Afro-American Life Ins. v. Central Life Ins.

4 Fla. Supp. 71

This text of 4 Fla. Supp. 71 (Afro-American Life Ins. v. Central Life Ins.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Circuit Court of the 4th Judicial Circuit of Florida, Duval County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Afro-American Life Ins. v. Central Life Ins., 4 Fla. Supp. 71 (Fla. Super. Ct. 1953).

Opinion

EDWIN L. JONES, Circuit Judge.

This cause came on to be heard on a motion for summary final decree filed by the defendants on March 20, 1953 and on a similar motion filed by the plaintiffs on April 6, 1953. The court has heard the arguments of counsel for all the parties and has considered the memoranda of authorities submitted by the parties.

Plaintiffs instituted this suit for a declaratory decree and other relief by bill of complaint filed April 1, 1952. Plaintiffs are the Afro-American Life Ins. Co., a Florida corporation engaged in the life insurance business (hereinafter referred to as “Afro-American”), and various individuals.

Some of the individual plaintiffs are stockholders in the defendant Central Life Ins. Co. of Florida, a Florida corporation likewise engaged in the life insurance business (hereinafter referred to as “Central”) who still hold legal, beneficial and record title to their stock, while other individual plaintiffs are persons who are still recorded as stockholders on Central’s books but who have sold and transferred their shares of stock in Central to Afro-American.

The defendants are the Central Life Ins. Co. of Florida and various individual stockholders thereof who were made defendants [73]*73individually and as representatives of the class of which they are members, namely, all the stockholders of Central (other than those who are parties plaintiff).

Plaintiffs allege in their bill that Afro-American has purchased from stockholders of record for good and valuable consideration 856 1/6 of the outstanding 4,000 shares of the capital stock of Central and that Central has wrongfully refused to record the transferred certificates on its books and to issue new stock certificates to Afro-American — thereby refusing to recognize Afro-American as the legal, beneficial and record owner in the place of the stockholders of record from whom the shares were purchased.

Plaintiffs further allege that at all times material Afro-American under its charter, as amended, was expressly authorized and empowered to purchase, own and hold stocks of any corporation and while the owner and holder thereof to exercise all the rights, powers and privileges of ownership. Plaintiffs charge that the actions of Central were wrongful, imposed illegal restraints on the sale and transferability of the plaintiffs’ stock in Central, depreciated the value, marketability and free alienability of their stock and wrongfully deprived them of their vested rights as stockholders, and of their property without due process of law.

Plaintiffs seek a declaratory decree with respect to the rights, status and equitable and legal relations of the plaintiffs and other stockholders, and a decree requiring Central to record the stock transfers on its books and to issue new certificates of stock in Central in exchange for the transferred certificates.

In their answer defendants deny that Afro-American under its original charter or any legal amendment thereof was legally authorized and empowered to purchase, own and hold shares of stock of other corporations, specifically of the defendant Central. Defendants deny that Afro-American is the legal holder and owner of 856 1/6 shares of Central’s stock, allege that if any such shares were purchased by Afro-American such purchases were illegal, ultra vires and void. Defendants charge that neither the statutes of Florida under which Afro-American was chartered nor its original letters patent or any legal amendment thereof allowed or empowered it to purchase Central’s capital stock.

The crux of this case, in the opinion of the court, is whether Afro-American under its charter as amended was lawfully authorized to purchase, own and hold stock in other corporations such as the defendant Central. Afro-American was incorporated by letters patent issued on March 4, 1901. On November 25, 1921 letters [74]*74patent were issued approving various amendments and additions to its charter. One of these dealt with the “general nature of the business or businesses to be engaged in or transacted by the corporation ” and specifically provided—

To purchase, own, sell and dispose of, mortgage, lease and encumber lands, the products thereof, and properties, real and personal of every kind and description whatsoever, to subscribe for, purchase, receive, own, issue, hold and underwrite for investment, or otherwise sell, dispose of, mortgage, sublet, pledge, hire, lease, or convey wherever possible and lawful, any stocks, shares, bonds, securities, notes, warehouse receipts or other obligations or property of any kind either of a person or persons, this or any other corporation or firm, association or company, and while the owner or. holder thereof, to exercise all the rights, powers and privileges of ownership thereof, to represent the same and exercise any voting power thereof ... to make contracts, covenants and agreements and obligations of any kind whatsoever for the furtherance of its purposes and business, on such terms as may be authorized by the company ... to invest its funds in such real and personal property as it may deem desirable . . . and generally to exercise such powers as may be incident or convenient to the purpose or business of the corporation; and to have, exercise and enjoy all the rights, powers and privileges incident to corporations organized and existing under and by virtue of the laws of the State of Florida;

There can be no doubt that the charter provisions above quoted, on their face, give to Afro-American full and broad authority to purchase, own and hold stock in any other corporation whatsoever (including Central) and while such owner to exercise all the rights and privileges of ownership including the right to voting power. But defendants urge that the charter amendment must be read in the light of the statutes and that the statutes of this state in force on November 25, 1921 did not expressly authorize one corporation to purchase stock in another and that for that reason Afro-American’s charter amendment of that date was illegal in that neither the governor nor the secretary of state had authority to grant to it the right to purchase stock in another corporation.

The court recognizes that a corporation’s charter consists of its articles of incorporation or letters patent taken in connection with the general law under which the articles or letters were granted or amended. While a corporation may not clothe itself with a power or object merely by naming it in its articles of incorporation and the general law as well as the articles must determine whether a corporate object or business is authorized or whether a particular power exists, the court is of the opinion that the amendment to Afro-American’s charter of November 25, 1951 was legal and valid in all respects under the general law and that under such law and charter amendment Afro-American had and has the power to purchase, own and hold stock in other corporations including the defendant Central.

[75]*75The corporation law in force in 1921 and here applicable is found in sections 4045, et seq., Revised General Statutes 1920 (now contained in chapters 610 and 611, Florida Statutes 1951). Such was the general law authorizing the formation of corporations of all kinds and it did not specify a limited number of objects or purposes for which corporations could be organized, but specifically provided that any three or more persons could become incorporated “for the transaction of any lawful business,” that is, for any lawful objects and purposes.

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Bluebook (online)
4 Fla. Supp. 71, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/afro-american-life-ins-v-central-life-ins-flacirct4duv-1953.