254 F. 813 | 8th Cir. | 1918
Lead Opinion
This was the case. The Barnes Electric Eight & Power Company was a corporation of the state of Iowa, with a capital stock of 400 shares, of a par value of $100 each, 360% of which had been issued, and 39% of which remained in its treasury. About July 2, 1912, the defendant' Ramsay agreed to take, and six months thereafter to pay, $3,500, with interest at 6 per cent, per annum, for 35 shares of this treasury stock, and thereupon he delivered to the corporation his promissory note, dated July 22, 1912, whereby he promised to-pay this sum to the corporation, and the latter at some time before August 8, 1912, issued to him its certificate for the 35 shares of stock, which, prior to the latter date, he sold and assigned to H. J. Stoop in exchange for stock in some other corporation. On August 8, 1912, there was a meeting of the stockholders of the corporation for the election of officers and the transaction of other business at which some of the stockholders objected to the votingNy Mr. Stoop of the 35 shares of stock, on the ground that they had been issued in violation of sections 1641b and 1641f of the Supplement Code of Iowa of 1913, which provide in substance that such a corporation shall not issue its stock “until the corporation has received the par value thereof”; that if it is proposed to pay for such stock “in property, or in any other thing than money,” the corporation shall cause such property or other thing than money to be appraised by the Executive Council of the state of Iowa, and shall not issue its capital stock therefor in a greater amount than the appraised value of such property or thing; that stock issued in violation of the foregoing provisions shall be void; that in a suit brought by the Attorney General a decree of cancellation thereof shall be rendered; that, “if the corporation has received any money or thing of value for said stock, such money or thing of value shall be returned” (section 1641d); and that any officer, agent, or representative of a corporation who violates any of the foregoing provisions shall be subject to fine and imprisonment.
After a discussion of this objection the stockholders signed an agreement that, if those who were directors of the corporation when the note was taken would pay to the corporation $3,500, they would turn over to the payors Ramsay’s note for $3,500 without recourse, would waive any objections to the issuance of the 35 shares of stock, and would agree that those shares should be considered legal stock of the
At the close of the trial each party made a general motion, without more, that the court instruct the jury to return a verdict in his favor; the court granted the plaintiff’s motion, denied the defendant’s, instructed the jury to return a verdict-for the plaintiff on the first cause of action, and a verdict and judgment accordingly were rendered. This judgment is assailed here on three grounds: (1) That the taking of the note for the stock and the issue of tire latter therefor were violations of the statute cited, and were against the public policy of the state, so that the note was not collectable; (2) that the note was without consideratiop;- and (3)- that the payment of the $3,500 to the corporation by the four directors, and the agreement of Ramsay to pay that amount and interest to them, were inseparable from the first transaction, grew out of it, and’were tainted with its illegality, and for that reason tire agreement of August 8, 1912, was not enforceable.
_ _ Turning to the decisions of the state of Iowa, whose statute is here under consideration, in Pennypacker v. Capital Insurance Co., 80 Iowa, 56, 45 N. W. 408, 8 L. R. A. 236, 20 Am. St. Rep. 395, the
“The evident purpose of such, a law is the protection of those paying for insurance upon property in that state. The prohibition, and penalty is against the company only. No duty is required of the insured, and no act upon his part expressly prohibited.”
pet the fact be noted here that the prohibition and the penalties of the Iowa statute in the case at bar are against the corporation and its officers, agents, and representatives only, and that no act of the subscriber or purchaser of the stock is expressly prohibited, nor is any penalty denounced against him. In Pangborn v. Westlake, 36 Iowa, 546, a statute of Iowa forbade the sale of a lot in any town or addition until the plat thereof was acknowledged and recorded, unden a penalty of $50 for each lot so sold; but the Supreme Court of thai. state held that such a sale was not void.
Section 1753 of the Statutes of Wisconsin of 1898, provided that no corporation should issue any of its stock, except in consideration of money or labor, or property estimated at its true money value actually received by it equal to the par value thereof, nor any bonds, except for money, labor, or property estimated at its true money value actually received by it equal to 75 per cent, of the par value thereof, and that all stock and bonds issued in violation of this prohibition should be void. Corporations of Wisconsin issued their stock and bonds before they actually received the amounts of money, labor, or property required by this statute, but after the issue of these bonds and stocks the requisite amounts were paid therefor to the corporation. The Supreme Court of Wisconsin held (a) that the bonds and stocks were not void to such an extent that they could not be validated by the payment and receipt of the requisite amount of money, labor, or property before the commencement of the actions which challenged them; (b) that such payment and receipt made them valid; and (c) that one who accepts and holds or sells stock prematurely issued under such a statute cannot escape liability to pay therefor* on the ground that the stock was issued before full value was actually received by the corporation for it because he cannot take advantage of his own wrong. Haynes v. Kenosha St. Ry. Co., 139 Wis. 227, 119 N. W. 568, 121 N. W. 124; Whitewater Tile Pressed Brick Mfg. Co. v. Baker, 142 Wis. 420, 125 N. W. 984-986.
