1 Keyes 118 | NY | 1864
By the Ooukt.
The defendant became a subscriber to the plaintiff’s capital stock; but at the time of subscribing did not pay ten per cent, in money. Subsequently, by agreement, the original "subscription was reduced from one thousand dollars to seven hundred dollars, and on two occasions he gave to the company two negotiable notes, in which»were embraced and included the original ten per cent, and the several calls which had_been made, and which were due and pay
If the statute not only requires a subscription on the books of the company, but that such subscription should be attended by a cash payment of ten per cent, to make a valid contract and one binding on the parties, the defense must succeed. On the contrary, if a contemporaneous cash payment was not necessary to the validity of the subscription, or was not a condition precedent to the defendant’s liability attaching; or if the subsequent payment of the ten per cent., voluntarily or involuntarily, so that the company actually got the money, invested the defendant with all the rights of a stockholder in the plaintiff’s corporation, and he could have compelled a delivery of the stock to him when the action was brought, there is no defense. If he ever became a stockholder he could not repudiate his obligation to pay for the stock for which he had subscribed, and if, as was doubtless the case, the object of the statute requiring a subscriber to pay ten per cent, in cash on the amount subscribed, was to secure money to the plaintiff on subscription to its stock, it was fully accomplished in the present case. The money, it is true, was not paid simultaneously with the subscription, but it was afterward realized by, and went into the treasury of the company, and I am unable to see why the subscription would not at least be valid and binding from the time the money was realized, which was before the commencement of the suit. It could only be otherwise upon the ground that to make a valid and obligatory contract for stock between the company and the subscriber,
It was said that the intent of the railroad act was that no subscription should be valid until ten per cent, in cash was paid thereon, and not that it should be invalid if the actual subscription and payment of the money were not simultaneous acts; that writing the name in the subscription book should be deemed but part of the transaction, and provisional or conditional until the ten per cent, is paid; but after payment, and certainly after payment of forty per cent, on the subscription, as in Clarke’s case, and twenty per cent, thereon, as in the case of Smith, the statute requirement on this point must be
The statute, it is said, requires the payment of ten per cent, in money on the amount subscribed, and until that is paid there is no legal or obligatory contract. The subscriber may refuse to make the cash payment and perfect the agreement for stock authorized by the statute. . But if the statute be
It is, perhaps, unnecessary to discuss the point whether the
The order of the general term granting a new trial should be reversed, and the judgment of the special term aflirmed.
A majority of the judges concurred in reversing the judgment, upon the ground above stated.
T. A. Johnson', J., delivered a dissenting opinion, to the effect that the doctrine of the cases above referred to, ought not to be extended, and that no money having been paid at any time by the defendant to the plaintiff, the subscription remained as it was at the beginning, a mere dead form; the giving of the note did not vitalize it, nor did the payment of the note to another as holder after action brought upon it; and hence there had been no such payment upon the subscription as the statute required to make it valid, and no action could be maintained upon it.
Order of general term reversed, and judgment of special term affirmed, with costs.