Colorado Industrial Loan & Investment Co. v. Clem

260 P. 1019, 82 Colo. 399, 1927 Colo. LEXIS 473
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedOctober 3, 1927
DocketNo. 11,728.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 260 P. 1019 (Colorado Industrial Loan & Investment Co. v. Clem) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Colorado Industrial Loan & Investment Co. v. Clem, 260 P. 1019, 82 Colo. 399, 1927 Colo. LEXIS 473 (Colo. 1927).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Campbell

delivered the opinion of the court.

Plain tier Clem bought of defendant company certain shares of its capital stock at an agreed price of $5,000, of which he paid in cash on delivery of the stock $4,500, and the balance of $500 was to be paid by him at a future time. In this action he sues the company defendant in its corporate capacity to recover the amount of the cash, and for a cancellation of the $500 note representing the deferred payment. In the amended complaint are four separate causes of action for the relief demanded, the first of which causes is based on fraudulent representations as to the assets of defendant; the second,, like representations as to the value of the stock itself; the third, on a “contract of sale and return” giving plaintiff the privilege and right of returning this stock at any time he became dissatisfied with his bargain, in which event defendant company promised to pay for or repurchase the stock at the sale price; the fourth, that the shares sold plaintiff were part of an illegal or excessive issue aud of no value. Trial was to the court, the parties waiving a jury. At the close of plaintiff’s evidence the defendant’s motion for a nonsuit was denied and in that connection the court informed defendant’s counsel, to save time, that they need not produce evidence as to the alleged frauds, or undue advantage taken by defendant in the making of the contract of sale, or anything of that kind, and that the only thing the court would, decide is the question of fact as to the alleged contract of sale as set forth in the third cause of action. The court further said that the testimony already taken by plaintiff is positive that there was such a contract and that plaintiff *402 relied upon it and that his purchase was made solely because of the promise of the defendant to purchase the stock in the event mentioned. Counsel for the defendant acted upon this suggestion of the court and withdrew its motion for a nonsuit and in producing its evidence restricted it to the third cause of action based on the sale and return contract and offered no evidence as to either the first, second or fourth eaixses. The record sufficiently shows that by tacit consent of the paxdies trial was had, the evidence was restricted to, and the findings of the court were made as though the suit was on the third cause of action alone and no claim was made by the plaintiff, except under the third cause, and there was no attempt of the defendant to produce evidence under either of the other three causes of action. The judgment or decree specifically rested on the findings of the court in plaintiff’s favor under the third cause.

The record shows a most unusual situation. While much of the defendant’s briefs is devoted to argument on legal questions that might, and probably would, be pertinent in a controversy between plaintiff and other stockholders or subscribers, or creditors of the company, or the receiver representing creditors, we fail to perceive their applicability in this action as tried and decided, which is one between the corporation itself and a purchaser of its capital stock who seeks to enforce his contract with it for takiixg back stock at a fixed price. That such defenses as might be interposed by creditors, and stockholders who bought on the faith of plaintiff’s stock subscription and purchase from the defendant are not germane to this- controversy, is apparent from defendant’s answer to this third cause of action which is a general denial, and a further defense of an equitable estoppel of the plaintiff to maintain the suit by acquiescence in the control and management of the company by its president Harry Dickson and other officials, by himself becoming a director of the company after he purchased the stock. Nowhere in the answer to the third cause is there *403 even a suggestion or hint that the right of other stockholders or creditors could or would be injuriously affected if this contract sued on is enforced. It is true that in the first cause of action in the amended complaint, which is based on fraudulent representations as to assets, there is an allegation on information and belief that the defendant company was insolvent when plaintiff’s contract was entered into; yet the answer of the defendant specifically denies the insolvency.

In this third cause of action, the one that was tried and decided by the lower court, there is not a word about insolvency. So that, as to this element, we find averment of it and a denial by the defendant The trial court ignored it, made no finding upon it and only incidentally in the testimony is it referred to. We therefore have before us for review a decree upon a case made by a complaint asserting and an answer denying, the making of a contract of sale and return. The evidence as to insolvency, if any, as to the rights of other stockholders and subscribers, if any, was not considered by the trial court, but was eliminated by it, with consent of the parties and rightly so, because all questions of fraud, undue advantage, solvency, rights of creditors and stockholders were in legal effect stricken from the pleading.

But says defendant, this contract is ultra vires and if enforced would necessarily impair the capital of the defendant and thus injure other stockholders and creditors. Though defendant in its brief separates this general objection into many subdivisions, they may be for our present purpose considered under the general heading. The general doctrine in this country, even without the aid of a statute, is that, although a corporation in making a contract acts in disagreement with its charter by making a contract unauthorized thereby, if the contract is not expressly forbidden by statute and is not immoral or contrary to public policy, if it is to receive a benefit from the agreement, it cannot be permitted in an action founded on it to question its validity while it re *404 tains those benefits. Sedgwick Stat. & Const. Law (1st Ed.) p. 90 (2d Ed.) p. 73. The foregoing doctrine was approved by this court in Denver Fire Ins. Co. v. McClelland, 9 Colo. 11, 9 Pac. 771, 59 Am. Rep. 134; Mulford v. Torrey Explo. Co., 45 Colo. 81, 100 Pac. 596; Lilylands Canal & Res. Co. v. Wood, 56 Colo. 130, 136 Pac. 1026; American Bank v. Hammond, 25 Colo. 367, 55 Pac. 1090; Mountain Water Works Co. v. Holme, 49 Colo. 412, 113 Pac. 501.

A large number of cases from various jurisdictions will be found in the footnotes to the case of Gilbert, Trustee, v. Citizens’ National Bank, 61 Okl. 112, 160 Pac. 635, as reported in L. R. A. 1917A, 740. In an elaborate discussion of the doctrine applicable to the defense by a corporation of ultra vires, the author, while he says the doctrine cannot logically be based on the ground of equitable estoppel, as some of the courts have decided, still the relief, which the courts of this country now generally afford on this ground, might properly have been withheld by refusing to entertain actions brought on the ultra vires contracts themselves, and by the courts concentrating their attention upon the task of evolving a body of rules calculated to develop to the fullest extent such descriptions of relief as may be granted in a court of equity independently of such action.

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Bluebook (online)
260 P. 1019, 82 Colo. 399, 1927 Colo. LEXIS 473, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/colorado-industrial-loan-investment-co-v-clem-colo-1927.