Court Opinion

ID: 8656212
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-11-24 21:16:12.017676+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:56:43.854985
License: Public Domain

FRICK, J.
The plaintiff, a corporation, commenced this action in equity against Preston A. Blair, Lars Hansen, J. P. Blair, Simon S. Jensen, Stephen S. Blair, and Seth M. Blair, as stockholders of the Blair-Hansen Live Stock Company, a corporation, and also against said corporation. The plaintiff, hereinafter called appellant, sued the individual defendants named above, whom we shall call respondents, to recover an alleged balance due upon their stock subscriptions as stockholders of said Blair-Hansen Live Stock Company, hereinafter called company. Appellant, in its complaint, in substance, alleged that said company was incorporated with a capital stock of $50,000 divided into 500 shares of one hundred dollars each; that Preston A. Blair, Simon S. Jensen, and Lars Hansen had each subscribed for fifty shares, and that Stephen S. and Seth M. Blair had each subscribed for ten shares of said capital stock; that the six subscriptions as aforesaid amounted to a total of 220 shares, or $22,000. It is further alleged that the first four subscribers above named *40had only paid the sum of $2,500 each on their subscriptions, and that the last two had only paid $500 each on the amount they had subscribed. It was also alleged that the appellant had obtained a judgment against said company for the sum of $1,344.57, upon which, before the bringing of this action, execution had been duly issued and returned wholly unsatisfied, and that said company was insolvent. The appellant therefore prayed for judgment against said delinquent subscribers for the amount due by each upon his unpaid subscription, or so much thereof as would pay its claim, and for general relief. The individual defendants filed a joint answer in which they admitted that they had subscribed for stock in said company as stated; admitted that said company was insolvent, and in effect denied all other allegations in the complaint except they admitted the corporate capacity of said company. They also affirmatively pleaded full payment of their subscriptions. The company filed a separate answer in which the admissions and denials in effect were -the same as those of the individual respondents.
On the 14th day of January, 1914, when the case was called for trial, the J. S. Campbell Company, a corporation, hereinafter called intervener, was permitted to file its complaint in intervention in the action in which complaint it set up a judgment which it alleged it had obtained by confession against said company on the 10th day of January, 1914, amounting to $1,252.35. The appellant filed a reply to the intervener’s complaint, in which it alleged that said judgment was void and of no force or effect for reasons stated in the reply. We remark that it is not necessary to set forth the reasons alleged by appellant why it claimed the intervener’s judgment void since that judgment, for the reasons hereinafter appearing, in no way affects appellant’s rights in this proceeding.
The evidence adduced at the trial developed that while the articles of incorporation of the company purport to have been prepared and signed by the incorporators on the 20th day of January, 1909, yet they were not sworn to by three of the incorporators, as provided by Comp. Laws 1907, section 315, imtil the 12th day of June, 1909. On that day they were duly *41filed with the County Clerk of Weber County, and on the 15th day of said month they were also filed with the Secretary of State, and he, on said date, duly issued a certificate of incorporation as provided by our statute. From the testimony of Mr. Jensen, who was the secretary and treasurer and bookkeeper of said company, at the times in question here, and whose testimony we shall accept as true for the purpose of this statement, it appears that the individuals above named who became the stockholders of said company had, since early in the year 1909, been engaged in the live stock businesss under the name adopted by said company; that they had contemplated forming a corporation, but, for reasons not material here, had deferred the completion of the organization thereof until the 12th day of June, as before stated; that on said date, as part payment of the capital stock of each subscriber, there was turned over to said company the following property, to wit:
450 wethers, for which the incorporators had paid the sum of.$ 1,241.25
Also 1,464 wethers, for which they, had paid. 4,100.00
Also 500 wethers, for which they had paid. 1,325.00
Also 249 head of sheep, for which they had paid... 1,025.75
They had also advanced on a lot of sheep purchased by them, which were turned oyer to the company, the sum of. 500.00
Upon another lot the sum of.. 250.00
Upon some bucks that they had purchased, the sum of ......i. 25.00
They also claimed that they had paid freight upon the sheep aforesaid in the sum of. 420.80
And for commissions paid the sum of. 112.40 „
They also claimed that they had turned over horses to the company worth. 500.00
A camping outfit wor-th. 175.00
And, one dog worth. 10.00
Making the total amount of property turned over on said date the sum of.'.$ 9,685.20
From which should be deducted an amount received for sheep sold during the period aforesaid, and which were not turned over to the company, amounting to... 388.25
*42Leaving the net value of the property turned over to the company on said date the sum of.$ 9,296.95^
In addition to the foregoing Mr. Jensen testified that the individual stockholders had paid in cash as follows:
Money deposited in the bank on the 9th day of June, 1909, the sum of. 811.09
Cash on stock subscriptions paid by all, the sum of. 8,600.00
Other items, which we have deemed it proper to allow, the sum of. 1,900.00
Making a grand total paid in upon the stock subscriptions, the sum of.$20,608.64
The capital stock subscribed for, as we have seen, amounted to the sum of $22,000. There remained thus the difference between the amount of the capital stock subscribed for, and what was paid in, both in property and in money, which amounted to $1,391.36.
