59 N.H. 385 | N.H. | 1879
The defendants by accepting the lease of the plaintiffs, occupying the plaintiffs’ railroad as a tenant, paying the rental agreed upon for several years, and deriving all the advantages
By the terms of the agreement of September 16, 1873, it appears that the defendant corporation agreed to loan to the plaintiff corporation $150,000, for which the latter were to give their promissory note, payable on the 1st day of January, 1875, and to transfer as collateral security 1,500 shares of their capital stock, the par value of which was $100. The balance due on the note the defendants seek to have allowed in set-off in ifiis action. But the plaintiffs claim that there was no consideration for the note, although the agreement would seem to leave no room for doubt on that point. As we understand it, the plaintiffs’ position is this: It is provided in the written agreement that if the note is not paid prior to January 1,1875, the defendants are to have the right after that time of selling the stock at less than par. But s. 8, c. 184, Gen. St., provides that “ No corporation shall sell or dispose of any of the shares of its capital stock at a price less than the par value thereof, except in the case of sales of shares at auction for non-payment of assessments.” Therefore, the plaintiffs contend, the contract in this respect being prohibited should be so construed as to avoid the illegal part of it; that is, it should be held that there was an absolute sale of the 1,500 shares, and a payment for the same, on which theory the note would be without consideration.
But it .is admitted that the transfer of the stock was intended
Judgment for the defendants.