Buffalo Jamestown Railroad Co. v. . Gifford

87 N.Y. 294, 1882 N.Y. LEXIS 4
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 17, 1882
StatusPublished
Cited by37 cases

This text of 87 N.Y. 294 (Buffalo Jamestown Railroad Co. v. . Gifford) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Buffalo Jamestown Railroad Co. v. . Gifford, 87 N.Y. 294, 1882 N.Y. LEXIS 4 (N.Y. 1882).

Opinion

Earl, J.

This action was commenced to recover of the defendant the balance of a subscription made by him to the capital stock of the plaintiff. He was defeated at the trial term, and the judgment against him was affirmed at the General Térm. The able opinion s delivered in the court below are so full and satisfactory that we could rest our decision here upon them. But the very earnest argument of the learned counselor who *297 appeared for the appellant before us, at an age which few reach and fewer still contend in a judicial forum, has induced us to give the casé more careful consideration than we would otherwise have deemed necessary.

The principal contention of the defendant is, that he never made a legal subscription to the stock of the plaintiff, and hence could not be compelled to pay any portion of the sum claimed from him. The main facts bearing upon his subscription are as follows: The plaintiff is a corporation, organized under the General ¡Railroad Act of 1850. Its articles of association were filed March 23, 1872, and it thereby became a corporation. The defendant was not one of the corporators named in those articles. A short time before the organization of the plaintiff, he, with other persons residing at Jamestown, for the purpose of aiding and encouraging the construction of the contemplated railroad, subscribed the following instrument in a small pocket memorandum book in which it was written, to-wit: “We, the undersigned, in consideration of, and for the purpose of becoming stockholders in the Buffalo and Jamestown Railroad Company, do hereby subscribe and take the number of shares, of $100 each share, of the capital stock of said company, set opposite our respective names, and agree to pay therefor in such time and manner as required ed by said company.

No. of shares. Amount.

Horace H. Gifford................... 10 $1,000 ”

The subscriptions were obtained by one Allen, residing at Jamestown, who afterward became a director of the company. After the organization of the company the name of the defendant was entered upon its stock ledger as a stockholder for the ten shares subscribed by him, and the company, from time to time, made calls of installments upon its stock, and prior to the time for the payment of each installment a notice was sent to the defendant and each of the other stockholders, of which the following is a blank form:

*298 “ Sib :

Ton are hereby notified that a call of. per cent has been made on the subscriptions to the capital stock of the Buffalo and Jamestown Railroad Company, payable on or before the day of at this office.

Respectfully yours,

PETER C. DOTLE.

Secretary.”

At the same time, the secretary of the qompany conferred upon a cashier of-' a bank at Jamestown authority to receive payment of the calls from the stockholders residing there, and for that purpose sent him receipts to be delivered, to those paying, of which the following is a blank form:

“ Buffalo, , 1872.

Received of

dollars, being per cent on his subscription to the capital stock of the Buffalo and Jamestown Railroad Company.

Secretary.

hi. B.—All receipts must be'returned to the treasurer before the stock can be issued.”

Allen, then being a director of the plaintiff, delivered the ' book in which defendant had made his subscription, as above stated, to the cashier that he might receive- payment of the subscriptions contained therein, and in response to the calls defendant paid, upon his subscription, ten per eént June 15, 1872, and another installment of ten per cent in December thereafter, and took from the cashier a receipt for each payment, in the form given above. After the last payment he refused to pay further installments, and this action was brought to recover the balance of such installments.

TJpon these facts it is to be determined whether the defendant made a subscription to the stock of the plaintiff, which bound him. It cannot be doubted that there was enough to *299 make a valid contract of subscription upon common-law principles. While the subscription was not valid and binding before the complete formation of the corporation, because there was no party with whom the defendant could then contract, yet after the corporation was formed, it accepted the subscription and recognized the defendant as a stockholder, and he recognized himself as a stockholder and ratified and confirmed his subscription by payments thereon. He thus, within all the authorities, upon general principles, became a stockholder in the company, liable to pay the. full amount of his subscription. (U pton v. Tribilcock, 91 U. S. 45; Webster v. Upton, id. 65; Buffalo & N. Y. City R. R. Co. v. Dudley, 14 N. Y. 336.)

But the claim of the defendant is that the subscription, while valid, if governed by the common law alone, is invalid under the General Railroad Act; chapter 140 of the Laws of 1850. Section 1 of that act provides that the persons who subscribe the articles of association, and all persons who shall become stockholders in such company, shall be a corporation.” If there were no other provision in the act, and the persons who subscribed the articles of association did not subscribe for all the stock, the balance thereof could be taken by any persons who would make a valid common-law subscription for the same, and pay the ten per cent required in the act; and thus, when this defendant paid the first installment in June, 1872, and at that time ratified his prior subscription, it became from that time a valid subscription. The learned counsel for the appellant claims that other persons than those who signed the articles of association could become stockholders only in the mode prescribed in section 4, which provides as follows: “ When such articles of association and affidavit are filed and recorded in the office of secretary of State, the directors -named in such articles of association may, in case the whole of the capital stock is not before subscribed, open books of subscription to fill up the capital stock of the company in such places, and after giving such notice as they may deem expedient, and may continue to receive subscriptions until the whole capital stock is sub *300 scribed. At the time of subscribing, every subscriber shall pay to the directors ten per cent of the amount subscribed by him in money; and no subscription shall be received or taken without such payment.” The precise purpose of this section is not apparent. The directors would, in the absence of such a provision, be authorized to open books of subscription for the. purpose of filling up the capital stock. The section may have been drawn by the person who prepared the statuté, without a definite idea of its utility or necessity.

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Bluebook (online)
87 N.Y. 294, 1882 N.Y. LEXIS 4, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/buffalo-jamestown-railroad-co-v-gifford-ny-1882.