The individual respondents, however, claimed, and the coúrt allowed them, credit for other items of expenses which were incurred by them prior to June 12, 1909, which, in the judgment of the court, when added to the payments we have enumerated above, paid for the whole of the subscribed stock, *and hence the court found that the respondents had paid their subscriptions in full and entered judgment in their favor and against both the appellant and the intervener dismissing their complaints, and entered judgment for costs against them.
1 The appellant alone appeals from the judgment. Among other assignments appellant insists that the court erred in allowing respondents any credit upon their subscriptions for the sheep and other property turned over by them to the company on June 12, 1909, as before stated. This contention is based upon Comp. Laws 1907, section 316, which, so far as material to the present contention, provides:
“Where subscriptions to the capital stock of any corporation formed under the provisions of this chapter shall consist, in whole or in part, of property necessary to the pursuit agreed upon, there must appear in the articles of incorporation a description of the property so taken, with a statement *43of the fair cash value thereof, which- statement, except in the case of corporations organized for mining or irrigation purposes, shall be supplemented by the affidavits of three persons, to the effect that they are acquainted with said property, and that it is reasonably worth-the amount in cash for which it was accepted by the corporation; and the owners of such property shall be deemed to - have subscribed such •amount to the capital stock of such corporation as will represent the fair estimated cash value of so much of such property, or of such interest therein, as they may have conveyed to such corporation by deed actually executed and delivered. ’ ’
The -articles of incorporation in question here did not contain the statement required by the foreging section, nor any statement concerning the taking of property; nor were the articles of incorporation supplemented by the affidavits required by said section, nor by any affidavits or statement whatever. Counsel for appellant, therefore, contended in the court below, and here contend, that under the foregoing statute no credit for property can be given upon a subscription as against the creditors of an insolvent corporation of the character of the corporation in question here unless the incor-porators have complied with .the provisions of the statute. It will be observed that the foregoing statute does not, at least in terms, declare payments in property void; nor does it prescribe any penalty for a failure to strictly comply with its terms. The question here presented has, however, in some form at least,' been passed on by the courts many times. While the decisions are not in full accord, yet we think the great weight of authority is to the effect that payments in property, under a statute like ours, may be allowed by a court of equity as against creditors of an insolvent corporation to the extent of the actual value of the property, when the property received is of the kind or character in which the corporation deals or which it requires in its business, where the transaction between the stockholders and the corporation is entered into in good faith. The rule adopted by the courts is well stated in 10 Cye. pp. 471, 472, 473, 475, thus:
“Where the charter or governing statute does not require payment *44in cash, then the shares may he paid for in such property as the corporation would have occasion to buy, at a fair valuation provided the transaction is in good faith. * * * Even where the charter,
statute, or other governing instrument, by its terms, requires payment in money, yet unless the language is such as to import a prohibition of anything but.money, the courts are generally agreed that payment may be made in any kind of property or services which the corporation may lawfully purchase in the prosecution of its business, provided it be done in good faith, and provided such property or services be conveyed or rendered at a fair valuation. The reason is that the law does not require the parties to go through the vain transaction which would be exhibited if the subscriber should pay for his shares in cash and if the corporation should hand back the cash in purchasing from the subscriber such property as the corporation might wish to buy from him; or, what would be the equivalent of such a transaction, that there should be a mere exchange of checks between the parties. * * * The ‘true value rule’ is that payment of corporate shares in anything except money will not be regarded as payment, except to the extent of the true or actual value of the property turned in and received in lieu of money, and regardless of the question of fraud. Stated differently, the ‘true value rule’ is that where payment is made in property, labor, services, or in anything other than money, the commodity must be turned in at its true value at the time, and that an overvaluation of it, or an undervaluation of the shares, leaves the shares unpaid to that extent, and the shareholders liable to make up the deficiency in favor of creditors of the corporation, without regard to ■ the question whether the discrepancy was the result of fraud, mistake, bad judgment, or a cheerful optimism. Under this rule, in an action to charge a shareholder with the corporate debts up to the amount o.f his stock, because the stock has been issued for property not worth its par value, it is not necessary to prove that the trustees were guilty of fraudulent intent; but the true inquiry will be: What was the reasonable value, or the reasonable market value, of the property conveyed, or the services rendered? * * * On the theory that the ‘true value rule’ is a rule of public policy, the right of a creditor of the corporation to enforce the liability of its shareholders who have not paid their subscriptions in full is not dependent in any degree upon the fact of his knowledge at the time of extending the credit, that such subscriptions were or were not paid in full, although this is not the doctrine of all the courts.”
