Bean v. American Alkali Co.

134 F. 57, 67 C.C.A. 167, 1905 U.S. App. LEXIS 4248
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedJanuary 9, 1905
DocketNo. 55
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 134 F. 57 (Bean v. American Alkali Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bean v. American Alkali Co., 134 F. 57, 67 C.C.A. 167, 1905 U.S. App. LEXIS 4248 (3d Cir. 1905).

Opinion

ACHESON, Circuit Judge.

The plaintiff in the court below was the American Alkali Company, a corporation organized and existing under the laws of the state of New Jersey, to the use of Arthur K. Brown and Henry I. Budd, Jr., receivers of the company. The defendants were Charles H. Bean and George E. Bean, copartners trading as Charles H. Bean & Co. The suit was an action at law to recover an assessment of $3.50 per share on 3,100 shares of the preferred stock in the company standing of record on the books of the company in the name of George W. Mactague. The assessment was made in September, 1901, by the company itself, while it was a solvent and going concern, and the declared object of the assessment was “for the purpose of providing funds for the completion of the present works, the building of additional works, and providing working capital.” The receivership was created under proceedings instituted on September 9, 1903. About the 15th of May, 1899, Charles H. Bean & Co. signed a subscription agreement for 9,700 shares of the preferred stock of the company, of which the above-mentioned 3,100 shares were part. At the bottom [58]*58of the subscription was the following memorandum: “Make ctfs. 100 shs. each name of Geo. W. Mactague, 52-1 Morris St.” The subscription agreement specified that the stock was to be paid for as follows: Twenty per centum (or $10 per share) upon 10 days’ notice after subscription, and the balance as might be required in the development of the business in installments upon notice. The subscription agreement contained the following further provision:

“Upon payment of the first installment of twenty per cent, the full-paid certificates of common, stock and partially paid certificates of preferred stock, setting forth that twenty per cent, has been paid thereon, shall be delivered to the subscribers hereto, and as subsequent installments are paid they shall be indorsed on the latter. Provided, however, that after the payment of the twenty per cent., provided for above, amounting to a total of ten dollars per share, the subscribers hereto shall no longer be liable for any balance of their subscription, excepting upon such shares as shall stand of record on the books of the company in their names at the time any subsequent assessment or calls are made, but the holders of such shares of record on the books of the company at that time, and they only, shall be liable for the same.”

The above-cited provision of the subscription agreement, which Charles H. Bean & Co. entered into, was expressly authorized by, and was in strict accordance with, the terms of the company’s charter, which ' contains the following provision:

“After payment of ten dollars per share on the preferred stock, the subscribers thereto shall not be liable for any balance of their subscription excepting upon such shares as shall stand of record on the books of the company in their names at the time when any subsequent assessments or calls are made, but the holders of such shares of record on the books of the company at that time, and they only, shall be liable for the same.”

The 20 per centum (amounting to $10 per share) of all the stock subscribed for by Charles H. Bean & Co. was duly paid. The plaintiff’s statement of claim, which embodied the subscription agreement, also disclosed the fact that at the time the subsequent assessment here in question was made George W. Mactague was registered on the books of the company as the holder of the 2,100 shares of stock, which are involved in this action. To avoid the effect of this admission, the statement of claim contained the following averment, namely:

“Plaintiffs are informed, believe, and expect to be able to prove, and therefore aver, that said shares were so placed in the name of Mactague for the convenience and accommodation of defendants for the purpose of concealing the real ownership thereof, escaping liability for possible assessments, or for other reasons unknown to the plaintiffs, and that the said George W. Mactague acted in the premises at the request of and on' behalf of the said defendants, but without any interest whatsoever in the said shares.”

It is quite plain that the plaintiffs’ action proceeded upon the alleged ground that Charles H. Bean & Co. were the real owners of the stock in question at the time the assessment or call sued for was made, and therefore were liable for the same. But the alleged ownership of the stock by the defendants was squarely traversed by the affidavit of defense, which set forth that the defendants, in the course of their business as bankers and brokers, subscribed for the 2,100 shares of stock for customers — sundry firms and individuals — upon orders, given by them to the defendants; and the affidavit of defense alleged that the defendants never had any right, interest, or property whatever in or [59]*59to the said shares, or any part thereof. And, specifically answering the above-quoted averment of the affidavit of claim, the affidavit of defense contained the following statement:

“Deponent further denies that said shares of stock were placed in the name of said Mactague for the convenience or for the benefit or advantage of said defendants, or to enable them to escape liability of any nature or character, or that said Mactague acted in the premises for them, or either of them, but expressly avers that said Mactague acted solely as above stated for the benefit of the lawful owners of said shares of stock, but in no respect for these defendants.”

Upon the trial"of the case, after the plaintiff’s side was closed, and a motion for a compulsory nonsuit had been overruled, Charles H. Bean, one of the defendants, took the witness stand, and testified that the defendants were bankers and brokers, and in that capacity were authorized by their clients to subscribe for shares of stock in the American Alkali Company under the conditions set forth in the subscription paper, and that accordingly the defendants subscribed for their clients the said 9,700 shares of preferred stock; that the defendants paid on account of this stock the first installment of 20 per centum, or $10 per share, by their own checks, but after they had received from their clients the corresponding amount of money to make the payment; that the defendants had no pecuniary interest whatever in the stock except a small stock commission; that the certificates (which were issued in the name of George W. Mactague) as received were delivered to their several customers for whom the stock was taken, and that the entire 2,100 shares of stock involved in this action were so delivered to their clients prior to the 7th of August, 1899 — i. e., before the assessment or call sued for was made. The whole of this testimony the trial judge, upon the motion of the plaintiff’s counsel, struck out. The defendants then called William W. Gibbs, and offered to show by him that at the time of the signing by the defendants of the subscription paper he was president of the American Alkali Company, and that he entered into an arrangement with the defendants “to obtain subscriptions on behalf of the company, and that as president of the company he had knowledge that Messrs. C. H. Bean & Co., when they signed this paper, were signing on behalf of others.” This offer the court rejected. The court directed the jury to find a verdict for the plaintiff, and, the jury accordingly having rendered a verdict in favor of the plaintiff for the sum of $5,880, the amount of the claim sued for, judgment for that sum was entered against the defendants.

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Related

American Alkali Co. v. Kurtz
134 F. 663 (U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern Pennsylvania, 1905)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
134 F. 57, 67 C.C.A. 167, 1905 U.S. App. LEXIS 4248, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bean-v-american-alkali-co-ca3-1905.