39 Me. 587 | Me. | 1855
— It was decided in Oldtown & Lincoln Railroad Co. v. Veazie, ante, p. 571, that a plea of the general issue does in our practice admit the existence of the corporation, with a capacity to sue and be sued. It cannot be an admission of more than this. There is nothing in the plea authorizing it. The decided cases do not; the plea contains no language that the corporation has performed its duties in other respects, or that it has performed its part of a condition by which a conditional contract with it has become binding.
By the pleadings therefore, it is admitted that the plaintiff is competent to be a party in Court, and is properly in Court; and being a corporation acting only by force of its. charter, this admission necessarily implies a legal organization under that charter.
The action is assumpsit, and based upon two subscriptions to the capital stock of the corporation. These subscriptions so far as their terms become material, are as follows: —
“ The subscribers hereby agree to take and fill the number of shares set against their names, respectively, in the capital stock of the Penobscot and Kennebec Railroad Company, on the terms and conditions following, viz: —
“4th. The corporation may be organized when four thousand shares shall have been subscribed, but no contract for building or completing the road shall be entered into until seven thousand shares shall have been subscribed.”
An agreement to take and fill a given number of shares in an incorporated company, is equivalent to an agreement to take and pay for such shares. Upon such agreement, assump-sit will lie for the stipulated price of the shares. Bangor Bridge Co. v. McMahon, 10 Maine, 478.
A subscription to the capital stock of an incorporated company, is a contract between the subscriber and the company. ,The subscriber may simply agree to take a given amount of stock, and in that event the remedy of the corpo
Whore a subscription is made upon condition that the company shall not be organized, or shall not enter upon the principal object of its organization until a giren amount of its stock shall be subscribed, such condition is a condition precedent, and the company will not be authorized to enforce the collection of such subscription until they hare complied with such conditions on its part.
A person might be willing to become a stockholder in a railroad corporation, which should hare four hundred thousand dollars of its stock subscribed before its organization, and seven hundred thousand before entering into a contract for building and completing its road, who would be unwilling to subscribe to its stock without restriction. Such a condition would provide for a capital amply sufficient to secure a full preliminary exploration and survey of the route for a road, and ensure the prompt construction of the road.
The right of the corporation to assess the stock of the defendant, depended upon the conditions in his subscription. If the company have complied with those conditions, then its right to assess under its charter and by-laws, and in conformity therewith, immediately accrued, and such assessments if legally made, may be collected. If the conditions in the subscription had not been performed on the part of the company, then the assessments cannot be collected, and it matters not what may have been the form of the assessments.
To show that the number of shares had been subscribed requisite to authorize the organization of the company, the plaintiff introduced the records of the proceedings of the stockholders. By these records it appears that before the organization there had been subscribed of the capital, four thousand and sixty shares. It is objected by the defendant
These books not only contain the names of the persons who had subscribed to the capital stock of the company,, and the amount subscribed by each person, but also show that more than four thousand shares were represented and voted upon at the organization.
In the case, Highland Turnpike Co. v. Keene, 10 Johns. 154, the Court say, “the general rule is, and it is a rule essential to public convenience, that corporation books are evidence of the proceedings of the corporation, but then it must appear that they are the corporation books, and that they have been kept as such, and the entries made by the proper officer, or some other person in his necessary absence.
The books of a corporation established for public purposes, are the best evidence of its acts, and ought to be admitted whenever these acts are to be proved. Owings v. Speed, 5 Wheat. 420; Coffin v. Collins, 17 Maine, 440.
Where a charter requires two thirds to form a quorum, and it was stated on the minutes that on due invitation the corporators met, that was held tantamount to saying that two thirds met. Com. v. Woelper, 3 S. & R. 29.
In Wood v. Jefferson County Bank, 9 Wend. 194, Savage, C. J., remarked, that the Act of incorporation did not make any set of men a corporation ipso facto. There was something to be done. Books of subscription were to be opened ; stock was to be subscribed for; that stock was to be distributed by commissioners; and those persons to whom the stock was thus distributed become stockholders. The stockholders were then to choose directors, and they a president and cashier.
