Newmann v. Sexton

156 Ill. App. 517 | Ill. App. Ct. | 1910

Mr. Justice Baker

delivered the opinion of the court.

We shall consider only the question whether the whole amount of the capital stock of the corporation was subscribed in good faith. The capital stock was $2,500 in shares of $100 each. The copy of the subscriptions set out in the report of the commissioners is as follows:

“We, the undersigned, hereby severally subscribe for the number of shares set opposite our respective names, to the Capital Stock of Olson and Peets Co., and we severally agree to pay the said Company, for each share, the sum of .one hundred dollars.

Name Shares Amount

Albert H. Olson......... .............5 $500.00

Albert H. Olson ......... .............5 500.00

George W. Sexton........ .............10 1000.00

George E. Peets.......... .............5 500.00

The report then proceeds as follows:

“Amount of capital stock' actually paid in......2000.00

Amount of capital stock not paid in............ 500.00

Stock subscribed and not paid, disposed of as follows: Five shares subscribed for by Albert H. Olson and held subject to call of Board of Directors.”

On the filing of the report the Secretary of State issued a certificate of the complete organization of the corporation, which was duly recorded. Olson testified that he held the five shares for which he had not paid, “in trust as treasury stock of the corporation; that he never actually owned other than as trustee, nor was there any intention on his part or on the part of the other directors, that he should own these last five shares subscribed for by him and held subject to the call of the board of directors.” The subscription by Olson for the last five shares was absolute on its face.

“The rule forbidding the introduction of parol evidence to explain a written instrument meets with no exception in the case of a subscription for stock of a corporation.” Corwith v. Culver, 69 Ill. 502-506.

The last five shares subscribed by Olson were not “treasury stock.” Treasury stock is stock which is returned by the person to whom it is issued to the corporation as a gift to sell the same and put the proceeds in the corporate treasury as working capital. 1 Cook on Corporations, section 46.

Section 7 of the Corporation Act provides that the subscriptions for shares of stock “shall be made payable to the corporation and shall be payable in such installments and at such time or times as shall be determined by the directors.” “A call is an official declaration by the proper corporate authorities that the whole or a specified part of the subscriptions to the capital stock is required to be paid. An installment is one of the several part payments into which a single call may be divided.” Cook on Corporations, Section 104. Section 4 of the Act makes it the duty of the commissioners, in their report to the Secretary of State, to state, “What disposition has been made of the stock subscribed and not paid.” In compliance with this provision the commissioners reported that five shares subscribed by Olson had not been paid and were “held subject to call of the Board of Directors.” The obvious meaning of the report is that Olson’s subscription for five shares of stock which had not been paid was held subject to call by the directors. By the terms of his subscription and the Act, the subscription was subject to call by the directors.

We think that the only conclusion that can properly be drawn from the evidence is that all of the stock of the corporation, “was subscribed in good faith,” before the Secretary of State issued his certificate of the complete organization of the corporation, and therefore that the defendants are not liable for any debt contracted in the name of the corporation. The judgment will therefore be reversed.

Reversed.