Case ID: ny-st-rep_39/html/0506-01.html
Source: Caselaw Access Project
Author: {"author": "\n      Vah Brunt, P. J.", "license": "Public Domain", "url": "https://static.case.law/"}
Date Created: 2024-08-24T03:29:51.129683

Edward B. Babcock, App’lt, v. The Schuylkill & Lehigh Valley R. R. Co., Resp’t.
    
      (Supreme Court, General Term, First Department,
    
    
      Filed June 26, 1891.)
    
    Corporations — Railroad — Stockholders— Consolidation—Exchange OF CERTIFICATES.
    Plaintiff subscribed for 3,100 shares of the capital stock of the P. & Isf. Y. Railroad, and paid ten per cent of the amount of his subscription. Thereafter the P. & N. Y. Railroad was consolidated with the defendant, under an agreement that the stockholders of the former company were to receive thé consolidated stock in place of its stock. Held, that the plaintiff was not entitled to receive certificates of stock from defendant on account of his subscription until he had paid the balance due upon such subscription, and could produce evidence of that fact,
    Appeal from judgment of special term dismissing complaint. Thos. G. Shearman, for app’lt; B. S. Harmon, for resp’t.
   Vah Brunt, P. J.

—This action was brought to compel the issue by the defendant of 1050 shares of its capital stock to the plaintiff. * It appeared upon the trial that the plaintiff at the time of the commencement of this action was and now is a resident of this state and that prior to the 8th of February, 1887, the Pottsville ¿c 2ST. Y. Railroad Company had been duly organized under the laws of Pennsylvania; that in the articles of association of said railroad company the plaintiff appeared as the subscriber for 2100 shares of the capital stock of said railroad company of the par value of fifty dollars per share, but no certificate or other evidence of the right of the stockholders of said company to its capital stock was ever issued to the plaintiff or to any stockholder of the company ; that the defendant prior to said 8th of February, 1887, was a corporation duly organized under the laws of the state of Pennsylvania; and on said day the Pottsville & 1ST. Y. Ry. Co. merged and consolidated its capital stock, franchises and property with and into the capital stock, etc., of the defendant in accordance with the provisions of the laws of the state of Pennsylvania, and the defendant as such consolidated corporation is duly organized and existing under the laws of said state with a capital stock of $2,000,000 divided into 40,000 shares of the par value of fifty dollars cash.

The agreement of merger between the two companies contained among other provisions the following:

Eighth. That each stockholder in either of the two corporations which are to be hereby consolidated, upon surrendering to the treasurer of the consolidated company any evidence he may possess, by certificate or otherwise, of his right to stock, if he have any such evidence, or, if no such evidence has been issued to him, then upon due demand being made upon the treasurer, shall be entitled to receive from the treasurer of the consolidated company .a certificate for the capital stock of the consolidated company in the proportion of two shares in face value of Pottsville & New York Railroad Company stock for one share at the same value, in the consolidated comany, and shall receive, for each share in the Schuylkill & Lehigh Yalley Railroad Company, share for share in the consolidated company. That is to. say, an amount equal to one-half in face value to that held by him in the Pottsville & New York Railroad Company, and to an amount equal in like value to that held by him in the Schuylkill & Lehigh Yalley Railroad Company, or to which he was entitled in the former companies respectively.”

The plaintiff has not paid nor offered to pay more than ten per cent of the par value of his alleged subscription to 2,100 shares of the capital stock of the Pottsville & N. Y. Railroad Company ; and there was no proof that the plaintiff prior to the commencement of this action, had ever demanded from the defendant or any of its officers any certificates of the capital stock of the defendant

It further appeared upon the trial that the defendant refuses to issue any shares of its capital stock to the plaintiff or to recognize him as a stockholder.

Upon .the termination of the plaintiff’s case the counsel for the defendant moved for judgment on the proofs and pleadings upon the following grounds:

I. That no demand had been proved.

IL That plaintiff had not proved that he continued to be for five years after his alleged subscription even the holder of said subscription.

IIL That he had not proved that he was. a shareholder in the Pottsville & New York Eailroad Company at the time of this consolidation, or that he had ever paid, or offered to pay, either to the Pottsville & New York Eailroad Company or to the defendant, more than ten pereentum of the face value of his said alleged subscription.

The court granted this motion, and from the judgment tnereupon entered this appeal is taken.

It is urged upon the part of the appellant that it being admitted by the pleadings that the defendant refuses to issue any stock to the plaintiff or to recognize him as a stockholder, a demand was superfluous.

It may be that the admission contained in the pleadings does not bear the broad interpretation put upon it by the plaintiff; and that the refusal refers to the time of the verification of the answer in which it is contained. But it is not necessary to consider this proposition because the judgment can be supported upon other grounds.

It seems to us clear that the plaintiff was not entitled to receive this stock from the defendant until he had become entitled to receive the.stock from the Pottsville & N. Y. Railroad Co.