“The books of the bank were produced, showing the election of the president and cashier. The production of the books showing the election of the officers was prima facie sufficient to show that the previous requisitions of the statute had been complied with, and that the corporation then had an existence.”
The by-laws of the company, Art. 7th, provide that the directors shall have power to dispose of the residue of the capital stock authorized by the charter, and not subscribed for at the time of the organization, in such manner, at such times, and from time to time, as they shall judge most for the interest of the company.
The records of the directors show that on the 31st day of July, 1852, a committee of the directors was authorized to dispose of the residue, or any portion of the residue of the capital stock of the company remaining on hand, and not subscribed for at the time of the organization of the company, and not subscribed for under the direction of said committee since their appointment, on such terms and in such manner as they may judge most for the interest of the company.
This committee reported at a meeting of the directors, hold on the 3d day of May, 1853, that they had procured subscriptions, as stated in their report, and had disposed of 4999 shares; and also submitted the books of subscription and a list of subscribers.
Whereupon it was voted by the board of directors that, “ it now appearing that a subscription exceeding seven hundred thousand dollars having been obtained on the books of the corporation, that the contract for the construction of the road, made by the committee appointed for that purpose, with W. B. S. Moor, provisionally, with the amendments and alterations on sheet marked A, annexed to said contract, and concluded and signed by said Moor and James Dunning, be and hereby is ratified and confirmed.”
As has been before remarked, it was essential, to make the subscription of the defendant obligatory on him, that the
The procurement of a given amount of subscriptions was one of the preliminary measures necessary to enable the company to organize and prosecute the enterprise of constructing a road. No good reason is perceived why the boohs of the company may not be received as evidence to show that these requirements of the charter and by-laws have been complied with, as well as other pre-requisites, prescribed by the same authority. The acts of the directors, within the scope of their authority, are the acts of the company, and the books of the directors in which are recorded their authorized official acts as directors, are also the books of the company. We therefore are of opinion that the books of the directors, in the absence of countervailing evidence, are sufficient to show, that the subscriptions required to authorize the company to contract for the construction of the road have been obtained, provided the directors had authority to act in the premises. This authority is denied.
In July, 1851, as appears by the records of the stockholders, a board of directors were chosen consisting of Messrs. Pickering, Strickland, Moore, Wood, Smith, Poor and Appleton.
By the same records it also appears, that at a stockholders’ meeting, held on the 27th of July, 1852, by adjournment, being an adjournment of the annual meeting, Messrs. Stanley, Crocker, Cummings, Churchill, Wood, Kim-ball and Pickard were chosen directors.
There is nothing appearing upon the records either of the stockholders or directors, showing that the board elected in 1852, ever accepted the trust, or acted as directors of the company, under that election.
By the third section of the charter it is provided, that “ the immediate government and direction of the affairs of
The records show, that the board chosen in 1851 continued to act as directors after the annual meeting of Í852, in the same manner as they had done before that time. Prom that fact, and from the fact that the persons elected in 1852 do not appear to have acted in any instance as a board, the inference is almost irresistible, that the board elected in 1852 were never qualified to act, and consequently, that the board of 1851 were authorized to continue in office under the provision of the charter recited above. That they continued to manage the affairs of the company as directors until the annual meeting of 1853, and that their acts have been approved and ratified by the subsequent action of the corporation is manifest. This would constitute them directors de facto, if the functions of the office of directors were not exercised by them by strict legal right. Charitable Association in Granville v. Baldwin, 1 Met. 359.
There is, therefore, no valid objection to the acts or records of this board of directors on the ground of want of authority.
That assessments shall not exceed five dollars on each share at one time, is one of the conditions in the subscription of the defendant. It is objected, that in several instances the directors laid two or more assessments at the same time. It will be seen, however, that in no instance was payment required of more than five dollars upon a share at one time. The stipulation is evidently designed to protect the subscriber from being called upon to pay more than five dollars on a share at one time. That is the substance of the condition, and this we think was not violated by the mode of making the assessments.
