized under the laws of the state of Utah, and against its directors and its secretary, for an alleged conversion of certain shares of the capital stock of the corporation owned by the plaintiff and his assignors. Judgment was in favor of the defendants, and plaintiff appeals.
The full-paid capital stock of the plaintiff and his assignors was sold by the defendants for nonpayment of assessments levied against it. The only question presented is whether the board of directors had authority to assess the stock. Section 331, Eev. St. 1898, provides:
*399 ' “The property of the corporation and the unpaid stock shall he liable for the debts of the corporation; but the individual property of any holder of full-paid capital stock of any corporation organized since March eighth, eighteen hundred and ninety-four, or that hereafter may be organized, under the laws of this state, except as otherwise expressly provided in this title, shall not be liable for the corporate obligations, nor shall assessments be levied on such stock for any purpose whatever, except to such extent and in such manner as may be expressly provided in the articles of incorporation.”
Section 338. provides:
“The articles of incorporation of any corporation now existing, or that may hereafter be organized under the laws of this state, may be amended in any respect conformable to the provisions .of this chapter by a vote representing at least two-thirds of the outstanding capital stock thereof at a stockholders’ meeting called for that purpose, as hereinafter prescribed; provided, that the original purpose of the corporation shall not be altered, nor shall the capital stock be diminished to an amount less than fifty per cent in excess of the indebtedness of the corporation; and provided further, that the liability of the holder of .full-paid capital stock for assessments or for the indebtedness of'the corporation shall not be changed without the consent of all the stockholders.” . ...
Section 354 provides:
“The full-paid capital stock of any corporation organized since March eighth, eighteen hundred and .ninety-four, or that may hereafter be organized under the laws of this state, shall not be assessable for any purpose whatever, except to such extent and in' such manner as may be expressly provided in the articles of incorporation; provided, that if such stock is made assessable and the mannef of levying the assessment is not provided for, it shall be levied in the manner and form hereinafter prescribed.”
The defendant company was organized December 2, 1902. So far as material, tbe articles of incorporation provided: That the capital stock should be $250,000, divided into twenty-five hundred shares, of the par value of $100 per share and stated the names of the incorporators and the amount of stock subscribed by each, aggregating two thousand shares, of which the plaintiff and his assignors subscribed 222^ shares. They further provided that: “The remainder of said shares of said capital stock, to wit: five hundred shares thereof, shall be and remain in the treasury
. In 1903 (Sess. Laws, p. 78, c. 94) the Legislature, among other 'sections, amended section 338, Nev. St. 1898, to read:
“The articles of incorporation, of any corporation now existing or that may hereafter be organized nnder the laws of this state may be amended in any respect conformable to the laws of thi3 state by a vote representing at least two-thirds of the outstanding capital stock thereof at a stockholders’ meeting called for that purpose as hereinafter prescribed. Provided, that the original purpose of the corporation shall not be altered, nor shall the capital stock be diminished to an amount less than fifty per cent in excess of the indebtedness of the corporation; and provided further, that the personal or individual liability of the holder of full-paid capital stock for assessments or for the indebtedness or obligations of the corporation shall not be changed without the consent of all the stockholders.”
Section 1, art. 12, of the Constitution of Utab, is:
*401 “Corporations may be formed under general laws, but shall not be created by special acts. All laws relating to corporations may be altered, amended or repealed by the Legislature, and all corporations doing business in this state, may, as to such business, be regulated, limited or restrained by law.”
On tbe 15tb day of February, 1904, in pursuance of previous notice of a special meeting for tbat purpose, tbe stockholders of tbe defendant company representing 1,655 shares of tbe capital stock amended article 16 of tbe articles of incorporation to read: “That, whenever tbe said corporation, is indebted to an amount exceeding ten per cent, of the amount of tbe outstanding capital stock of said corporation, tbe board of directors shall have the power and authority, for tbe purpose of paying said indebtedness, to levy and collect an assessment upon tbe outstanding capital stock of said corporation in an amount sufficient to pay said indebtedness, but not to exceed fifty per cent, of tbe outstanding capital stock, and shall have tbe power and authority to levy and collect such other assessments upon tbe capital stock of said corporation as are authorized by statute; but only one assessment exceeding tbe amount authorized by statute shall be levied by tbe directors of said corporation. To tbe extent herein mentioned tbe capital stock of this corporation is hereby declared to be assessable.” The' amendment was adopted by 1,605 shares of the capital stock voting for it. Fifty shares voted against it. On March 8, 1904, the directors adopted the following resolution. “Resolved, that an assessment of 50 per cent., to wit, $50 per share, be, and the same is hereby, levied upon all of the outstanding capital stock of the said Keith-O’Brien company, which shall be payable to E. G. Kidder, secretary of said company, at Room 100, David Keith Building, Salt Lake Oity, Utah, on or before the 2d day of May, 1904; and any shares of stock upon which said assessment shall not be paid on or before the 2d day of May, 1904, shall be delinquent, and shall be sold according to law on the 6th day of June, 1904, to pay the amount of said' assessment and the costs of advertising and expenses of sale.” Notices of the amending of the ar-
The appellant contends: (1) That the original articles of incorporation did not authorize the board to levy an assessment upon the outstanding capital stock fully paid, nor were any number of stockholders less than the whole authorized to amend the articles with respect to levying and collecting assessments on such stock; (2) that the Legislature, under the reserved power of the Constitution, could not lawfully confer authority upon two-thirds of the stockholders, or any other number of stockholders less than the whole, to make amendments to the articles, so as to levy assessments on such capital stock, without the consent of the minority; ánd (3) that in all events such assessments could not lawfully be made until the treasury stock was first exhausted.
