12 Wash. 634 | Wash. | 1895
The opinion of the court was delivered by
J.— The respondents have moved this court to strike the statement of facts and to affirm the judgment, for the reason that said statement was not served upon respondents before the filing thereof and because no copy of the same was served • on the respondents after the original was filed. This motion is supported by the affidavit of one of the respondents.
An examination of the record discloses that, upon the day of filing the statement of facts in the superior court, the appellants served upon the respondents a. notice which, after entitling the cause and direction to the respondents, proceeds as follows:
“ You and each of you are hereby notified that the*635 defendants John Leary, Jacob Furth and William E. Bailey, desiring to have a statement of facts certified in the above entitled cause preparatory to appeal to the supreme court of the state of Washington, have prepared such statement of facts as proposed by them, and herewith serve a copy thereof upon you; and you are further notified that the said proposed statement of facts is this day filed in the above entitled cause.”
It further appears by the admission of service endorsed by counsel for the respondents upon the original statement, that a copy of said statement was “received and service of same accepted ” by them on the 28th day of March, 1894 (being the date upon which said original statement was filed). This, we think, is sufficient, and the motion to strike the statement and affirm the judgment will be denied.
The respondents, claiming as judgment creditors of the Seattle Terminal Railway & Elevator Company, a corporation alleged to be insolvent, brought this action in the superior court for King county, against said corporation, and .against the appellants Furth and Leary and defendant Bailey, seeking a decree for the payment of their judgment by the said appellants and Bailey, as stockholders of said corporation, upon the ground that the stock held by them had not been fully paid. It is alleged in the complaint that said corporation was organized on the 29th day of March, 1890, with a capital stock of $1,000,000, divided into 10,000 shares of $100 each; that at its organization appellants and defendant Bailey each subscribed for ten shares of its capital stock, of which they have ever since been the owners and holders, and that they have not paid for the same, nor for any part thereof; that subsequently, on about September, 1890, the said appellants and defendant Bailey became the owners of additional shares of capital stock of said corporation as follows : Ap
The Washington National Bank is made a party defendant under the allegation that it was requested by respondents to join with them as parties plaintiff, pursuant to the statute, but refused so to do. The corporation defendant entered no appearance in this action.
Each of the appellants and defendant Bailey filed separate answers, in which they severally set out that prior to the organization of the corporation, the Seattle Terminal Railway & Elevator Co., Amos Brown, B. F. Shaubut and Thomas Ewing, were the owners of land in King' county and of franchises, rights and privileges of the value of upwards of $1,000,000; that, being desirous of bringing about the organization of said corporation for the purposes expressed in its articles, and also of obtaining the co-operation and assistance of the appellants and defendant Bailey and to obtain their services as trustees of the corporation, they entered into an agreement with them whereby each of them was to assist in the organization of said corporation and subscribe for ten shares of its capital stock and accept the office of trustee, and in consideration thereof said Brown, Shaubut and Ewing would convey and cause to be conveyed to said corporation all of the property, rights, privileges and franchises
For a further affirmative defense it was alleged in each of the separate answers that, prior to the 7th day of June, 1892, and prior to the existence of any indebtedness whatsoever, of the Seattle Terminal Railway & Elevator Company to the Washington National Bank or to the plaintiffs, all of the capital stock of said company had been fully paid, of all of which the defendant bank and the respondents at all of said times had full notice and knowledge.
By way of reply to the matters set forth in these answers, the respondents alleged that the defendants were promoters of said corporation and were associated with Brown, Shaubut and Ewing and other persons in
Upon the trial of the cause the lower court found that no payments whatever had been made on account of the stock held by the individual defendants; that no part of the subscription or price thereof has ever been paid either by defendants or their transferors; that as to such shares thereof as they respectively took by transfer, they had knowledge at that time that no part of the subscription or price thereof had ever been paid. And as conclusions of law the court found that the indebtedness due and owing from them on said account, or so much thereof as may be necessary to satisfy said judgment (the respondents’), is a trust fund to which respondents are entitled to look for satisfaction of said judgment; that the individual defendants and each of them should be required to pay into the registry of the court a sum of money on account of said subscription
The evidence introduced upon the trial of this cause below and transmitted to this court is very voluminous, and the number and character of the exceptions which appellants have taken to the findings have necessitated a great deal of labor upon the part of this court in the examination of the record. Having reached the conclusion that the findings on some of the material propositions involved are not only against the great weight of the evidence but practically without evidence to support them, and that the decree in favor of the respondents was not only erroneous, but that the same should have been entered for the appellants, we deem it unnecessary to here consider many of the questions discussed in the briefs of counsel, and will confine this opinion to a consideration of such only of the questions involved as are necessary to be considered for the purposes of a final determination of this controversy.