We can see no good reason, nor do we discern any equity, in denying to those who, in good faith, have contributed property to a corporation in payment, or in part payment, of *45their subscriptions the right to show just what the property so contributed was actually worth in money at the time the corporation was organized. What possible injury can result by permitting such to be done? It is suggested, however, that the subscribers being allowed to place their own value upon the property which no longer may exist and at a time remote from the time when it was actually turned over to the corporation tends to foster injustice and to the inflation of values of the property actually turned over. The question is, however, also pertinent whether the arbitrary denial of credit for what was actually turned over in good faith does not also lead to injustice and wrong. If the courts will but do their whole" duty no great wrong or injustice can result from allowing credit to the stockholders for the actual cash value of the property turned over by them to the corporation even under our statute. Courts, of course, must exercise the utmost care to prevent injustice by limiting the credits to be given to the actual value of the property turned over. Each case, in that regard, should be permitted to furnish a guide of its own. In this case we have found no difficulty in allowing for the property what was paid for it, and in view that all of it was purchased and paid for only a short time before it was turned over to the company we have deemed it but just to fix the time of payment as of the date of actual incorporation. This, it seems to us, is equitable. No doubt if the statute forbade such a course the courts would be powerless; but our statute, as we have seen, does not forbid us from giving credit in accordance with the rules of equity we have outlined. If the statute is followed a corporate creditor may not attack property'payments for subscriptions except for fraud, although the corporation is insolvent. Under statutes like ours where the statute is not followed and the corporation is insolvent, such a creditor may, however, assail property payments without claiming fraud by merely alleging that the subscriptions were not paid in money and are not fully paid, and when such is the fact the burden is cast upon the stockholder who has paid his subscription in property to show that the property contributed by him was worth in cash the amount for which he received credit upon his subscription. *46If the property is thus shown to have been worth as mueh as the amount of the subscription it will be deemed as having been fully paid, but if the property was worth less than that amount the subscriber will be allowed credit only for the actual value of the property and will be required to pay the deficiency, if any, in money to the creditors of the insolvent corporation in case a proper action is commenced for that purpose. That an action in equity, like this one, is the proper remedy in cases of this kind is now well settled. 1 Cook on Corporations (6th Ed.) sections 199, 200, and 204.' See, also, 4 Thompson on Corporations (2d Ed.) sections 3960, 3962, and 3975, upon the question that under a statute like ours credit will be given to the subscriber for the actual value of the property contributed by him in payment of his subscription, and upon the question of remedy, see same volume, section 4851. This court is also, in a measure at least, already committed to what is, by the text-writers, called the “true value rule” in paying for stock subscription, as appears from the opinioji in the case of Richardson v. Treasure Hill M. Co., 23 Utah, 366, 65 Pac. 74. True, the corporation involved in that case was a mining corporation and thus was expressly excepted from the operation of the provision of section 316, supra, but from what is said in the opinion relating to the general subject of paying for stock subscriptions it is clear that the court, as then constituted, felt constrained to follow the “true value rule.”
