61 Pa. Super. 401 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1915
Opinion by
This is an appeal by defendant from judgment for want of a sufficient answer. The action was assumpsit and was founded on two writings, one executed on December 30, 1908, and the other on May 3, 1909. By the former the defendant subscribed for five shares and by the latter for twenty shares of the capital stock of the plaintiff corporation of the par value of fifty dollars per share and in each instance agreed to pay the full par value of the shares subscribed for in five equal consecutive monthly installments. It was alleged in the statement of claim and virtually admitted in the answer that the defendant paid certain of the earlier installments but had not paid the later installments amounting in the aggregate to six hundred dollars. The plaintiffs claimed to recover this sum together with interest on the several unpaid installments thereof from the dates when they became due.
It was alleged in the statement of claim and admitted in the answer that the Philadelphia and Gulf Steamship
Before referring to the defense on the merits set up in the answer some technical points mentioned in the.brief of appellant’s counsel will be noticed.
It is suggested that the statement of claim was insufficient to support the judgment because a copy of the decree of the United States District Court was not attached thereto. There is much merit in the suggestion of plaintiff’s counsel that it was too late to raise this objection for the first time after judgment and appeal. If it had been raised in the court below the defect, if any, could have been cured by amendment. See Finch v. White, 190 Pa. 86. But apart from this consideration the objection cannot be sustained on a proper construction of Section 3 of the Act of May 25, 1887, P. L. 271. That requires, inter alia, that the statement be accompanied by copies of all contracts upon which the plaintiff’s claim is founded. In this case the plaintiff’s claim was founded on the two subscription contracts, not on the decree of the United States District Court, and the statutory requirement was complied with by attaching copies of the contracts. If by any latitude of construction it could be said that the record of the suit in the
It is further claimed that the statement was insufficient because it did not aver that the amount of the subscription was necessary for the payment of creditors. The substantial question raised by this objection was considered in Philadelphia and Gulf Steamship Company v. Clark, 59 Pa. Superior Ct. 415, wherein we pointed out the distinction between the contract sued on and a contractual or statutory obligation to pay upon call or as needed and held that proof that the whole amount of the subscription was needed to discharge existing liabilities of the corporation Avas not essential to the plaintiff’s prima facie case. What was there said as to the question of evidence applies with equal force to the question of pleading.
The insufficiency of the defense based on the alleged representations of the agent who obtained the subscriptions is adequately and clearly shown in the opinion filed by Judge Ckane of the Municipal Court and nothing need be added to the following excerpt therefrom: “The defense interposed against the payment of balance on the second subscription is to the effect that at the time defendant signed the second subscription it was represented to him by an agent for plaintiff that, ‘It was the intention of the plaintiff company to obtain subscriptions and raise the sum of one million dollars with which to purchase not less than four steamships so the company could have weekly sailings between Philadelphia and New Orleans’; that plaintiff’s agent further ‘represented to defendant that the said subscriptions aggregating one million dollars would be completed within sixty days of said agreement.’ Denial is made in the ansAver that the sum of one million dollars was subscribed within sixty days from May 3, 1909, or
The remaining defense and the one principally relied on is based on the undisputed fact that at the time the subscription for stock was made the conditions which the Act of April 22, 1874, P. L. 108, makes a prerequisite to the right of a foreign corporation to do business in this Commonwealth had not been complied with, nor were the provisions of the Act of June 8, 1911, P. L. 711, complied with before the action was brought. It is claimed for these reasons that the contract was not enforceable. It is to be observed with regard to this defense that the statement of claim alleged that the plaintiff corporation was at all times wholly and exclusively engaged in interstate commerce, to wit, the transportation of merchandise between Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, and New Orleans, Louisiana, and later Charleston, South Carolina. This averment was admitted
The judgment is affirmed.