Blien v. Rand

46 L.R.A. 618, 79 N.W. 606, 77 Minn. 110, 1899 Minn. LEXIS 666
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedJune 22, 1899
DocketNos. 11,634—(177)
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 46 L.R.A. 618 (Blien v. Rand) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Blien v. Rand, 46 L.R.A. 618, 79 N.W. 606, 77 Minn. 110, 1899 Minn. LEXIS 666 (Mich. 1899).

Opinion

START, C. J.1

This is an action, under G. S. 1894, c. 76, to enforce the liability of stockholders of Normanna, a corporation of this state, for its debts. The defendants, for convenience, may be classified and referred to as (A) eligible stockholders, (B) noneligible holders of certificates of stock, and (C) noneligible subscribers for corporate stock. The trial court made its findings of fact and conclusions of law, directing judgment, as prayed for in the complaint, .against class A, and in favor of classes B and C, dismissing the action on the merits as to them. Judgment was so entered, and the plaintiffs appealed from the judgment in favor of classes B and C.

No question is here made as to .the liability of.the defendants designated as class A, — that is, the eligible stockholders. There is no settled case or bill of exceptions in the record, and the question for our decision is whether the conclusions of law of the trial court and the judgment are justified by the facts found. The trial court found all the essential facts to sustain its conclusion that the stockholders of the corporation were liable to the amount of their stock for the debts of the corporation, but it also found, in legal effect, as a conclusion from the special facts found, that the defendants composing classes B and C were not stockholders.

The special facts upon which this conclusion was based were, concisely stated, these: Normanna is, and has been since January 6, 1886, a corporation duly organized under G. S. 1878, 'c. 34, tit. 3. The general nature of its business was, by its articles of incorporation, declared to be:

“The buying, leasing, and owning of real estate in the city of Minneapolis, county of Hennepin, state qf Minnesota, and improv[112]*112ing the same, erecting thereon such building or buildings, containing a hall or halls sufficient and convenient for the use of this association, and its members; and to lease, let, and rent to others for-hire the said hall or halls, storerooms, or any and all parts of said building or buildings; provided, however, that no intoxicating liquors shall be sold on the premises; and to do any and all things, necessary, expedient, and pertinent to the purposes and ends aforesaid; and to advance the interests of its members and the Norwegian residents of Minneapolis, Minnesota, and vicinity.”

The capital stock of the corporation was fixed by its articles at $50,000, and the number of shares thereof at 5,000, of $10 each. Article 7 of its charter was this:

“No person shall be a stockholder in this corporation unless he or she be a Norwegian by nativity or lineage, or shall have been a Norwegian citizen, or speaks the Norwegian language, and is a resident of the city of Minneapolis or vicinity.”

All of class A were eligible to membership under this article, but classes B a,nd O were not; nor was the defendant John C. Oswald. The corporation, by. its board of directors, February 29, 1887,. adopted a resolution that shares in the corporation be sold to others than Norwegians, and thereafter solicited subscribers and .sold stock to any and all classes who would buy, regardless of nationality or the language spoken by them. It does not appear that any persons to whom stock was issued ever objected to such action. Each of the defendants belonging to class B subscribed for one or more shares of the stock of the corporation, as particularly set forth in the trial court’s findings of fact, and each paid the corporation in full for the shares subscribed by him, and the corporation issued to each of them a certificate of stock pursuant to and in compliance with his subscription, which he has ever since retained. Each and all of such defendants were duly notified of the semiannual meeting of the stockholders of the corporation, during the period of “their stockholding,” which in each case was at least three years. Some-of them, however, never attended any of the stockholders’ meetings. The corporation was designated in some of the subscription contracts as “Normanna” and in others as “Normanna Hall Associa0 tion,” and its certificates of stock so issued were m form as follows:.

[113]*113“State of Minnesota. Normanna Hall Association. Capital stock, $50,000. This certifies that - is entitled to - shares of the capital stock of the Normanna Hall Association. Transferable only, with consent of the board of directors, on the books of the association, in person or by his lawful attorney, upon the surrender of this certificate. Witness the corporate seal of said association at Minneapolis, this-day of-, A. D. 18 — .”

This form of certificate was used, and none other, by the corporation Normanna as its certificate of stock, and each and all of the defendants of class B had notice that such certificate was the certificate used by the corporation as its stock certificate.

The defendant John C. Oswald subscribed for 25 shares of the stock of the corporation, and directed his agent to pay for it on demand. The agent did so, and the corporation issued a certificate of stock pursuant to the subscription, which'was accepted by the agent and placed in Oswald’s safe, where it remained until the trial of this action; but he did not in fact know that the certificate had been issued. He was, however, duly notified of a.11 of the meetings of the stockholders of the corporation for a period of at least seven years. At the time he subscribed for stock he supposed he was making a donation to the corporation, and not subscribing for stock. All of the unpaid debts of the corporation were contracted subsequent to the issuing of the stock to class B and to the defendant Oswald.

The defendants composing class 0 signed a stock-subscription contract, but no certificates of stock were ever delivered or tendered to.any of them until after the corporation made an assignment in insolvency for the benefit of its creditors. One of such defendants, George H. Fletcher, paid his subscription before the assignment by the corporation. The assignee of the corporation tendered to the defendant Loren Fletcher a stock certificate for the amount of his subscription, which he refused to accept on the ground that he had not, as he claimed, subscribed for any stock, but had agreed to donate the amount of his subscription to the corporation. Thereupon the assignee demanded of him the amount of his subscription, which he paid as a donation, and the assignee wrote on the subscription agreement, in connection with the signature of the defendant, these words: “Paid $250 as a donation, but not for shares [114]*114of stock, as it was the understanding of both parties to the contract that it was a mere gift.” The defendant Philip B. Winston of this class never paid anything on his subscription agreement. None of the defendants in class C was eligible to membership in the corporation, under the provisions of article 7 of its charter. There is no finding that any of the unpaid debts of the corporation were contracted subsequent to the stock subscription by class C.

The plaintiffs claim that the corporation was organized under title 2, c. 34, G. S. 1878, and the defendants here contesting their liability claim that it was organized uniler title 3 of the chapter.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
46 L.R.A. 618, 79 N.W. 606, 77 Minn. 110, 1899 Minn. LEXIS 666, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/blien-v-rand-minn-1899.