It is contended by appellant, however, that, inasmuch as it was made to appear from the uncontradicted evidence that between , the time the articles of incorporation were signed and the time they were filed, as required by our law, the respondents declared what is called a cash dividend of $2,000, which was divided among the individual respondents here in proportion to their subscriptions as before stated, they should be compelled to pay back said $2,000 to the extent at least that it is required to pay the debts of the corporation. Upon the other hand, it is contended by respondents that there were expenses paid by them during the ninety days preceding the filing of the articles of incorporation, and that the sheep that were purchased during said ninety days and were turned over *47•to the company were worth more on the 12th day of June, 1909, that the amounts paid therefor,-which amounts we have hereinbefore fully set forth. They also claim other items of credit, which, however, are not deemed of importance. In that connection respondents contend that although they had not in any particular complied with the statute in either verifying the articles of incorporation or in filing them, nevertheless, the corporation was a corporation de facto. We cannot see how it can help respondents any whether it be held that there was a corporation de facto during the ninety days or not. We have given, them full credit for every dollar that Mr. Jensen, the secretary and treasurer and bookkeeper, testified they paid for the sheep and property turned over, and in order to protect the creditors of the corporation we have fixed the date of payment as of the 12th day of June when the articles of incorporation were actually filed as required by law. That, in equity and good conscience, under the circumstances, is all they should ask at the hands of a court of •equity. If, therefore, under the circumstances, the sheep were worth more than the money paid for them, the difference, if any, belonged to the corporation, and not to the respondents. If the respondents had paid their subscriptions in money and sheep at eighty or ninety per cent, of their value had been purchased, the profit would have belonged to the ■corporation, and not to them. Where, as here, the evidence is clear and undisputed with regard tó what was actually paid for the property which is turned in as payment for subscriptions, and where the money was paid so short a time before the corporation was organized, the subscriber, in order to protect the creditors of the corporation, should be given credit only for the money he paid and nothing more. That is fair to him and also fair to the creditors of the corporation, •and it comports with the spirit if not the strict letter of the statute. Besides, the increased value claimed by the respondents is entirely too uncertain and speculative to be allowed in a ease like this. Where, as here, the incorporators in forming a corporation utterly fail or neglect to comply with plain statutory provisions which are intended to prevent the practice of fraud and injustice upon the creditors of a corporation, *48and which were enacted for the protection of snch creditors, the stockholders may not complain if in a conrt of equity they are compelled to show by positive proof just what was the actual value of the property that was turned over to the corporation in payment, or in part payment, of their capital stock. Not to require at least that much is to invite violations of the statute by all who contemplate the organization of corporations. In a case of this kind the evidence respecting value should be clear and convincing. Moreover, respondents were amply compensated by the $2,000 which they received as dividends during the ninety days preceding the filing of the articles of incorporation for all additional expenses and other items of.credit claimed by them. That, we shall assume, represented the profits of the enterprise while it was in their hands as individuals, and so regarding it they should not be required to account as contended by appellant.
In view of the foregoing facts and the law applicable thereto the district court was by far too liberal in allowing the. claims of respondents. Nor does the evidence, taken as a whole, sustain the finding that the subscriptions were paid in full. Indeed, there is no specific finding upon the question of stock payments. All that the court found, or what is called a finding, is a mere conclusion. The so-called finding reads as follows:
"That the said defendants, and each of them, have paid in full their respective said subscriptions to said capital stock of the Blair-Hansen Live Stock Company; that there is nothing due or remaining unpaid, whatever, on their said stock subscriptions.”
2 There is no finding how the stock was paid for, nor what, if anything, was the value of the property which was turned in as part, payment of the subscriptions. There is not, therefore, any finding whatever upon that issue. While, under the facts and circumstances of this case, we feel constrained to allow respondents to retain said $2,000 for the reason already stated and because we have allowed them credit only from the date that the articles of incorporation were completed and filed, yet, from the whole evidence, we are also convinced that they should not be allowed any other *49credits except suck as we have allowed them. We are also of the opinion that in making the allowances aforesaid a reasonable as well as a practical construction is placed upon our statute. Nor does such a construction in any way conflict with article 12, section 5, of our Constitution, which is also relied on by appellant. That section, so far as material here, reads as follows:
“Corporations shall not issue stock, except to bona fide subscribers thereof or their assignee, nor shall any corporation issue any bond, or other obligation, for the payment of money, except for money or property received, or labor done. ’ ’ i
We can find nothing in the foregoing language which prohibits corporations from issuing stock for either property or labor, or for both. As we read the foregoing provision it is in strict harmony with our statute as we have construed it.