It is claimed as well settled law, both of Pennsylvania and New York, that a subscriber to stock in a railroad corporation whose subscription is accepted by that corporation becomes by that act a stockholder to all intents although he has only paid ten per cent of his subscription; and that he is entitled to his certificate, and ' to vote and otherwise to act upon perfectly equal terms with all other stockholders, even though the others have paid up in full.

What the law of Pennsylvania may be upon this subject is not material to the consideration of this appeal, because such law has not been either proven or pleaded. But we have searched in vain for any adjudication in the courts of this state which supports any such conclusion.

We are referred to the case of The People v. Albany & Susq. R. R. Co., 1 Lans., 308; affirmed 5 Lans., 25, but fail to find any such proposition established by that adjudication.

Eeference is also had to the case of Rutter v. Kilpatrick, 63 N. Y., 604, but no such proposition is established by that case, because it appears from the record in that case that the subscriber had paid into the corporation the amount subscribed, and all that was decided was that the relation of stockholder was established by the subscription and payment, and did not depend upon the issue of the certificate or other evidence of such right by the corporation.

Attention is also called to the case of Buffalo & N.Y. City Rail road Co. v. Dudley, 14 N. Y., 336-346. In that case the question involved was whether an agreement to take a certain number of shares of the capital stock of the railroad company subscribed previously to the incorporation of the company creates a promise express or implied to pay. for the shares, for the recovery of which the company may maintain an action against the subscriber.

It is true that it is stated in the opinion that when the defendant had subscribed his name and paid his five per cent the effect was to make him a stockholder and the owner of twenty shares, subject to the forfeiture prescribed. But it is also expressly recognized that his title to the stock does not become complete, and he entitled to receive a certificate therefor, until the payment of the subscription, and that his interest therein might become forfeited by non-payment of said subscription.

In the case of Spear v. Crawford, 14 Wend., 20, the same doctrine was enunciated, the question involved being whether a party who subscribed for a certain number of shares of stock was liable to the creditors of the company to the nominal amount of the stock of the said company subscribed by him, although he had not paid in any part of his subscription or done any act whatever as a stockholder; and it was held that because of the mere fact of subscribing the corporation might compel such subscribers to pay for their stock; and that public'policy required that they should be considered stockholders so far as to be compelled to meet the debts of the corporation. The court say after citing certain cases: “ It is true that none of these cases decide the precise point that the mere fact of subscribing to stock of an incorporated company constitutes such subscriber a stockholder.

“ But they do decide that such subscription puts it in his power to become a stockholder in the broadest and most unqualified sense of the term by compelling the corporation to give him the legal evidence of his being a stockholder,- upon his complying with the terms of the subscription ; and on the other hand that it puts it in the power of the corporation to compel him to pay for the shares subscribed by him and thereby to become a stockholder to that amount Neither party therefore can escape from the obligations created by the subscription without the consent of the other.”

It seems to us clear, therefore, that in order to entitle the plaintiff to claim full paid certificates of stock from the defendant he was bound to show that he was entitled to such certificates from the corporation to which he was a subscriber. It is true that the consolidation agreement provided that every stockholder in either corporation upon surrendering to the treasurer- of the new company his certificate of stock if any, and without such certificate if none had been issued to him, should receive shares in the new company, in exchange for shares in the old company in the proportion of one share of stock in the new company for two shares in the old company. But it is evident that the clause in the agreement in regard to the rights of the parties who did not receive -certificates of stock contemplated the existence of the fact that such parties were entitled to receive such certificates from the Pottsville & N. Y. Ry. Co., but that they had not been issued to them.

Now it. is clear that the plaintiff was not entitled to receive any certificate of shares in the Pottsville & N. Y. Railroad Company until he had paid his subscription. He had no shares to exchange, and the language is that he should receive shares in the new company in exchange for his shares in the old company. Under these circumstancés, as he had no shares in the old company to exchange, it is difficult to see how the barter could be effected.

The claim that no payment was necessary to make the subscription valid, but the fact that the corporation had been formed on the assumption that the Pottsville & N. Y. Company had been duly organized, is presumptive proof of due payment, cannot prevail. There is nothing to show but that the Pottsville Company might be duly organized without having all its capital stock paid up in full, it having the right to collect such subscription from its stockholders, and its creditors having the power to enforce such right.

The point as to the failure of proof as to payments made by the associates of the plaintiff in the Pottsville Company is of no avail because that question was entirely immaterial. Simply because A. gets whát he is not entitled to gives no right to B. to claim in a court of justice that the same fraud should be perpetrated in his behalf.

Neither is the claim of the plaintiff that, although he has paid his ten per cent, he gets nothing. He was entitled to nothing until he paid the balance of his subscription. He had subscribed for a certain number of shares of stock, and agreed to pay the balance. He was not entitled to the certificates or evidence of ownership of those shares until he had paid the balance, and, therefore, there was nothing which the court could decree in his favor.

Upon the whole case, we are of opinion that the case was correctly decided in the court below and that the judgment should be affirmed, with costs.

Daniels and Lambert, JJ., concur.