66 So. 219 | Miss. | 1914
deivered the opinion of the court.
This is an action of conversion brought by the Lamar County Bank, appellee, against the People’s Bank, appellant, to recover the amount of thirty shares of the capital stock in appellant bank, with accrued dividends. This stock was assigned to appellee by Vanee R. McDonald in settlement of an indebtedness. He was at the time cashier of appellee bank and largely indebted to it. The evidence shows that the stock was transferred and delivered by him to the bank in part payment of his indebtedness and that he received credit for the face value thereof. Appellant refused, upon request, to enter a transfer of the stock on the books of the corporation. On the hearing of the case the trial court granted a peremptory instruction for the plaintiff, and gave a verdict for the full value of the stock, with dividends and interest. Prom this action of the court this appeal was taken.
Appellant claims that the purchase of the' stock by appellee was an illegal contract under the laws of Mississippi, and that such contract can have no effect or be enforced in any court of this state. This point was also raised in a demurrer, which was filed by appellant to the declaration and overruled by the court. It is contended that appellant and appellee are competing corporations, being engaged in the same kind of business, that of banking, and being competitors therein. The evidence shows that the banks were located in the same general territory, and should be classed as competitors for business therein. By section 5005 of the Code, of 1906, competing corporations are prohibited from directly or indirectly purchasing or owning the capital stock or any part thereof of another corporation. We quote that section in full:
“No corporation shall directly or indirectly purchase or own the capital stock, or any part thereof, of any*859 other corporation, nor directly or indirectly purchase, or in any manner acquire the franchise, plant or equipments of any other corporation, if such other corporation be engaged in the same kind of business and be a competitor therein. Any corporation offending against this provision shall forfeit its charter, if a domestic corporation, and if a foreign corporation, shall forfeit its right to do business in this state, and shall be proceeded against by the attorney-general in manner and form provided in section 5004 of this chapter.”
It will be noticed that by the statute the purchasing and owning of capital stock in competing corporations is not onlyt prohibited, but the offending corporation is severely penalized therefor. We note that subsequent to the time of the sale of the stock by McDonald to ap-pellee, which occurred in 1909, the legislature of this state has again, in 1910, dealt with this statute, and has by an act (chapter 223 of the Laws of 1910) amended section 5005 so as to prohibit competing corporations from acquiring in any manner the capital stock, or any part thereof, of another corporation doing business in this state. We mention this law here, not because it is in force in the present case, but only to show that the state legislature has recently approved the statute, and by the amendment preventing the acquiring of the capital stock, extended its effect. The statute expressly prohibits the act of appellee in purchasing the stock. The contract of purchase was in direct violation of the statute. It was therefore illegal. Being illegal, ap-pellee could not through it recover.
We find quite a full discussion of' the law applicable to illegal contracts in the case of Woodson v. Hopkins, 85 Miss. 171, 37 So. 1000, 38 So. 298, 70 L. R. A. 645, 107 Am. St. Rep. 275. In that case the contract was illegal, as being contrary to public policy. In this case it is illegal, because made in breach of a statute. The principles announced in Woodson v. Hopkins are in the main
“No principle of law is better settled than that a party to an illegal contract cannot come into a court of law and ask to have his illegal objects carried out; nor can he set up a case in which he must necessarily disclose an illegal purpose as the groundwork of his claim. The rule is expressed in the maxim, ‘Ex dolo malo non oritur ac-tio, and in ‘In pari delicto potior est conditio defenden-tis.’ The law, in short, will not aid either party to an illegal agreement; it leaves the parties where it finds them. Therefore neither a court of law nor a court of equity will aid the one in enforcing it, or give damages for a breach of it, or set it aside at the suit of the other, or, when the agreement has been executed, in whole or in part, by the payment of money or the transfer of other property, lend its aid to recover it back. The object of the rule refusing relief to either party to an illegal contract, where the contract is executed, is not to give validity to the transaction, but to deprive the parties of all right to have either enforcement of, or relief from, the illegal agreement. While it may not always seem an honorable thing to do, yet a party to an illegal agreement is permitted to set up the illegality as a defense, even though it may be alleging his own turpitude. Money paid under an agreement which is executed, whether as the consideration or in performance of the promise, cannot be recovered back where the parties are in pari delicto. And goods delivered or lands conveyed under an illegal agreement are subject to the same rule. Courts will not, even with the consent of the parties, enforce an illegal contract. And it would seem to follow that an illegal agreement cannot be rendered. legal by ratification. ’ ’
In the case of Franklin Bank v. Commercial Bank, 36 Ohio St. 350, 38 Am. Rep. 594, quoting from the headnote :
*861 “The parties were banking corporations organized under a law forbidding any bank to hold or purchase stock in any other corporation, except to prevent loss upon a debt previously contracted in good faith. The plaintiff loaned money to the defendant’s president individually, and took as security a certificate of shares of the capital stock of the defendant belonging to him. Subsequently the plaintiff presented the certificate to the defendant, and demanded a transfer of the shares on the defendant’s books. This being refused, the plaintiff sued for conversion of the stock. Held not maintainable. ’ ’
Mr. Michie, in his treatise on the law of Banks and Banking, discussing the purchasing and holding of stock in another corporation, and stating that, where expressly prohibited from so doing, a bank could not purchase stock in another corporation, and its action in so purchasing could not be validated by estoppel, cited the case of Franklin Bank v. Commercial Bank, and in a footnote made the following comment:
“Where a bank, which is prohibited by law from taking stock in another corporation as a pledge for a contemporary loan, takes in such manner the stock of another bank, it has no right of action against the latter bank for its refusal to transfer the stock, though the law provides that any bank violating any provision of the act shall forfeit all its rights and franchises, which forfeiture can only'be declared in a proceeding by the state.” Michie on Banks and Banking, vol. 1, p. 660.