The instances which have been cited illustrate the fact that the Legislatures often use the word “void” in statutes in the sense of utterly void, so as to be incapable of ratification, and also in, the sense of voidable, yet capable of- ratification by those whose rights are infringed, without clear distinction, and leave the courts to determine, from the terms of the statute, the nature of the subject-matter, the
The purpose of the legislators in enacting the statute was to secure to the corporation payment for its stock in money or its equivalent to an amount ecpial to the par value of the stock. That object will be attained more successfully and certainly if the stock issued in violation of the statute is held to be voidable than if it is adjudged to be absolutely void. If it is held to be voidable, the corporation may avoid it, if its full value is not paid when demanded, and, on the other hand, may secure that value if the purchaser is willing to pay it. If it is held to be utterly void, it can recover nothing for the stock it has sold, and must return that which it has received. Take the case in hand: The proof is that, when Ramsay gave his note for the stock, none of the parties were aware of the requirements of the statute that the stock should not be issued until the consideration for it had been fully paid in money or its equivalent. If the stock was incapable of ratification, and the note was uncol-lectable the corporation could not lawfully receive payment for the stock after its issue. If the stock was voidable only, the corporation could, as it did, lawfully obtain an amount of money equal to the par value of the stock it isstied therefor, and the conclusion is that the true construction of that, statute is that the word “void” was used and intended to be used therein in the sense of voidable, hence capable of ratification, and that by the acceptance of the $3,500 from the four former directors in payment therefor and for the assignment of Ramsay’s note, the stock was ratified and validated, and the action on the note rendered indefensible.
“The illegality of one contract does not extend to another, unless the two are united either in consideration or promise. Hanover National Bank v. First National Bank, 109 Fed. 421, 48 C. C. A. 482. * * * Even when a single contract embraces several agreements, some legal and others illegal, it is the duty of the court to separate the good from the bad, when that is possible. Choctaw, O. & G. R. Co. v. Bond, 160 Fed. 403, 87 C. C. A. 355; Lingle v. Snyder, 160 Fed. 627, 87 C. C. A. 529. This rule would be more readily applied when the agreements are contained in separate instruments. The plaintiff could have established its case without any aid from the illegal contracts. It is true that it pleaded those contracts in its complaint, and introduced them as part of its case upon the trial. This, however, was not necessary. * * * It is what is necessary to be shown, rather than what is in fact shown, that indicates whether the union between two contracts is such as to involve one in the illegality of'the other.”
The application of these indisputable rules to the contract of August 8, 1912, leaves no doubt of its independence of the contract and the transaction of July 22, 1912. In the first place, if there was any illegality or violation of public policy in the latter transaction, it was in the premature delivery of the stock before it was paid for in money, and that delivery had been made and Ramsay had sold the stock to another before the contract of August 8, 1912, was made. If there was any wrong, it had been done, and the contract of August 8, 1912, could not and did not induce, or in any way promote, the violation of the statute, or of the public policy it embodied. In the second place, it was neither a part of the contract, of the consideration, or of the promise of the contract of August 8, 1912, that the stock should be issued prematurely, and the two contracts were separate in consideration and in promise. One of the best tests of the inseparability of two contracts or transactions is the necessity of the proof of one by the plaintiff in order to maintain his action upon the other. There was no such necessity in the case at bar. All that was necessary fpr Crevlin to prove was his ownership of the note, Ramsay’s promise to pay the amount of it when due, in consideration that the four directors would pay the $3,500 to the corporation in August, 1912, and their payment of that amount. No rational or logical way of escape is perceived from the conclusion that the contract of August 8, 1912, was separate from and independent of the contract and transaction
Let the judgment below be affirmed.
Concurrence Opinion
Reserving expression of opinion respecting the interpretation which should be given the Iowa statute involved, I prefer to base my concurrence upon the validity of the agreement of August 8, 1912.