Court Opinion

ID: 3682403
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-06 06:27:56.599443+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T13:34:02.782474
License: Public Domain

Plaintiff, as receiver of the First Farmers State Bank of Minot, brought suit upon a promissory note executed by the defendant to the Savings Loan and Trust Company, hereinafter referred to as the company, and by it sold and transferred to the bank. The defense mainly relied on is failure of consideration, it being asserted that the capital stock for the purchase price of which the note was given, was never, in fact, delivered to the defendant by the company, and that no stock certificate was issued to him.
The case was tried to a jury, but a motion for a directed verdict having been made by the parties at the conclusion of the trial, both sides stipulated that the issues be decided by the court. Findings of fact and conclusions of law were made in favor of the defendant. The court found that the note was executed in consideration of a promise to deliver to the maker a number of shares of stock in the company; that the stock was never delivered "and that the said defendant never received any portion of the consideration for said note." It was also found that the defendant was never notified of the acceptance by the company of his application for stock; that he was not accorded any of the rights and privileges of a stockholder; and that the endorser of the note had full knowledge of all these facts at the time of the transfer of the instrument. A judgment was accordingly entered for defendant.
Plaintiff contends that the note was in no sense a payment for the stock for which the maker subscribed; that it could not be so treated under certain constitutional and statutory provisions, and that any *Page 247 
agreement to that effect would be invalid. His position on the point is sound. German Mercantile Co. v. Wanner, 25 N.D. 479, 52 L.R.A.(N.S.) 453, 142 N.W. 463. Comp. Laws, 1913, § 4529, reads:
"No note or obligation given by a stockholder whether secured by pledge or otherwise, shall be considered as payment of any part of the capital stock; but the capital stock shall be paid in, either in cash, or in the manner provided in this article."
Plaintiff further contends that the note is enforceable as a subscription to capital stock and that no stock certificate could have been lawfully issued until the note was paid. Sections 4525 and 4526 and 4527 it is urged, may not be construed to authorize the issuance of stock until it is fully paid; § 138 of the Constitution and §§ 4528 and 4529, supra, are likewise cited to the same purpose. This court has expressed itself contrary to plaintiff's contention. German Mercantile Co. v. Wanner, supra. It was there said that the governing statutes clearly contemplate that corporations may, in some circumstances, issue stock before it is fully paid for, that a note is property and, therefore, not within the prohibition of § 138 of the state Constitution. We see no reason for re-examining this question at this time as we do not deem that issue to be presented or involved.
The evidence supports the findings of the trial court with respect to the failure of the corporation to issue or deliver stock to the defendant or to give a notice of corporate meetings.
It fairly appears from the record that the company had been organized and was functioning as a corporation when the note in suit and the application for membership were executed by the defendant. The application purports, upon its face, to be an offer from defendant to become a member of the company, accompanied by a note in the amount of the face value of the stock which he desired to purchase. In the application he offered to pay for the stock by a "note for $750, due January 1, 1918." The defendant on cross-examination testified: "You were not to receive the stock until you paid the note, were you?" A. "Yes." A fair inference from the testimony is that the note was not to be paid unless and until the stock was issued and delivered. In view of the fact, which we think clearly appears, that the proposition of the defendant was to purchase stock in a corporation which had *Page 248 
already been organized, as distinguished from a contract of subscription, in the true sense of that term, the offer stands on the same footing as the sale of any other property, "and delivery or tender of the certificate is a condition precedent to the right of the corporation to maintain an action for the price, unless the contract otherwise provides." 14 C.J. 551. Here the offer contemplated that the certificate be issued before the note was paid.
Exhibit 3, the application for membership, recites that the defendant subscribes "for five shares of common stock at $150, per share. . . . I agree to pay for said shares in the following manner: . . . note for $750 due January 1, 1918." Upon its face, the subscription, or offer of the defendant to become a stockholder, contains also a stipulation that his note be accepted in payment of the capital stock. This, as has been pointed out, and as plaintiff insists, the corporation could not do, under the statute. Comp. Laws, 1913, § 4529. Hence the plaintiff seeks to enforce payment on the theory that the note was the promissory part of a subscription to capital stock — an offer to purchase stock and to become a stockholder in the corporation. The offer itself does not warrant such a construction. If the proposition was unlawful, as contended, as a subscription to the capital stock of a corporation in process of organization, it should have been rejected as made; the company had no right to modify it, in order to suit its own notion of what was lawful, without defendant's consent, and then pretend to accept it as thus modified. One does not become a stockholder until an offer to become such is accepted. Jackson v. Sabie, 36 N.D. 49, 161 N.W. 722.
If the transaction be treated as an offer to purchase stock after the corporation had been organized, delivery was a condition precedent to liability to pay the note in suit, and the payee therein, or any transferee with knowledge of the facts, could not recover thereon; and if it be considered as an ordinary subscription to capital stock, the offer or subscription was made on a condition with which the corporation could not lawfully comply — that the note be accepted in payments of the stock — and there can be no recovery. There was and could be no acceptance of defendant's offer to become a stockholder, and, consequently, *Page 249 
there never arose any binding obligation on his part to perform.
The judgment of the trial court is affirmed.
CHRISTIANSON, Ch. J., and NUESSLE, BURKE, and BIRDZELL, JJ., concur.