32 Ga. 273 | Ga. | 1861
JBy the Court.
delivering the opinion.
This was an action by the Coosa and Chattooga River Railroad Company, in the Superior Court of Walker county, against Constantine Wood, for the sum of $75 00; two installments of five and ten per cent, on five shares in the capital stock of said company, for which said Wood is alleged to be a subscriber therein.
On the trial, the plaintiff in said action offered in evidence the original book, kept by the commissioners appointed by the charter for organizing said company, for the purpose of entering and recording therein their proceedings as such commissioners, together with the acts, resolutions and proceedings of said commissioners, as recorded therein; said book having first' been identified as the book of original entries, by the suppletory oath of Thomas Patton, one of the stockholders, (whose testimony for that purpose was objected to by defendant, but waived in the argument before us.) The defendant objected to the entries therein as evidence against him. The Court overruled the objection, and that is the first ground of error complained of.
1. We do not think the objection well taken. This was the book or minutes of the action of the commissioners, appointed in the charter for the organization of the company. They were required to keep books of subscription, sum up and certify the amount of the same, to organize the company, and make a record of their proceedings in the election of the board of directors. These entries, put in evidence, are the acts done by said commissioners, in their official
The remaining exceptions are to the charges, and refusal to charge on request of counsel for defendant.
The defendant relied on two grounds of defense to the action:
1. That his individual subscription had not only not been made in terms of the charter, but that it had been received and allowed by the commissioners in direct violation of its express provisions in this, that the sum of five dollars on
2. That the company had not been organized in pursuance of the provisions of the charter, by the actual subscription of two thousand shares in the capital stock of said company in ■ terms of the charter before its organization by the commissioners, and, therefore, the plaintiff could not recover: in other words, that the corporation were illegally exercising the franchise of this legislative grant of incorporation.
The first position goes only to the liability of the defendant to pay for his stock ; and the second, to the validity of the charter.
2. As to the first position: The provisions of the charter on this subject are as follows: “ and no subscription shall be received and allowed, unless there shall be paid to the commissioners, at the time of such subscription, the sum of five dollars on each share subscribed, for which the commissioners shall give to the subscriber a certificate, setting forth the number of shares taken by each subscriber, and amount per share paid them.” It being in proof that this provision of the charter was not complied with by the defendant at the time of subscription, or since; in fact, the amount then required to be prepaid formed a part of the sum for which this suit was brought. The Court charged the jury, that “ it is no defence to this action that the commissioners waived the necessity of defendant’s paying the five per cent., and that it does not lie in his mouth to say that his subscription, so received and allowed by the commissioners, is, for that reason, void.” Was that charge right ? We think that it was not. The commissioners were the appointed agents of the Legisture to open books and receive subscriptions to the capital stock of the company; but in the exercise of this power they were limited to the terms and manner of subscription prescribed by the Legislature, from which the power was derived, and a subscription taken or allowed by them in violation of their instructions, as contained in the grant, is void
The principle here stated is expressly recognized in Poe vs. Napier, 12 Ga., 182. That was a contest between two sets of subscribers to the capital stock of the Manufacturers’ Bank of Macon. Robert Collins and others, the first subscribers in point of time, subscribed for the whole amount of the capital stock, paying to the commissioners ten per cent, in drafts, at thirty days, on New York, and partly in drafts on the banks in Macon, which drafts, when due, were paid in specie. Leroy Napier and others, the second set, subsequently offered to subscribe for the whole amount, tendering to the commissioners ten per cent, in cash. The charter provided, amongst other things, that: “ When the amount of $250,000 00 shall have been subscribed, bona fide, and the sum of ten per cent, thereon shall have been paid in gold or silver, or the bank notes of this State'paying specie,” an organization was authorized. Napier and his associates claimed that the first subscription was illegal, because, under the act of incorporation, it was the duty of the commissioners to disallow all subscriptions, unless .accompanied by the actual payment of money, or a tender of "it in gold, silver, or the notes of specie-paying banks. This brought up the question involved in this case directly for the adjudication, and this Court, on the point made, says: “If, indeed, it is true that the act requires the money to be paid at the time when the subscription is made, then I admit that there is no escape from the conclusion of the counsel for the plaintiff in error.
The first case referred to, and relied on, in support of the
The Superior Court overruling the several objections, held that the subscription was recoverable. Courts since that time have been in great doubt as to the ground on which-the Court made that decision.' The charter prescribed the form of subscription to be made; and the subscription having been made in that form, the Court says: “We can not discover any ground, on which the promise ought to be considered as void. The subscription was taken by commissioners, who were authorized to receive it, and in the form, prescribed by the act. That form contains an absolute promise to pay the money to the president, directors, and company. On one side the interest of the company in selling the shares, and the public advantage to be derived from the success of the institution, and on the other the expected profit to accrue from the stock, were sufficient consideration to uphold the promise. By force of the act itself, also, it must be considered as good. The Legislature must also have intended, that it should be obligatory; for else the formal manner in which, it was prescribed to be taken, would be sense
One other case was referred to and relied on by counsel for defendant in this record—that of Tar River Navigation Company vs. Neal, 3 Hawks’s Rep., 20; but as that case is applicable to the next point, and not this, I will notice it more particularly in that connection. The identical case made in this case was considered in the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania : Hibernia Turnpike Company vs. Henderson, 8 Sergeant & Rawle, 217. That was a suit to recover the sum of five dollars for a subscription for a share in that company. In the charter it was provided “ that every person offering to subscribe in the said books, shall previously pay to the attending commissioners the sum of five dollars for each and every share to be subscribed.” The Court held the payment of the five dollars a condition precedent to the becoming a subscriber or shareholder, and as this payment was not made, that the subscription was void, and could not be enforced. Using this strong language, “ Words more strong, and an intention more clearly expressed, to make the payment of the five dollars a condition precedent to the subscription, can not be conceived. By what authority, then, could the commissioners, or the corporation, dispense with the condition? A corporation being the mere creature of law, can act in no other manner than the law prescribes, and must not be permitted to enter into a contest with the Legislature concerning the policy or expediency of the terms which have
Counsel for plaintiff in error requested the Court to charge the jury, that “Before a right to call on the defendant to pay up any portion of stock (allowing his subscription to be good) so subscribed by him, the plaintiff must prove to their satisfaction, that two thousand shares of the capital stock, including that subscribed by defendant, has been subscribed for, and five dollars on each share paid at the time of subscription.” The Court refused to give the charge, and this forms the third ground of exceptions.
We hold that this request was properly refused. The question made in this request differs from that involved in the charge already discussed, in this, that it goes to the validity of the charter, the organization of the company under it, and the right of the corporators to the use of it. The other goes only to the liability of this particular subscriber. The one depends upon the will of the Legislature, the other upon the legality of the contract of the defendant under the charter. While the defendant cannot avail himself of the one as a defense to an action by the company against him, he may of the other. He cannot say that the corporation with whom he has treated or dealt, as a corporation, is not rightfully in the exercise of its powers, because the company having been established by the Legislature, and in the manner pointed out,
Let the judgment be reversed.