Beitman v. Steiner Bros.

98 Ala. 241
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedNovember 15, 1893
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 98 Ala. 241 (Beitman v. Steiner Bros.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Beitman v. Steiner Bros., 98 Ala. 241 (Ala. 1893).

Opinion

McCLELLAN, J.

This is an action by Steiner Bros, against Beitman. The complaint as amended contains a count on a note executed by defendant to plaintiffs and common counts for money paid, &c., for money due by account, and for money due by account stated. Of these, only the first count is important as the questions reserved for our consideration arose on the sufficiency of certain pleas which went to the cause of action laid specially therein.

The main question is presented on the following facts which are set up in the pleas and relied on as showing the absence of consideration for the promise sued on : The defendant purchased from the plaintiffs fifty-three shares of the capital stock of the Birmingham, Powderly and Bessemer Street Bailroad Company, of the par value of fifty dollars ¡ser share and executed to them the note sued on for the price thereof which appears to have been about 50 per cent, of the face value of the shares. The authorized capital stock of the company was one hundred thousand ($100,000) dollars, and this amount was subscribed by plaintiffs and others, but before the certificates were issued the stockholders met and resolved to increase the capital stock of the concern to two hundred thousand ($200,000) dollars and to divide out the additional shares among the original subscribers so that each subscriber to the original capital of $100,-000 would receive double the number of shares he had subscribed, and (presumably) paid for, the increase being in the nature of a bonus for which nobody paid anything. The certificates issued to plaintiffs and sold to defendant by them were of this, the only, issue of stock made by the company. Plaintiffs knew the foregoing facts, indeed had participated in the proceedings by which the certificates of shares had been doubled without any increase in the capital of the corporation, when they sold their shares to the defendant; and the latter also, it is to be presumed, from the absence of any [245]*245negation of knowledge in the plea, knew that the stock he purchased of the par value of $2650, represented only half that sum in actual capital. There can, of course, be no doubt that the fictitious increase of the capital stoch of the corporation, adding as it did not one penny to its capital could not under our laws afford a predicate or basis for the issuance of certificates of shares beyond the capital actually subscribed and paid or to be paid in; and that in so far as the certificates which were issued are rested upon or purport to represent capital beyond the $100,000 actually subscribed and paid, they are utterly void. But where there has been an excess of stock certificates over the real capital of a corporation, attempted to be authorized, and issued, our laws do not avoid the entire issue. The vitiating operation of the constitutional provision is confined to the fictitious excess; the language is: “All fictitious increase of stock or indebtedness shall be void.” — Consts. Art. XIV, § 6. Where the excess of certificates beyond the actual capital is issued separately from the certificates which truly represent that capital, where, in other words, subsequent to the issuance of certificates which are authorized, the stock is increased without a corresponding increase of the capital itself, and certificates thereof are issued, such certificates are void, but the original certificates are as valid for all purposes as if the fictitious increase had not been attempted at all; and the holders of them are entitled to share in the business and assets of the concern accordingly. Nor can it be material that such holders have also subscribed for and taken worthless certificates — the viciousness of the one would not impair the validity or value of the other. Where, however, as on this case, the fictitious increase is formally authorized before any stock is issued and all of the certificates are issued and delivered to the subscribers at the same time and purport to represent and rest on a gross capital equal in amount to the actual and fictitious capital combined, it is, of course, impracticable to separate the good from the void certificates or to say that any particular certificate of stock is solely based on actual capital, or on feigned capital only, and therefore is wholly good or wholly bad. Yet while in such case no certificate can be said to represent its face value, or to entitle the holder to share in the incomes and assets of the corporation to the full extent of the amount it purports to evidence, on the other hand, it is equally clear that such certificate is in part based upon actual property and represents in some amount actual capital in which the holder has a right to share in the proportions his certificate sustains'to the whole [246]*246issue and tbe whole issue sustains to the actual capital. It is certain on the facts disclosed in these pleas that $100,000 had been paid in and was held by the corporation as its capital. It is equally clear that this fund belonged to the holders of the $200,000 of shares to the same extent and in the same sense it would have belonged to them had no fictitious increase of shares been attempted to be authorized and actually issued. It is manifest too that the several interests of the stockholders in this fund is determinable by reference to the number of shares of stock they respectively hold just as if the whole issue was in all respects valid; the sum of the shares held by each marks the extent of his interest and is his muniment of title. Precisely double the number of authorized certificates having been issued to each subscriber-for the stock, the relative share of each subscriber in the corporate capital is neither increased nor diminished by the duplication. Each has the interest he controlled and paid for, albeit it may appear by the face of the paper evidencing his interest that the fund is twice what it really is, and hence nominally that his aliquot share thereof is double liis real interest. In other words, each subscriber agreed to receive and did receive two shares worth 50 per cent, of their face value instead of one share at par. It was so with the plaintiffs. The defendant knew all the facts relative to the fictitious increase of shares. He knew that the certificates plaintiffs offered to sell him were based on an actual capital amounting to only 50 per cent, of the nominal capital represented in part by those certificates, and in view of these facts he purchased plaintiff’s stock at fifty cents on the dollar. There was no concealment, no misrepresentation. He received precisely what he contracted for and agreed to pay for; and the certificates which were transferred or were to be transferred to him entitled him to exactly the same interest in the corporate capital as between himself and the other stockholders and the company as if there had been no duplication of shares and he had paid the sum of money he agreed to pay for one-half the shares of stock he received. The facts alleged fall far short of showing that there has been any want or failure of consideration in whole or in part for the note sued on. Possibly the fictitious increase might afford grounds for a writ of quo warrcurdo against the persons purporting to form and constitute this company, but even in that event the defendant would be entitled to the share in its property which is represented by the certificates he purchased. Possibly, also, creditors of, the corporation might call upon the stockholders to make good the difference be[247]

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Bluebook (online)
98 Ala. 241, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/beitman-v-steiner-bros-ala-1893.