It is admitted by the respondents that, commencing at a time some two months after the incorporation of the Terminal Company, and continuing until some four or five months after judgment was entered against said corporation in favor of the Washington National Bank, the respondent Turner was the attorney for said Terminal Company. Without here stopping to consider whether said bank could rightfully assign an interest in a portion of the judgment which it held, (without the consent of the judgment debtor), or the other equally interesting question of whether respondents can be considered to have been creditors of said insolvent corporation at any time prior to the date of the assignment to them of a portion of said judgment
In Coit v. Gold Amalgamating Co., 119 U. S. 343 (7 Sup. Ct. 231), the court say of the suject we are here considering :
“The plaintiff contends, andit is the principal basis of his suit, that the valuation thus put upon the property was illegally and fraudulently made at an amount far above its actual value; . . . that' the articles ■had no market or actual value, and, therefore, that the capital stock issued thereon was not fully paid, or paid to any substantial extent, and that the holders thereof were still liable to the corporation and its creditors for the unpaid subscription. If it were proved that actual fraud was committed in the payment of the stock, and that the complainant had given credit to the company from a belief that its stock was fully paid, there would undoubtedly be substantial ground for the relief asked. But where . . . the shareholders honestly and in good, faith put in property instead of money in payment of their subscriptions, third parties have no ground of complaint. . . . But where full paid stock is issued for property received, there must be actual fraud in the transaction to enable creditors of the corporation to call the stockholders to account.”
And the proposition is fully sustained in the following cases: Coffin v. Ransdell, 110 Ind. 417 (11 N. E. 20; Hospes v. Northwestern Mfg. & Car Co., 48 Minn. 174 (50 N. W. 1117, 31 Am. St. 637); Bank of Fort Madison v. Alden, 129 U. S. 372 (9 Sup. Ct. 332); Medler v. Hotel Co., 28 Pac. (N. M.) 551; Douglass v. Ireland, 73 N. Y. 100; Young v. Erie Iron Co., 65 Mich. 111 (31 N. W. 814); Lake Superior Iron Co. v. Drexel, 90 N. Y. 87; Gamble v. Queens County Water Co., 123
In Thompson on Liability of Stockholders, § 134, it is said:
“ A corporation may take in payment of its shares any property which it may lawfully purchase. Such a transaction is not ultra vires or void, but is valid and binding upon the original sharetakers and upon the corporation, unless it is rescinded or set aside for fraud. While such a contract stands unimpeached, the courts, even where the rights of creditors are involved, will, treat that as payment which the parties have agreed should be payment.”
Indeed the cases are numerous in which it is held that to charge the holder of stock issued upon and for the purchase of property individually for the debts of the company, “ it is not enough to prove that the property has been purchased and paid for at an over valuation through a mere mistake or error of judgment upon the part of the trustees,” but it must be shown that the purchase at the price agreed upon was in bad faith.
It appears from the evidence in this case that the-respondent Turner was present at a meeting of the stockholders of said Terminal Company, held some time in October or November, 1892, at which meeting a proposition was pending looking to the voluntary subscription of the stockholders of an amount sufficient to pay certain labor claims, indebtedness incurred by the corporation in the line of improvements in building a railway and erecting warehouses upon its properties. ' This meeting was held some five or six months prior to the time of the assignment by the bank to respondents of an interest in the judgment
“We entered into the discussion of the question of contributing to a fund to pay off the laborers and other creditors, and there was a general agreement of opinion on the part of those present that it would be well to do it; but General Turner (respondent) objected on the ground that he did not think that the bondholders or stockholders were under any legal or moral obligation to pay any debt of the company; that the stock was fully paid stock, and that the property given in payment of it was worth the stock, and he did not see any reason why he should be asked, or any stockholder should be asked to put their hands in their pockets to pay money gratuitously on these debts.”
The witnesses Brown and Ballard, who were also present at said meeting, gave substantially like testimony as to what respondent Turner said at said meeting. This is important only as tending to show—what we think, in the absence of any evidence upon the question, might and should readily be inferred from the fact of his long connection with this corporation as its counsel — that he was at all times cognizant of the fact that the entire capital stock of the corporation had been accepted as a consideration for the properties, rights and franchises transferred to it by the
The respondents do not appear to question the correctness of the proposition contended for by appellants, viz., that the capital stock of a corporation organized under our law may be paid for either in money or money’s worth, which appears to be the settled rule, in the absence of charter restrictions or provisions of statute forbidding it.
We conclude that the court below erred in finding that no part of the stock of which the appellants are the owners had been paid, and in concluding that appellants, or either of them, are indebted in any sum for or on account of the shares of stock held by them, or either of them; and in failing to find that all of the capital stock of said corporation had been fully paid for in property received and accepted by said corporation in full payment of its stock. From which it follows that the decree must be reversed and the cause remanded to the lower court with instructions to proceed to enter judgment for the appellants and against the respondents, in accordance with this opinion.
Hoyt, C. J., and Anders, J., concur.
Dunbar, J., dissents.