The act of purchasing the stock was clearly prohibited by the statute. There can be no question but that it was the intention of the legislature to prohibit just what has been done in this case. This intention will certainly be gathered from the language and subject-matter of the statute, and the evil, the purchasing and owning by a corporation of capital stock in a competing corporation, which it seeks to prevent. Appellee, the party seek
Reversed and remanded.
OPINION ON SUGGESTION OP ERROR.
The facts of this case necessary to now be stated, in addition to what was said relative thereto in our former opinion, are that the certificate of stock here in question was lost by its former owner, McDonald, and on March 20, 1908, a new certificate was issued to him therefor, which new certificate, or, rather, another issued in lieu thereof, is now owned by J. H. McLeod. In April, 1909, the certificate first issued, the one here in question, was. assigned by McDonald to appellee in part payment of an indebtedness due it by him. Whether McDonald had in fact lost this certificate at the time he obtained the issuance of the new certificate does not appear, and is not material.
The ground upon which we reversed the judgment of the court below was that appellee’s acquisition of this certificate of stock was in violation of section 5005 of the Code, and therefore it could not invoke the aid of the courts in enforcing any right which it claimed to have thereby acquired. 66 So. 219.
Appellant has now called to our attention, for the first time, the case of Watts v. Buchanan, 92 Miss. 543, 46 So. 66, in which the acquisition of stock by one of two competing corporations in the other was treated as a mere ultra vires act and of which the state only could complain. The construction there put upon the statute is controlling here unless that case is to be overruled, and this we do not think should be done.
Two other reasons are assigned by appellant for reversing the judgment of the court below: First, that,
Suggestion of error sustained and judgment of the court below affirmed.
Suggestion of error affirmed.
I cannot agree to the affirmance of this case. My reasons for declining to join with the majority of the court in sustaining the suggestion of error and affirming the case are fully stated in our former opinion appearing in 66 So. 219.
It is stated in the present opinion that this case is controlled by the decision in the case of Watts Mercantile Co. v. Buchanan, 92 Miss. 543, 46 So. 66. I note quite a difference in the two cases. In the Watts case, Buchanan sold his interest in the Alberta Hoop Company to the Watts Mercantile Company. The suit was upon a promissory note given by the vendee to evidence the purchase price. To escape the payment of the note, the company defended on the ground'that the transaction was ultra vires, because it involved a purchase by one corporation of an interest in another. It seems that the Watts Company had been part owner and stockholder
“We are thus drawn to consider the bald proposition whether a corporation, which makes” an ultra vires . . . “purchase from a private individual who has the power to sell, can set up its own ultra vires to defeat payment, and at the same time hold on to the” proceeds of “the contract.”
In referring to the statute forbidding the purchase by one corporation of the capital stock of another, and the penalty which is provided that the corporation offending should forfeit its charter and be proceeded against by the attorney-general, the judge continued:
“It might be enough in the case before ns to say that the penalty denounced is against the purchasing corporation, and that it would have to be stretched to cover a case as against an individual seller.”
The decision of the court was planted particularly on the language of a New York court (Seymour v. Spring Forest Cem. Ass’n, 144 N. Y. 333, 39 N. E. 365, 26 L. R. A. 859) which is as follows:
‘ ‘ That kind of plunder which holds on to the property, but pleads the doctrine of ultra vires against the obligation to pay for it, has no recognition or support in the law of this state.”
Judge Calhoon then said:
“We subscribe to that doctrine in the particular case we have on hand. ’ ’
It will be noted that in the Watts v. Buchanan Case the court was dealing with the enforceability of an ultra vires contract between the parties thereto. The court was applying the rule taken from the language of the New York court to the particular case in hand. The Watts Company, a corporation, was seeking to defeat the collection of its promissory note by setting up its
This case is different. Appellant is not endeavoring to hold on to property acquired by any ultra vires act on its part. It is not seeking to defeat payment of any indebtedness it owes. It has not been guilty of any ultra vires act. It has received no benefit from such an act.
What appellee complains of is appellant’s refusal to transfer on its books stock of its company which was acquired by appellee in clear violation of the statute.
Appellant is not pleading ultra vires. Appellant bases its refusal to make the transfer upon the unlawfulness of appellee’s purchase. Appellee claims its right to the stock through the medium of an illegal transaction. The contract in this case is illegal because in breach of a statute. I think that this was sufficient ground for appellant’s refusal to make the transfer, and I do not believe that this case should be controlled by the decision in the case of Watts Mercantile Co. v. Buchanan.