It undoubtedly is the law that the power of a corporation to levy an assessment on full-paid capital stock must be derived from the statute, or the articles, of incorporation, or some other express promise to pay it. It may he assumed' that, were it not for .the provisions contained in articles 16 and 19 of the articles.of incorporation, the original articles coiild not have been amended, under section 338, Rev. St. 1898, so as to authorize the levy of an assessment on full-paid capital stock without the consent of all the stockholders. But section 331, Rev. St., provides that assessments are not to be levied1 on full-paid stock for any purpose whatever, except to such extent and in such manner as may. be expressly provided in the articles of incorporation. And it is the general rule that
“A'majority of the stockholders of a corporation clearly have the power to make any alterations or changes in the constitution of the corporation which are authorized by its charter, for this power is within the contract between the corporation and its stockholders.” (3 Olark & Marshall’s Private Corporations, see. 630.)
'“It is a principle of law,” says Mr. Cook, in his work on Corporations (volume 1 [5th Ed.'l, sec. 241), “coeval with the existence of corporations having capital stock, that, unless the corporation char*403 ter or constitutional statute provides otherwise, a stockholder, the full par value of whose stock has been paid in, is not liable for and cannot be made to pay any amounts in addition thereto.”
Tbe plaintiff and Ms assignors subscribed the articles of incorporation. The articles are their contract. What powers have they conferred upon the board of directors, or a majority of the stockholders, by the terms of their contract ? Fairly construed, article 16 of their contract means that, for the purpose of paying expenses, conducting the business, and for paying the debts of the corporation, the board of directors are authorized to levy and collect assessments on the outstanding capital stock, and for that purpose and to that end such stock was made assessable. The extent of the assessment, and the manner and form of levying and collecting it, was stipulated to be as by law provided. Such stipulation' undoubtedly was made with reference to the proviso of section 354, Rev. St. 1898, that -if such stock (full-paid capital stock) is made assessable, and the manner of levying the assessment is not provided for (by the articles), “it shall be levied in the manner and form hereinafter provided’.” Tt will therefore be observed that the capital stock of the corporation was, for certain purposes and to some extent, made assessable. Such was the contract of agreement of the in-corporators, and to which each subscriber agreed. Now, they further contracted and agreed among themselves that the articles might be amended in any respect, at any stockholders’ meeting called for that purpose, by a majority of the outstanding capital stock voting for such amendments. By this stipulation the incorporators expressly .authorized a majority of the stockholders to amend the articles. They had the undoubted right to make such an agreement. While this did not give the majority the right to alter or change the fundamental purpose or character of the corporation, or to ■substitute entirely different articles for the original, at nevertheless gave them the authority to make any reasonable and proper amendments germane to the things and subjects expressed in the articles, or in furtherance of carrying out the general plan and purpose of the corporation, and to promote
Having reached this conclusion, it is unnecessary to pa¿s upon the questions whether the legislature, by the amendment of 1903, conferred the power upon two-thirds of the stockholders to amend the articles so as to authorize the board of directors to levy the assessment in question against a dissenting minority, and whether the Legislature, under the reserved power of the Constitution, was authorized to malee such an amendment, so far as affecting corporations existing at the time of the passage of the amendment.
. The only other question remaining is: Was the assessment properly levied while the five hundred shares of treasury stock remained in the treasury and unsold?' Again looking at the contract of the incorporators, we find that these five hundred shares should remain in the treasury, and should be disposed of at such time and for such price as the board of directors should determine. The articles nowhere provide that the treasury stock should first be exhausted before the levying of an assessment. On the contrary, the articles
We are of tbe opinion that tbe judgment of tbe court below should be affirmed; and it therefore is affirmed, with costs.