Coggeshall v. Georgia Land & Investment Co.

82 S.E. 156, 14 Ga. App. 637, 1914 Ga. App. LEXIS 409
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedJune 22, 1914
Docket5374
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 82 S.E. 156 (Coggeshall v. Georgia Land & Investment Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Coggeshall v. Georgia Land & Investment Co., 82 S.E. 156, 14 Ga. App. 637, 1914 Ga. App. LEXIS 409 (Ga. Ct. App. 1914).

Opinion

Wade, J.

W. D. Coggeshall brought suit 'against the Georgia Land & Investment Company, alleging that the defendant was a corporation under the laws of Georgia, originally organized under the name of Barrett Investment Company, and that the Barrett Investment Companjr, on March 4, 1910, issued to the plaintiff a certifícate for what purported to be ten shares of preferred stock in the said company, of the par value of $10 per share; that this certificate was in fact nothing more than an evidence of indebtedness, and provided for the payment of an 8 per cent, dividend on the first day of January of each year; that the certificate provides also that it may be retired on or after December 31, 1913, by ’payment of its face value in full, together with all dividends then due, and that no part of it has ever been paid; that the certificate purports [638]*638to be part of an authorized issue of $75,000 of preferred stock, and a large number of similar certificates were issued by the said company, aggregating $30,000, a portion of which the company paid off, both principal and interest or dividend, but the company refused to pay the plaintiff the amount of the certificate issued to him, though it was in the same class and issue as those paid off to others; and that by reason of these facts, the defendant was indebted to him in the sum of $100 principal, with interest thereon at the rate of 8 per cent, per annum from March 4, 1910, besides interest upon interest due upon the certificate on January 1, 1911, January 1, 1912, and January 1, 1913. Attached to the petition was a copy of the certificate, as follows:

Incorporated under the laws of the State of Georgia.

Number 270. 10 shares.

Barrett Investment Company, Atlanta, Ga.

This certifies that W. D. Coggeshall, of Darlington, S. C., is entitled to ten shares of the preferred stock of Barrett 'Investment Company, par value ten dollars, upon which ten dollars per share has been paid, and is transferable in person or by attorney upon the books of the corporation only upon the surrender and cancellation of this certificate properly indorsed. This certificate of stock is part of an authorized issue of seventy-five thousand dollars of preferred stock, and Barrett Investment Company guarantees the payment of an annual dividend of eight per cent. on.this stock, and the entire profits of said corporation are pledged to the payment of said dividend, said dividend, if not paid annually, to become cumulative. Said dividend will bp due and payable on the first day of January of each year. This stock may be retired on or after December 31, 1912, by payment in full of the face value thereof, together with all dividends then clue.’

In witness whereof, the president and secretary of this corporation have hereunto subscribed their names and caused the corporate seal to be hereto affixed, this fourth clay of March, A. D. 1910.

Barrett Investment Company Inc.

(Seal.)

Atlanta, Ga. Charlton Barrett, President. C. C.' Williams, Secretary.

Shares $10.00 each.

The defendant demurred on the ground that the petition failed [639]*639to set out a cause of action, and showed on its face that the instrument sued upon was a certificate of stock, and the petition did not allege an application to the board of directors of the defendant company for the desired redress before the suit was filed. There were also special grounds of demurrer which the court did not consider, since the general demurrer was sustained, and the petition dismissed. The defendant excepted to the judgment sustaining the general demurrer.

The sole question to be determined in this case is whether the instrument which is the basis of the suit is in fact a mere evidence of indebtedness due the plaintiff by the defendant company, or is what it purports to be by its terms, a preferred-stock certificate. As was said by Justice Lewis in Cook v. Equitable Building & Loan Association, 104 Ga. 829 (30 S. E. 917): “It matters not what name is given to its obligation, whether stock, note, or bond; the nature of the transaction, whether it be a pure borrowing of money or not, is determined by the real substance and effect of the contract between the parties.” This .language is quoted with approval by Justice Cobb in the ease of Savannah Real Estate Co. v. Silverberg, 108 Ga. 281, 289 (33 S. E. 908, 910). The mere fact that the contract declares that it is a certificate of preferred stock does not determine its character. The term “preferred stock,” according to general legal interpretation, is stock which entitles the holder to receive dividends from the earnings of a company before any dividends are paid on the common stock. By a “dividend” is meant money paid out of its profits by a corporation to its stockholders; and a preferred dividend is a dividend paid to one class of stockholders in priority to that to be paid to another class. Preferred stock takes a multiplicity of forms, but usually possesses certain distinctive characteristics. The dividend may be either cumulative or non-cumulative; and unless the contract expressly provides otherwise, preferred stockholders participate in the surplus profits, after the preferred dividend has been declared on the preferred stock, and an equal dividend on the common stock. Generally preferred stockholders are entitled to vote at elections, and to exercise the various rights of common stockholders, unless the right to vote is expressly withheld from them by the terms under which the contract is issued. The variety of forms under which preferred stock may be legally issued are to be found in the charter, the [640]*640by-laws, the certificate of stock, resolutions of stockholders and directors, minutes of the corporate meetings, reports of or to the company, and any contract under which the stock was issued. The rights pertaining to such stock are matters of contract, and the contract is to be ascertained from the sources named above. A preferred stockholder is entitled to a certificate which sets forth the fact of the preference, and sometimes the right is given to exchange common stock for preferred, or preferred for common stock, etc. In fact, where the corporation has authority to issue preferred stock, it may attach such conditions, not violative of law or contrary to public policy, as it deems best, and one of such conditions may be that the corporation may retire the stock at par within a certain time. See 1 Cook on Corporations (6th ed.), 731 et seq.

The plaintiff in error relies on the case of Savannah Real Estate Co. v. Silverberg, supra, as authority to sustain the contention that the document under consideration was an evidence of indebtedness, and not in fact a stock certificate; and there is much in that decision, and in the ease of Cook v. Equitable Bldg. & Loan Asso., supra, that tends to support this view, but a study of the case of Savannah Real Estate Co. v. Silverberg, which is more closely in point, will disclose a difference between the certificate there examined and the one now under consideration, which authorized, in our opinion, the ruling of the trial .fudge. In that case Justice Cobb', in discussing the certificate which was there held to be a mere evidence of indebtedness, said, in substance, that the general appearance, of the paper indicated that it was a certificate of stock, but its terms showed that the holder thereof was deprived of one of the important rights of u

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Bluebook (online)
82 S.E. 156, 14 Ga. App. 637, 1914 Ga. App. LEXIS 409, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/coggeshall-v-georgia-land-investment-co-gactapp-1914.