Appellant, however, further contends that the court erred in permitting the intervener to introduce in evidence the judgment obtained by it by confession as before stated. If' that judgment were material here it would be very doubtful indeed whether it was properly received in evidence, not upon the ground urged by appellant, however, that it merely represented assigned claims of stockholders of the corporation, since that objection is not good in this jurisdiction. This court is committed to the doctrine that a stockholder as a creditor may maintain an action in equity to recover unpaid subscriptions of stock, but in doing so he must, if delinquent, first pay in the unpaid portion of his subscription and then after having done so he may share ratably with other creditors in the fund derived from unpaid subscriptions. Wilson v. Kiesel, 9 Utah, 406, 35 Pac. 488. To the same effect are Bissit v. Kentucky, etc., Co. (C. C.) 15 Fed. 353, and note; Thompson v. Lake, 19 Nev. 103, 7 Pac. 68, 3 Am. St. Rep. 797; Thompson v. Crockett, 19 Nev. 242, 9 Pac. 121, 3 Am. St. Rep. 883. In Cook on Corporations (6th Ed.), Section 205, the rule is tersely stated thus:
“A stockholder who is also a creditor may file a bill as a creditor to reach unpaid subscriptions. He must, however,, pay his own subscription. ’ ’
*50Appellant, therefore, cannot rely upon the objection that ,a subscriber may not sue or participate' in a creditors’ action to reach unpaid subscriptions. The court did not err, therefore, in admitting the judgment in evidence upon that ground, .and, in view that the judgment cannot affect appellant’s rights for the reason now to be stated, we need not now pause to point out why the confession of judgment was so grossly irregular as to practically destroy its effect. As we have pointed out before, the court rendered judgment against the intervener’s claim as well as against the claim of appellant and dismissed the action as to both. The intervener has not appealed from that part of the judgment affecting it, while the appellant has appealed from the judgment so far .as it was affected thereby. The judgment against the inter-vener must therefore stand for the simple reason that we are powerless to review it. Bolapp v. Railroad Go., 37 Utah, 561, 110 Pac. 364. Whatever error, if any, the court may have •committed, therefore, in admitting the judgment in evidence is harmless so far as appellant is concerned. What we do hold, therefore, is that in view that the intervener has not appealed from the judgment against it, it cannot now participate in any judgment that the appellant may recover against the respondents upon their unpaid subscriptions.
The only question, therefore, that remains to be solved is: What, in view of the evidence,. should the findings and judgment be? The respondents Preston A. and J. P. Blair, Lars Hansen, and Simon S. Jensen each subscribed for fifty shares •or for $5,000 of the capital stock of the company. Each one <of those; therefore, subscribed for 5/22 of the amount of the capital stock subscribed. The respondents Stephen S. and •Seth M. Blair each subscribed for 1/22 of the whole stock •subscribed. Each one of the four first-named respondents .■ should therefore be required to pay 5/22 of the unpaid subscriptions, or 20/22 in all, and the last two should each be required to pay 1/22 thereof, or 2/22 in all. Now, as we have seen, the unpaid subscriptions amount to the sum of $1,391.36. ■of which sum each one of the first four subscribers should contribute the sum of $316.218, or the four should contribute the ;sum of $1,264.87; while the last two named should each con*51tribute the sum of $63.2436, or the combined sum of $126.48. When, therefore, the sum of $1,264.87 which the first four should contribute is added to the sum of $126.48 which the last two should pay, it, gives us $1,391,359, which is the amount of the unpaid subscriptions. Each one of the subscribers should be required to pay 8 per cent, interest upon the amount unpaid by him as shown above from the 10th day of May, 1913, which was the date upon which the action was commenced and therefore constituted a demand, if the interest is necessary to pay appellant’s demand and costs, and, if not, then only so much as shall be required for that purpose.
The judgment of the District Court of Weber County is therefore affirmed so far as it relates to the intervener, and should be reversed and the cause remanded to that court, with directions to modify its findings of fact and conclusions of law so far as they relate to the appellant’s claim, and to substitue others and make them conform to the facts as herein stated, and to enter judgment in favor- of appellant and against the individual respondents in amounts hereinbefore stated, and in accordance with the views herein expressed.
Since writing the foregoing my Associates, for reasons satisfactory to themselves, have arrived at the conclusion that the judgment should be affirmed in toto. While, in view of the whole record, as I read it, and the law applicable thereto, I am unable to yield my judgment to theirs, yet, in view that they constitute the court in this case, their judgment, and not mine, must prevail. The judgment appealed from is therefore affirmed, with costs to respondents.