Anderson v. Railroad

17 S.W. 803, 91 Tenn. 44
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 17, 1891
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 17 S.W. 803 (Anderson v. Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Anderson v. Railroad, 17 S.W. 803, 91 Tenn. 44 (Tenn. 1891).

Opinion

Lurton, J.

A number of subscribers to the original stock of the defendant company have joined in filing this bill for the purpose of enjoining suits at law upon their several contoacts of subscription.

The corporation, expressly waiving all questions of jurisdiction, answers and submits the liability of complainants to the judgment of the Court, and by cross-bill seeks a recovery against each of them.

The learned Chancellor was of opinion that no liability existed, and perpetually enjoined suits at law and dismissed the cross-bill. In support of this decree a number of propositions have been urged.

First. — It is insisted that the defendant company has no legal existence, because its charter has not been registered in the several counties through which it is authorized to construct and operate a line of railway.

The charter of the defendant - company was obtained under the general incorporation Act of 1875. It was granted in 1883, and, as recited in the written parts, was “for the purpose of constructing a railway from the town of Gallatin, in the county of Sumner, to the city of Knoxville, in the county of Knox, through the counties of Sumner, Trousdale, Smith, Putnam, DeKalb, White, Cumberland, Koane, and Knox, over the most direct ■and practical route between the said termini.” This charter, after registration in Sumner, was transmitted to the Secretary of State, who affixed his certificate' of registration in his office and the [47]*47great seal of State. This certificate, together with the great seal, was subsequently registered in the county of original registration. "Whether there has been any registration in any of the other counties in the projected line of road is on the record left in doubt. Complainants insist that until registration in these other counties, and particularly in the county of Trousdale, where work has been begun and where directors’ meetings have been latterly held, that the company has no valid corporate existence.

By Section 26 of the Act of 1875 it is required that the charter shall be registered in the office of the county where the principal office of the company is situated; that -it shall then be transmitted to the Secretary of State, who shall affix his certificate of registration, together with the great seal of State, and that these shall be like-' wise registered “ where said instrument was originally registered.” This section then declares that this registration shall complete the formation of the . company as a body-politic, and the , validity of the same in any legal proceeding shall not be collaterally questioned.

When these conditions of existence have been fulfilled as required, and not before, can the corporation- rely upon its exemption from collateral attack. Brewer v. State, 7 Lea, 682.

All of this was done in this case. We must take the registration in the first instance as a corporate determination of the location of its [48]*48“principal office.” Registration in the comity where its principal, office is .situated completes its identity as a corporation. It is true that by a subsequent clause in the same section it is provided “that if the corporation establishes agencies in any other county or counties, the instrument must be also registered in said county.” Failure to comply with this provision may subject the corporation to a proceeding by the State for a forfeiture, but its corporate existence cannot be collaterally questioned after registration in the county of its principal office. Complainants are not in a situation to make any question as to the failure to register in Trousdale County. It is shown that after they had subscribed, that the meetings of the directors and stockholders were held at Hartsville. This cannot change the fact that the. corporators determined Sumner County to be the location of the principal office. The subsequent opening of an office in that county, or the removal of the principal office, if permissible, cannot affect the charter acquired by the registration in Sumner.

Second. — The capital stock was fixed by the cor-porators, at a meeting held for purposes of organization, at three millions of dollars. Something less than $50,000 of this had been taken .when this bill was filed. Complainants’ contention is, that until the whole of the stock is taken they cannot be made liable for calls on their subscription.

It is well settled that there is an implied condition that the amount of stock specified in the [49]*49charter, articles of association, or contract of subscription, or fixed by the corporators when authorized to settle same, shall be actually taken before the subscribers shall become liable. Read v. Memphis Gas Co., 9 Heis., 545; Morawetz on Private Corporations, Sec. 156; Beach on Private Corporations, Sec. 535.

This implication may, however, be rebutted by the terms of the charter, or the provisions of the enabling Act, articles of association, action of stockholders or corporators fixing capital, or by the conditions of the contract of subscription. So a subscriber may waive such condition, and this waiver may be either express or implied. A waiver will generally be implied if the subscriber consents to the letting of contracts, the creation of debt, or the doing of any corporate act involving the necessity of calliug in the subscribed stock, unless the charter expressly forbid the doing of any coi’porate act until tile requisite capital is taken. Morawetz on Private Corporations, Sec. 156; Beach on Private Corporations, Sec. 535, and authorities cited.

There is nothing in the charter, or resolution fixing amount of capital stock, or in the original contract of subscription, rebutting the usual implied condition and taking their contract of subscription out of the general rule of law. But after the original subscription had been made, a majority of the subscribers entered into the following agreement:

“Eor the purpose of enabling the Middle and [50]*50East Tennessee Central Railroad Company "to put their road under construction from the Chesapeake and Nashville Railroad to Hartsville, Tenn., the undersigned, subscribers to the capital stock of the said Middle and East Tennessee Central Railroad Company agree that they will pay their said subscriptions as fast as the work progresses; provided, that not more than twenty-five per cent, shall be called for in any one month.”

Upon the faith of this agreement the directors let out a contract for the construction of the very part of the projected line contemplated b3^ this, agreement, being eleven and one-half miles, and covering the route between the Chesapeake and Nashville road and the town of Hartsville. The contractors were shown this supplementary agreement, and upon the faith of it accepted a contract to construct so much of the road as was agreed to by that paper, and had completed about seventy per cent, of the work “when this suit was begun. The obvious effect of assenting to this agreement was to waive the implied condition that the whole of the stock should be raised, and was an undoubted agreement that the work should begin at the Chesapeake and Nashville Railroad instead of the town of Grallatin. Some of complainants did not sign this agreement, and are not shown to. have assented, by votes or otherwise, to the commencement of work or the creation of debt. There is proof that at a meeting of subscribers it was. unanimously resolved that the directors should let [51]

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Bluebook (online)
17 S.W. 803, 91 Tenn. 44, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/anderson-v-railroad-tenn-1891.