Berry v. Matthews

1 Ga. 519
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedSeptember 15, 1846
DocketNo. 75
StatusPublished

This text of 1 Ga. 519 (Berry v. Matthews) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Berry v. Matthews, 1 Ga. 519 (Ga. 1846).

Opinion

By the Coart

Lumpkin, Judge.

This was a bill filed by the creditors of the Habersham Iron Works, and Manufacturing Company, and seeking to make the stockholders of that corporation, individually, liable for the debts of the complainants, upon four grounds, because—

1st. The act of incorporation was never legally accepted by the company.

2d. That if accepted, the company had forfeited all their rights under it.

3d. That the stockholders had not paid in the amount of stock held by them.

4th. That large dividends had been distributed by the corporation, to the stockholders which ought to have been applied to the payment of the company’s debts.

The bill was made returnable to the April term, 1843, of the Superior Court of Habersham county, and at the same term a demurrer was put in by the defendants, containing thirteen grounds, all of which are reducible to one, namely, a want of equity. At April term 1844, a decision was made by Judge Hillyer on the demurrer. He held that a formal acceptance of the charter, by a vote of the majority of the stockholders, was not necessary. That any acts which would go to show that the company were acting under their charter, would be sufficient, and that when the charter was granted upon the application of the company, (as in this case,) its acceptance would be presumed from very slight circumstances, lie was of the opinion, that from the facts stated in the bill, the charter was accepted by the company.

The complainants assigned eighteen reasons in support of the position taken in the bill, that if the charter was accepted, the company had forfeited all its rights under it; upon this point, the same judge ruled, that a charter may be forfeited, and all the franchises granted therein resumed by the State, on account of the illegal conduct of the company. But, that until a judgment of ouster was pronounced by a competent tribunal, the charter remains in full force, and any improper conduct on the part of the corporation cannot be visited on the stockholders, further than [520]*520those who are concerned in such misconduct — consequently he adjudged that the stockholders were not individually liable to the creditors, upon the ground that their rights, under the charter, had been forfeited by the improper conduct of the company.

Upon the third ground, that the stockholders had not paid in the stock held by them, the court held, that they were clearly liable, and were compelled to respond to the creditors, and that the remedy was by a proceeding in Chancery'. But the difficulty in the present case was, that this charter was granted to the very persons by name, who are defendants in the bill, and who, it appears, had formed the company previous to their application to the Legislature for a charter ; and that while it was true that they were authorized to extend their capital to even $60,000, they were under no obligation to do so ; and it did not appear that the defendants had ever subscribed for stock which was not paid in, indeed, the very reverse is charged, that no books of subscription ever were opened. It was suggested that if the bill had charged, that in pursuance of the charter, the company had disposed of such an amount of stock, and that A had purchased so many shares at such a price, and B had bought so many, &c., and that the purchasers had not paid in the respective sums due by them ; that they would 'be decreed, to pay into court for the use of the creditors, pro rata, sufficient to pay their respective debts, or the amount of their subscriptions.

As to the fourth ground, that large dividends had been made by the company to the stockholders, which ought to have been applied to the payment of the debts, the court considered it the strongest point in the case, and that if it had been properly stated and insisted on in the bill, the bill would have been sustained ; for, that after the insolvency of an incorporated company, the stockholders could no more receive dividends than they could abstract the capital itself; that, in principle, there was no difference.

Upon a careful examination, then, of the whole case made by the complainants,'it was ordered that the demurrer be sustained, and the bill dismissed, so much of it as seeks to make the defendants liable, upon the ground that their charier had never been accepted, or that they had forfeited their rights and privileges under it; and that the complainants have leave to amend their bill relative to the sale or subscription of stock, and the fraudulent declaration of dividends.

In obedience to this interlocutory order, the following amendment was made :

“And your orators further charge, that, not having access to the books of the company, they cannot say, with absolute certainty, what amount of stock was held and owned by each stockholder; but they believe, and so eharge, that the stock of said company divided out, was two hundred shares at one hundred dollars each, making a capital of twenty thousand dollars ; and that the same was divided originally, before the act of incorporation was obtained, between the said John R. Matthews, Paul Rossignol and Lewis F. E. Dugas, in the following proportions, or in other number of shares of nearly the same import, viz: to the said John R. Matthews one hundred shares, making the sum of ten thousand dollars, and to each of the others, the said Paul Rossignol and Lewis F. E. Dugas, fifty shares, making the sum of five thousand dollars a piece, which said last [521]*521sums of money make the said capital of twenty thousand dollars. And your orators further charge, that the said John R. Matthews, Paul Rossignol and Lewis F. E. Dugas, paid no money into the coffers of the association then or at any time thereafter, for the stock thus owned and held by them; and before the grant of the charter of incorporation proceeded to sell a portion of said capital stock of twenty thousand dollars to the other defendants, in the following proportion, or in other number of shares of nearly the same import, each share at one hundred dollars, viz : to Mrs. Pauline Y. Dugas five shares, Julia Augusta Nimimo one share, John B. Guieu three shares, Richard W. Habersham, Senr., five shares, Eugene D. Cook five shares, John S. Dobbins, Samuel A. Wales and James Brannon, composing the firm of John S. Dobbins, & Co., ten shares ; Lewis Alexander Dugas five shares, John Edgar five shares, Loon P. Dugas five shares, Joshua M. Balleu three shares, John Frazer five shares, John W. Wilde five shares, OliverS. Dobson five shares, Turner H. Trippe five shares, Antoine Picquet five shares, John V. C. Conling five shares, William M. D’Antignae five shares ; making in the whole eighty-five shares, sold at one hundred dollars per share, and amounting to the sum of eight thousand,-five hundred dollars ; and that the said John R., Paul, and Lewis F. E., retained the balance of said stoek, amounting to one hundred and fifteen shares, or other large number of shares, making eleven thousand, five hundred dollars, or other large sum of money, and that they have not at any time paid for said stock to said company; and that if any of the other defendants have paid for the stock sold to them as aforesaid, the money paid for the same, was all appropriated by the said John R., Paul, and Lewis F. E., and was never a part of the funds of the company.

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Bluebook (online)
1 Ga. 519, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/berry-v-matthews-ga-1846.