271 Pa. 6 | Pa. | 1921
Opinion by
The parties hereto are Pennsylvania corporations, and, on January 16, 1915, the defendant, the Scranton Board of Trade, by resolution, offered to purchase of plaintiff $10,000 worth of its seven per cent preferred stock, at par, in four annual installments of $2,500 each. At a meeting of plaintiff’s board of directors, held four days later, it was unanimously resolved: “That in compliance with the resolution of the board of trade herewith presented, the proper officers of this company be authorized to take the necessary steps to legally issue $10,000 worth of preferred stock at 7% payable semi-annually
■ We are unable to sustain the judgment. The stock in question was issued pursuant to the unanimous vote of all the stockholders and, therefore, valid although the meeting at which it was authorized was not called for that purpose, upon sixty days’ notice, as provided by statute: Eastman on the Law of Private Corporations in Penna., vol. 1, sec. 249.
What plaintiff did, constituted in our opinion, an acceptance of defendant’s offer. The stockholders authorized the directors to issue and sell the stock and they in turn committed that duty to the president and treasurer, who actually accepted defendant’s offer. True, under the resolution of plaintiff’s stockholders, the directors might have sold the stock to some other purchaser, but did not; through their officers they sold it to defendant, and, being authorized to make the sale, their act imposed liability upon the plaintiff corporation; hence, the conclusion that the latter was not bound by the contract is untenable. Moreover, the delivery and acceptance of the first installment of stock was such a ratification as to render the agreement at least prima facie obligatory, the mutual undertaking of the parties constituting sufficient consideration to support the contract: Fletcher’s Encyclopedia of Corporations, vol. 2, sec. 526, p. 1156.
Defendant’s original resolution, to which we have referred, contained a provision that the $10,000 of stock should be turned over to the Scranton Industrial Development Company, in consideration of its purchasing certain bonds from plaintiff. The development company was, as we understand the facts, an organization allied with defendant, and there is no suggestion that the stock was to be a gift back to plaintiff, or that the $10,000 as consideration therefor was intended as a gift.
Where, as here, a plaintiff’s statement makes a prima facie case, he cannot be turned out of court on demurrer
The judgment is reversed with a procedendo.
Mr. Justice Frazer dissented.