135 Ky. 659 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1909
Opinion op the Court by
Reversing.
Some years ag’o a corporation known as the “Cumberland River & Nashville Railway Company,” was organized for the purpose of building a railroad from Corbin, Ky., through Wayne county," into Tennessee. It made a contract for the building of the road from Tateville to Monticello, and this contract was sublet by the original contractors to Plunkett, Edwards & Clark. Some work was done upon the road between Tateville and Monticello, and then it developed that the railroad company was without means. The people about Monticello were very anxious to secure a railroad and they began to organize a construction company which was to finance the building of the road from Tateville to Monticello. With this view the following written contract was signed by a number of persons interested in the building of the railroad; Whereas it is proposed to organize a corporation with' a capital stock of $100,000.00 divided into shares of $100.00 each under the name of the Monticello Railroad Construction Company, with its chief office at Monticello, Kentucky; said corporation to he organized for the purpose of constructing and building railroads and especially for the purpose of constructing and building the Cumberland River & Nashville Railroad, and taking over to itself all contracts now existing for building the said railroad from the Cinein
It is insisted for the defendants that the contract is simply an agreement to subscribe for stock when the corporation should be organized and the conditions set out in the agreement' complied with, and that under the ruling’ of this court in Mt. Sterling Coalroad Company v. Little, 14 Bush, 429, no action can be maintained upon the contract in the name of the corporation; but the latter cases fully maintain the right of action, holding that the rule was correctly stated in the case referred to, but by inadvertence was incorrectly applied. Twin Creek, etc., Turnpike Co. v. Lancaster, 79 Ky., 552; Bullock v. Falmouth, etc., Turnpike Co., 85 Ky., 184, 3 S. W., 129; Cadiz R. R. Co. v. Roach, 114 Ky., 934, 72 S. W., 280; Curry v. Ky., etc., R. R. Co., 78 S. W., 435, 25 Ky. Law Rep., 1372.
On the trial of the case, the defendants desired to interrogate the jurors as to whether any of them were related by blood or marriage to any of the other stockholders in the construction company. The court refused to allow the question answered and of this the defendants complain. The other stockholders in the construction company were not parties to the action. They had no interest in the action except such as the mere fact that they were stockholders in the corporation gave them. The rule is that a juror or judge is not always disqualified in a suit by a corporation merely because he is related to some of the stockholders in the corporation. The stockholders themselves would not be qualified to be jurors, but it would be carrying the rule further than it has been carried to say that in a case like this all their relatives were also disqualified. It was held in New York Life in
At the conclusion of the evidence, the court properly instructed the jury that they should find for the plaintiff unless they believed from the evidence that $80,000 had not been subscribed to the capital stock of the company in good faith, and that in this event they should find for the defendant. To define what was a subscription in good faith, he then gave the jury the following instruction: “If the jury believe from the
The proof, on another trial, as to the ability of the subscribers in contest to pay, will be limited to the facts known to the witnesses. Hearsay and information from others will be omitted, except it may be shown what information the directors had as to the ability of the subscribers in contest, as this will illustrate whether they exercised' ordinary care in accepting the subscriptions as made by persons of apparent ability to pay. The court will allow proof of all statements made in the presence of any of the directors by any of the subscribers tending to show a want of apparent ability to pay on their part.
The subscriptions made by corporations which have been paid are not invalid because not warranted
Judgment reversed, and cause remanded for a new trial and further proceedings consistent herewith.