Branch v. Augusta Glass Works

23 S.E. 128, 95 Ga. 573
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedJanuary 14, 1895
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 23 S.E. 128 (Branch v. Augusta Glass Works) 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
Branch v. Augusta Glass Works, 23 S.E. 128, 95 Ga. 573 (Ga. 1895).

Opinion

Lumpkin, Justice.

The litigation presented by the entire.record is somewhat complicated, but we have endeavored to formulate in the head-notes the legal principles which control the case, so far as we feel called upon to deal with it at this time.

The Augusta Glass Works, a corporation, brought an action against Thomas P. Branch upon a contract of subscription to the capital stock of the company. Two trials were had. While it seems that the first ought to have been confined to the issues made by the plea of nul tiel corporation, the jury not only found against that plea, but also in the plaintiff's favor, upon the merits of the main case, the sum of $500.00, with interest. After-wards, counsel for the plaintiff filed a disclaimer renouncing all right to enter up a judgment on this verdict for the $500.00 and interest^and asking that the case be reassigned for trial upon the remaining issues involved therein. The court allowed the disclaimer, and ordered [575]*575that it be entered upon the minutes. The defendant filed a motion for a new trial, and also certain excep-. tions pendente lite assigning as error various rulings made by the court at the trial just referred to. Subsequently the case was tried upon the issue of indebtedness, and again resulted favorably to the plaintiff; whereupon the defendant filed a second motion for a new trial, and also other exceptions pendente lite relating to rulings made by the court at the last trial. Both motions for a new trial were heard together and overruled. The defendant then brought the case to this court by a bill of exceptions which complains of all the errors alleged to have been committed during the entire progress of the case while it was pending below.

After looking through the entire record, we reached the conclusion that the first motion for a new trial ought to have been sustained; and this being so, the proceedings had at the second trial were not legally necessary, and for this reason will not now be reviewed in detail. We will endeavor, however, in the following brief discussion of the questions upon which we have ruled, to state in connection therewith such of the facts gathered from the voluminous record as may be essential. ■

1. The charter of the Augusta Glass Works was granted under the provisions of section 1676 of the code. One of the pleas embraced in .the defense of nul tiel corporation was to the effect that the act of September 21, 1887 (Acts of 1887, p. 57), authorizing judges of the superior courts to pall special .terms to grant charters to corporations, was unconstitutional, on the grounds: (1) that it was a special law enacted in a case for which provision had been made by an. existing general law (Code, §5027); and (2) that it was an infringement of the constitutional requirement of uniformity in the jurisdiction, powers and practice o'f courts (Code, §5156).

We consider the act of 1887 a general, and not a [576]*576■special law. It has uniform operation throughout the ■State, and applies alike to all superior courts; but if in .any sense it is a special law, we are unable to perceive that it covers any ease for which provision had already been made by an existing general law. Nor are we able to see how it in any manner infringes that paragraph of the constitution declaring that “the jurisdiction, powers, proceedings and practice of all courts, or officers invested with judicial powers (except city courts), . . . :shall be uniform.”

2. The capital stock of the Augusta Glass Works was to be $50,000. Exception was taken to the court’s refusal to charge the jury, that “the Augusta GlassWorks ■could not commence to exercise the privileges conferred by the charter until ten per cent, of $50,000 was paid in; and that until such payment was made, there could be no legal call or organization.”

While paragraph 3 of section 1676 of the code does provide that no corporation created under the provisions •of that section shall commence to exercise the privileges ■conferred by its charter until ten per cent, of its capital stock has been paid in, this does not mean that before this requirement is complied with it will be unlawful for the corporation to organize and collect subscriptions to its capital stock. The phrase, “to exercise the-privileges conferred by the charter,” it seems to us, necessarily refers to the right of the corporation to transact the business for which it was chartered. Before beginning the transaction of such business, it must ■organize and be in a position to deal with third persons, ■and one of the essential elements of organization is the ■collection of at least a portion of the capital stock in .available funds. The law simply means to declare that the corporation shall not be legally entitled to do business under its charter, with outside parties, until it has in hand at least one tenth of its capital stock. The [577]*577collection of subscriptions to the same is certainly a legitimate method of realizing in cash the ten per cent, which must be paid in before the corporation can lawfully begin the transaction of its corporate business.

3. It was further insisted that the Augusta Glass Works could not, as a corporation and in its corporate name, maintain an action -upon the contract which formed the basis of the present suit. That contract was in writing, signed by the defendant and several other persons, and was in the following words:

“We, the undersigned, do severally agree to subscribe to the capital stock of a company, to be incorporated and known as the ‘Augusta Glass Works,’ the amounts set opposite our respective names below. The capital stock is to be not less than ($50,000) Fifty Thousand Dollars, in shares of ($100) One Hundred Dollars, par value, each. The Works aré to be located in or near Augusta, Richmond County. Fifty per cent, of the ■subscriptions hereto are to be payable on demand, and the balance as the Directors may direct. This contract is to be binding upon each party hereto when $50,000 has been bona fide subscribed, and not before.”

After some investigation, we are satisfied that the corporation had the legal right to bring and maintain in its own name an action upon this contract against any subscriber thereto for the amount of his unpaid subscription thus made to its capital stock. In this conclusion we are supported by a considerable array of respectable authorities, to a few of which we will briefly ■call attention. Thus, in 1 Spelling on Priv. Corp. §306, it is laid down that where several persons sign a written ■instrument which involves the formation of a corporation, and the parties have so far progressed with the ■execution of their agreement as to organize the corporation under it, the corporation immediately becomes a party t.o the undertaking by relation, and may sue for the sums promised in such agreement. In Haskell, assignee, v. Sells, 14 Mo. App. 91, it was said that “ an [578]*578agreement to take shares in a corporation to be foi’med enures to the benefit of the corporation when organized in pursuance of the subscription.” Bakewell, J., who delivered the opinion of the court in that case, observed that the subscription paper signed by Sells was an unconditional contract to take a certain number of shares, and that this, prima facie, constituted him a stockholder; adding: “That there was no corporation in existence at the time the paper was signed, is immaterial.

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23 S.E. 128, 95 Ga. 573, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/branch-v-augusta-glass-works-ga-1895.