40 App. D.C. 9 | D.C. Cir. | 1913
delivered the opinion of the Court:
This is an appeal from a judgment in the supreme court of the District, under the 73d rule, for $1,000 and accrued interest, in a suit by Leonard A. Lange, the appellee, upon the common counts in assumpsit and the following agreement:
Milwaukee, Wis., May 23, 1908.
The Royal Glue Company of Washington, District of Columbia, agrees to sell to Leonard A. Lange, of Milwaukee, Wisconsin, eight (8) shares of the preferred treasury Royal Glue stock, at one hundred and twenty-five (125) dollars per share, stock fully paid and nonassessable, and agrees to receive in payment therefor a three months’ note drawing interest at the rate of 6 per cent per annum, and agrees to renew said note, or any portion of it, at its maturity, provided the maker is unable to pay it, and to this end agrees to advance to the maker a sufficient amount of cash with which to take up said note, should it be deposited in a bank for collection, or held by the Royal Glue Company, or otherwise.
Royal Glue Company,
C. IT. Neely,
Gen’l Manager.
In its affidavit of defense, subscribed by its president, the defendant averred that “under the terms of the charter and bylaws of the company, * * * there is no authority given to the defendant corporation to enter into any such agreement as pleaded in said declaration and bill of particulars.” It is further averred that the plaintiff is estopped from asserting any rights under said agreement, because he has been paid certain dividends on said shares of stock.
The averment in the affidavit that no atithority is to be found in the charter and by-laws of the company to enter into said agreement, must be taken to mean that those instruments are silent upon the subject. Appellant, however, here contends that the agreement sued upon is ultra vires and void, because, it is insisted, (a) it is an attempt to reduce the capital stock, contrary to law; (b) because the fulfilment of the contract will result in withdrawing from the trust fund of the company that which belongs to all the stockholders and the creditors; and (c) because there is no power given the corporation, under the District laws, to purchase its own stock.
The view we taken of this agreement renders it unnecessary to enter into an extended discussion of corporate powers within this jurisdiction. Generally speaking, a corporation may become the holder of a portion of its own stock, unless prohibited by law. Johnson County v. Thayer, 94 U. S. 631, 643, 24 L. ed. 133, 135. The contention that a solvent corporation debtor does not stand on the same footing as an individual debtor has not received the sanction of the Supreme Court of the United
Again, in Hollins v. Brierfield Coal & I. Co. 150 U. S. 371, 383, 37 L. ed. 1113, 1116, the court, after reviewing its prior adjudications, said: “In other words, and that is the idea which underlies all these expressions in reference to “trust” in connection with the property of a corporation, the corporation is an entity, distinct from its stockholders as from its creditors. Solvent, it holds its property as any individual holds his, free from the touch of a creditor who has acquired no lien; free also from the touch of a stockholder who, though equitably interested in, has no legal right to, the property. Becoming insolvent, the equitable interest of the stockholders in the property, together with their conditional liability to the creditors, places the property in a condition of trust, first, for the creditors, and then for the stockholders.”
The agreement in question must be interpreted as a whole, and, when so interpreted, it becomes apparent that in effect it constitutes nothing more than a conditional sale of stock. A similar agreement was so construed in Vent v. Duluth Coffee
That appellee would be entitled to receive dividends during the year was as well known to the company as to him. During that time the company was to enjoy the use of the purchase price of the stock, and, presumably, it was thought that one would offset the other. At all events, there is no element of estoppel present in the transaction.
Judgment affirmed, with costs. Affirmed.