241 P. 1097 | Okla. | 1925
The plaintiff in error was the plaintiff below, and the defendant in error was the defendant. The parties will be referred to herein as plaintiff and defendant, as they appeared in the trial court.
The plaintiff, an Oklahoma corporation, brought its suit against the defendant to recover upon eleven promissory notes given to plaintiff by defendant, all dated September 7, 1920, each for the sum of $83.33, and bearing interest at 10 per cent. per annum, and each providing for a $10 attorney fee; and the first falling due on the 7th of October, 1920, and one falling due and payable on the 7th of each succeeding month. Default in payment is alleged, and judgment prayed for the face of the notes, amounting to $916.63, and interest at 10 per cent. and attorney fee in the sum of $110. Copies of the several notes are attached as exhibits.
The defendant filed answer and cross-petition. For answer defendant admitted the execution of the notes, but denied indebtedness thereon, for the reason that there was no consideration for which the notes were given, and that they were obtained by fraud of the plaintiff. The lack or failure of consideration relied upon is that the consideration for the notes was an issue of stock by the plaintiff company, pursuant to a contract in which the company agreed to sell and the defendant to buy 10 shares of its capital stock of the par value of $100 each, and defendant made a cash payment of $83.33 and gave his promissory notes for the balance of $1,000 par value; and it is, in effect, alleged that such issue of stock was spurious and void for the reason that the notes were accepted in payment for all of the par value other than the $83.33 of the issue of stock, and constituted no valid consideration for the notes. The stock certificate is tendered to the plaintiff in the answer. By way of cross-petition defendant seeks to recover from the plaintiff the cash payment of $83.33 made by defendant upon the stock, and the further sum of $100 for services rendered to plaintiff for which defendant had not been paid. Judgment is prayed that plaintiff take nothing upon its petition; for cancellation of the notes; and that the defendant recover from the plaintiff the sum of $183.33 with interest thereon from November 22, 1920. The plaintiff replied by a general denial.
The case was called for trial on the 28th of September, 1922, and a jury empaneled to try the issues joined. In the plaintiff's opening statement to the jury it was conceded the notes were given as and for part purchase money of the stock certificate. Upon this opening statement the defendant moved for judgment, on the theory that the issue of stock was spurious and void for the reason that it was not paid for in money, services, or property equal in value to the par value of the stock. Thereupon the jury was discharged. The plaintiff put in evidence the notes, and admitted that they, together with cash in the sum of $83.33, were given for the stock certificate of the par value of $1,000. The plaintiff's articles of incorporation were also put in evidence. The defendant offered evidence tending to show that he had rendered services for the plaintiff amounting to $100, for which he had not been paid.
Upon this record the trial court found that the stock certificate issued by the plaintiff corporation, to defendant, was void, and that the plaintiff was not entitled to recover upon the notes; and that the stock certificate should be canceled; and that plaintiff should refund to defendant the cash payment of $83.33; and found for the defendant in the sum of $100 for services rendered to plaintiff, and for interest, amounting to $22, a total of $205.33, for which judgment is rendered in favor of defendant and against the plaintiff, together with interest at 10 per cent. per annum from the rendition of the judgment.
The plaintiff appeals. The errors assigned present the one question of whether or not the notes which were given for the stock certificate are property which can be accepted in payment for stock, within the meaning of section 39 of article 9 of the Constitution of Oklahoma, which reads:
"No corporation shall issue stock except for money, labor done, or property actually received to the amount of the par value thereof. * * *"
The notes were unsecured, were plain *99
promissory notes. In Harn v. Smith,
"It is clear, in our opinion, that the note of a stock subscriber accepted by a corporation in payment for the stock issued him, is not to be regarded as 'property actually received' within the meaning of the constitutional provision. In such a transaction the subscriber does not pay anything into the treasury of the corporation. He merely gives the corporation his promise to pay."
The court held that in a broad sense a promissory note was property in the hands of the payee, but said:
"The framers of the Constitution never intended that property of that nature should constitute the capital of a corporation."
The precise question here presented was not involved in Lee v. Cameron,
It follows that the judgment of the trial court must be, and is hereby affirmed.
By the Court: It is so ordered.