City Coal & Ice Co. v. Union Trust Co.

125 S.E. 697, 140 Va. 600, 1924 Va. LEXIS 201
CourtCourt of Appeals of Virginia
DecidedDecember 18, 1924
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 125 S.E. 697 (City Coal & Ice Co. v. Union Trust Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City Coal & Ice Co. v. Union Trust Co., 125 S.E. 697, 140 Va. 600, 1924 Va. LEXIS 201 (Va. Ct. App. 1924).

Opinion

Christian, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is a writ of error to a final judgment rendered by the Circuit Court of the city of Norfolk against the City Coal and lee Company, Incorporated, in favor of the-Union Trust Company of Maryland for the sum of" [603]*603■'$1,000.00 with interest from the 19th day of October, 1919, an attorney’s fee of $100.00, and costs upon the "following undisputed facts:

The City Coal, Wood and lee Company, Incorporated, subscribed for ten shares of stock of the par value of $100.00 per share of another corporation 'known as the J. J. McPherson Packing and Ice Corporation, both of these corporations were incorporated under the laws of this State. The note for $1,000.00 .sued on was given to the McPherson corporation by the City Coal, Wood and Ice Company, Incorporated, In payment of the subscription to the stock of that corporation. Under its charter the City Coal, Wood and .Ice Company, Incorporated, had no authority to subscribe to the stock of another corporation. In October, 1919, the McPherson corporation borrowed from the Union Trust Company the sum of $40,000.00 and gave It as collateral security for said loan a number of notes which it held. These notes were all notes given by the makers in payment of subscriptions to the stock of the McPherson corporation. None of the notes were past due when thus deposited as collateral and it is proven that J. J. McPherson told W. O. Pierson, treasurer of the trust company, at the time that the loan was made, that the note of the City Coal, Wood and Ice Company, Incorporated, for $1,000.00 had been given to the McPherson corporation in payment of its subscription for the stock. Mr. Pierson admitted that the trust company knew that the note had been given in pay:ment of the subscription for stock.

The McPherson corporation went into bankruptcy in 1921, but the District Court of the United States for the Eastern District of Virginia had authorized the trust company to proceed to collect the collat[604]*604given to it as security for its loan to the bankrupt. The City Coal, Wood and Ice Company, Incorporated, and the O. W. Guy Company, Incorporated, were on the 28th day of February, 1921, by virtue of section 3823 of the Virginia Code, merged into the City Coal and Ice Company, Incorporated, the defendant in this action, and that by reason of the merger it was liable upon the note if the note was a valid obligation of the City Coal, Wood and Ice Company, Incorporated.

The parties waived a jury and all matters of law and fact were submitted for decision to the court. The parties will be denominated herein as plaintiff and defendant as they were in the court below.

The defendant interposed two defenses to its liability, to-wit, that the charter of the City Coal, Wood and Ice Company, Incorporated, did not expressly or by implication give it power to subscribe for the stock of another corporation, hence the subscription was ultra vires and the note null and void. Second: That the plaintiff knew that the consideration for the note was-the subscription for the stock.

The court found upon the issue joined in favor of the-plaintiff and entered judgment for the face of the note-$1,000.00, with legal interest thereon from the 1.9th day of October, 1919, till paid, together with $100.00 attorney’s fee and its costs by it about its suit in this behalf expended. Thereupon the defendant applied for and was awarded this writ of error.

In order that the application of the law to the facts of this case may be made lucidly, a brief history of the doctrine of ultra vires, which is of recent origin, and some of its modifications and limitations by the courts in practice, as the reasons upon which the doctrine is-founded have proven harsh and highly technical, should. [605]*605be given. “The doctrine of ultra tires originated at a period when nearly all corporations were created for public purposes, and it grew up principally with reference to tbe transactions of municipal corporations. Tbe courts of an early day transferred the rigorous rule, created by the demands of a sound public policy, to private corporations, where no sound principles demanded the application of the rule; and they held again and again, not without any special reference to the rights of the public which did not through the State intervene, but where only the rights concerned were the rights of stockholders and creditors who did not move to assert their own rights — that obligations entered into by corporations, whether in writing or otherwise, for objects not authorized by their charters could not be made obligatory upon them — and this without any reference to the question of estoppel.” Thompson on Corporations, section 5969.

The courts applied the principle that where the corporation was moving affirmatively to enforce its unlawful and prohibited contracts, courts of justice will withhold their aid, and they applied it with equal vigor in the destruction of the rights of persons contracting with corporations, holding them conclusively bound to know— what the judges themselves did not in many eases know — the limitations of the power of the corporation, by holding “that where the corporation had made an obligation in favor of an individual in excess of its granted powers, he could not maintain an action against the corporation and recover thereon — as where a corporation had executed its promissory note for a purpose not warranted by its charter.”

In the case of Pittsburg, etc., R. Co. v. Keokuk, etc., Bridge Co., 131 U. S. 371, 9 S. Ct. 770, 33 L. Ed. 157, Mr. Justice Gray stated the reasons upon which the [606]*606doctrine of ultra vires was based as follows: “The reason why a corporation is not liable upon a contract ultra vires, that is to say, beyond the power conferred upon it by the legislature, and varying from the objects of its creation as declared in the law of its organization, are: (1) The interest of the public that the corporation -shall not transcend the power's granted: (2) The interest of the stockholders that the capital shall not be subjected to the risk of enterprises not contemplated by the charter, and therefore not authorized by the stockholders in Subscribing for the stock: (3) The obligation •of every one entering into a contract with a corporation to take notice of the legal limits of its charter.”

The application of this doctrine of ultra vires to •contracts of private corporations which did not contravene the established public policy of the State (and being based on rather artificial reasoning), were found by experience in many cases to violate that highest public policy, “that corporations ought not to be upheld in dishonesty any more than individuals; and that it is contrary to the highest public policy for the judicial courts to sustain a corporation in dishonesty by assisting it in repudiating its honest contracts.” Hence there have arisen in recent years many exceptions and •distinctions in the application of the vigor of the doctrine of ultra vires as applied to the private business transactions of private corporations so that at present the plea will not as a general rule prevail where it will not advance justice and fair dealing.

The earliest application of the doctrine of ultra vires,

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Bluebook (online)
125 S.E. 697, 140 Va. 600, 1924 Va. LEXIS 201, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-coal-ice-co-v-union-trust-co-vactapp-1924.