Eakright v. Logansport & Northern Indiana Railroad

13 Ind. 404
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 15, 1859
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 13 Ind. 404 (Eakright v. Logansport & Northern Indiana Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Eakright v. Logansport & Northern Indiana Railroad, 13 Ind. 404 (Ind. 1859).

Opinion

Davison, J.

The appellees, who were the plaintiffs, sued Eakright upon a subscription of stock to the original articles of association of. said company. These articles are set out in the complaint, and read thus:

“ We, the undersigned, whose names and places of residence are designated in the margin, for the purpose of organizing a company to construct, own, and maintain a railroad hereinafter mentioned, in pursuance of an act entitled ‘ an act to provide for the incorporation of railroad companies,’ approved May 11, 1852, do hereby, each for himself, subscribe the number of shares in the capital stock of said contemplated railroad company set opposite our respective names, such subscription payable to said company as the board of directors, when elected, &c., may, from time to time, direct. And we hereby subscribe and agree to the following articles of association, viz.: Article 1. The name and style of the corporation shall be, ‘ The Logansport and Northern Indiana Railroad Company.’’ 2. The capital stock of the company shall be 800,000 dollars, to consist of 16,000 shares of 50 dollars each. 3. The railroad shall commence at the west, or such point on the west line of De Kalb county, with a view of connecting with the present Auburn and Eel River Valley Railroad, at such point as may be agreed on by the companies so connecting; thence running down Eel river valley to Logansport, passing through the counties of Noble, Allen, Whitley, Kosciusko, Wabash, Miami, and Cass. 4. The number of directors shall be seven. 5. The length of the road will be, probably, seventy-five miles. In witness whereof, we have hereto severally set our names, as parties to the above articles, and subscribed to the capital stock of said company. December 1, 1852.

[406]*406Subscribers’ names. I Residence. I No. of shares. I Amount.
William Eakright. | Miami county. 4. $200.”

It is averred that on the 10th of February, 1853, the organization of the company, was completed and perfected ^ ^le ele°ti°n of the following board of directors, viz.: Cyrus Tabor, Stewart B. Kendrick, William Beach, John H. Constant, John Comstock, William Thorn, and William Swazzee; and that at the time of such election, the subscriptions to the capital stock amounted to more than 1,000 dollars for each and every mile thereof; and that the foregoing articles of association were then adopted by the subscribers thereto, and duly filed in the office of the secretary of state. It is further averred that defendant, by subscribing, &c., made himself liable to pay, &c., at such times and in such manner as the board of directors when elected, &c., might, from time to time, direct; and that the said board, at a regular meeting, held August 3, 1853, ordered that an installment of 10 per cent, on the capital stock of the company be called for and made payable in ten days from that date, and further installments of 10 per cent, be called for and made payable, each and every month thereafter, until the full amount shall be paid, &c. It is also averred that due notice was given, &c., but the defendant refused to pay, &c.

Defendant demurred to the complaint; but his demurrer was overruled.

The statute under which this railroad company was organized, contains these provisions:

1. “ Whenever stock to at least 50,000 dollars, or 1,000 dollars for each and every mile of the proposed road shall have been subscribed, the subscribers to such stock shall elect directors for such company from their own number, and shall severally subscribe articles of association, which shall set forth the name of the corporation, the amount of the capital stock of the company, * * * the number of shares of which said stock shall consist; the number of directors, and their names, to manage the affairs of the company; the name of the place from which, and the place to which, the proposed road is to be constructed, and each [407]*407county into which or through which it is intended to pass, and its length, as near as may be. Such subscriber to such articles of association shall state his place of residence, and the number of shares taken by him in such „ company.”

2. “That the articles of association thus formed shall be filed in the office of the secretary of state,” &c. 1 R. S. pp. 409, 410.

The complaint, it is insisted, is defective on four grounds, to-wit—

1. It does not show a subscription of stock, and an election of directors, preliminary to the construction of the articles of association.

2. The articles themselves do not set forth the names of the directors.

3. Nor do they show distinctly the name of the place from which the proposed road is to be constructed.

4. It is not shown when, where, and how the demand for the payment of the installments, assessed by the directors, was made.

As we have seen, the statute says that, whenever stock to at least 50,000 dollars, &c., shall have been subscribed, the subscribers shall elect directors, &c., and shall severally subscribe articles of association, &c., which articles shall set forth the number of directors, and their names, &c. This seems to contemplate certain steps to be taken by the subscribers, before they construct the articles of association; but it seems to us that a substantial compliance with the statute is sufficient. If, in the proceeding to organize such company, from its commencement to its completion, all the requirements of the statute have been observed, though not in the order which it prescribes, such organization may, in our opinion, be deemed sufficient. The Covington, &c., Plankroad Co. v. Moore, 3 Ind. R. 510. Here the directors are not named in the articles of association ; but it appears that they were elected at a meeting of the subscribers, after the stock was subscribed, and the articles were constructed; and further, at the same meeting at which they were elected, the same articles of association [408]*408-were expressly adopted by the subscribers. Indeed, all the requirements of the statute have, in this instance, been literally pursued, save that of naming the directors in the articles of association, and that, it seems to us, has, in e^ee^) been done by the adoption of the articles when the directors were elected. At all events, the requirement that they be named in the articles, may be • held merely directory, and not, in view of the facts stated in the complaint, essential to the validity of the corporation. Moreover, there is an authority which, in effect, decides that the fact of an illegal election of directors cannot be set up in resistance of the payment of stock, but would be a case for a quo roarrarvto, to oust the illegally elected directors. The Newcastle, &c., Turnpike Co. v. Bell, 8 Blackf. 584. See, also, The Covington, &c., Plankroad Co. v. Moore, supra; The Western Plankroad Co. v. Stockton, 7 Ind. R. 500.

The third ground of objection to the complaint, viz., that the articles of association do not show, distinctly, the name of the place from which the proposed road 'is to be constructed, is untenable; because the statute simply requires the name of such place to be set forth. This must be done with a reasonable degree of certainty.

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Bluebook (online)
13 Ind. 404, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/eakright-v-logansport-northern-indiana-railroad-ind-1859.