12 Ga. App. 148 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1913
1. Tlie answer in this ease, properly construed, does not allege that the minimum capital stock of the corporation therein referred to ' had not been subscribed.
2. No part of the capital stock of a corporation need be paid in .before the charter is granted and the corporation begins business as a legal entity. Bing v. Bank of Kingston, 5 Ga. App. 578 (6), (63 S. E. 652).
3. The act of a corporation in selling and indorsing over to'a third person a note, given in payment of a subscription to its capital stock, is not an exercise of “the privileges conferred by the charter,” within the meaning of section 2823 (3) of the Civil Code of 1910.
4-, A suit upon a note given in payment of a subscription to the capital . stock in a corporation can not be defeated by proof that -ten per cent, of the capital stock has not been paid in. The purpose of such a suit is to obtain a compliance with the provisions of the statute, so as to
5. To an action on a stock-subscription note it is no defense that the corporation has accepted from other subscribers, in payment of their subscriptions, property of a value less than the amount of such subscriptions.
6. There was no error in striking the answer and entering judgment for the plaintiff. . Judgment affirmed.