The assessments in this case having all been laid before the annual meeting in 1854, cannot be affected by any irregularity in the proceedings of that meeting, if any such existed. The records, however, disclose no such irregularity.
When a majority of a board of directors appear to have been present at the meetings of the board, at.which business is transacted, the presumption is, that all the members of the board were duly notified J;o attend. Sargent v. Webster, 13 Met. 497.
At a meeting of the board of directors, held on the 27th day of July, 1852, the following preamble and vote was .adopted: —
Whereas information has been given us, that the amount of $600,000 cannot be obtained in subscriptions to the stock of the company, being the sum required to make the subscriptions in Bangor binding: — Therefore voted, “ that the subscriptions to the capital stock of the Penobscot & Ken-nebec Railroad Co., made up to the present time, in the city of Bangor, Waterville and towns in the vicinity, be and hereby are declared not binding on said subscribers, only so far as they shall elect to pay said subscriptions.”
At that time the defendant was a resident of Waterville, and had subscribed, in 1850, for thirty shares of the stock of the corporation.
By this vote, it is contended that he is released from any obligation to pay for those thirty shares, unless he shall elect to pay for -them, and that his resisting the claim of the company in this suit, is evidence of an election on his part not to pay.
There is no such condition in the subscription of the defendant, as appears to have been incorporated into the subscription in Bangor.
By the 5th section of the charter, it is provided that “ the president and directors for the time being, are hereby authorized and empowered, by themselves or their agents, to exercise all the powers herein granted to the corporation, for the purpose of locating, constructing and completing said railroad, and for the transportation of persons, goods and property of all descriptions, and all such powers and authority for the management of the affairs of the corporation's may be necessary and proper-to carry into effect the object of this grant.”
It may well be doubted whether these powers would authorize the directors to release a subscriber from his obligation to take stock without any consideration, and there does not appear to have been any consideration, so far as the defendant is concerned, for this conditional release by the directors.
But if the directors were authorized to make this conditional release, the defendant, to avail himself of it must make the election contemplated therein, within a reasonable time. He could not avail himself of the privileges of a stockholder, by reason of his subscription, for those shares, and at the same time repudiate his liability as a subscriber, on the ground that ho had elected not to pay under that vote of the directors.
The case finds that at the annual meeting in 1853, a year after the vote referred to, the defendant by his proxy in writing, dated on the 5th of July, 1853, authorized Harrison Barrett to appear, act and vote for him, for the number of shares set against his name, being one hundred and ■thirty, and that said Barrett did vote o.n that number of
It is provided by c. 181, of laws of 1855, § 1, that no person, offered as a witness, shall be excluded by reason of his interest in the event of the action, but his interest may be proved to affect his credibility.
11 Section 2.— The above section shall not apply to a party to the action, nor to any person for whose immediate benefit it is prosecuted or defended.”
The witnesses introduced were not parties to this action j it was not brought for their immediate benefit, but they undoubtedly have a contingent interest in the event of the suit, as it may affect favorably or otherwise the value of their stock in the corporation. Persons thus situated are, under this Act, competent witnesses.
Other objections which have not been specifically noticed, were made to the preliminary proceedings, affecting the organization of the corporation. Rut under the pleadings in this case, and in view of the presumption omnia rite acta, which “covers multitudes of defects in such cases,” these objections cannot prevail.
The defendant, as a subscriber to the stock of the corporation, had a right to inspect the books, and to offer them or their contents in evidence. He has not seen fit to avail himself of this right, or in any other way to offer evidence to control that offered by the plaintiff. Erom the evidence in the case, we think the legitimate inference is, that there has been a compliance on the part of the corporation with the conditions precedent to be pei'formed by them, and upon the performance of which the liability of the defendant to pay for his stock attached, and therefore, that, according to the agreement of the parties, a default must be entered, with judgment for $13000 damages.
Defendant defaulted.