Ellison v. Mobile & Ohio Railroad

36 Miss. 572
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 15, 1858
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 36 Miss. 572 (Ellison v. Mobile & Ohio Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ellison v. Mobile & Ohio Railroad, 36 Miss. 572 (Mich. 1858).

Opinion

HANDY, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The defendant in error brought this action to recover the amount of certain instalments, due upon a number of shares of the capital stock of the company, for which the plaintiff in error had become a subscriber.

The declaration alleged that the defendant in the court below, [583]*583before the 1st of March, 1858, had subscribed for ten shares of the stock of the company, according to the written subscription signed by him and set forth, and averring that the instalments, according to the subscription, had been called for, and required to be paid by the president and directors of the company, and that they were requisite for the payment of contracts for the construction of the road of the plaintiff. The defendant demurred to the declaration, and upon his demurrer being overruled, he filed thirteen pleas, to all of which the plaintiff demurred, except the first, ninth, and thirteenth, to which he replied. The demurrer to these pleas was sustained, and the case was tried upon the issues presented by the first, ninth, and thirteenth pleas and replications. Upon the trial, sundry instructions were given to the jury, at the instance of the plaintiff, and several asked in behalf of the defendant were refused. The rulings of the court upon these points, and the sustaining of the plaintiff’s demurrer to the pleas, present the questions now to be determined.

It is unnecessary to state the pleas and proceedings in detail, which give rise to the points in controversy; and we will proceed to consider the questions involved in the rulings of the court, as they are presented and discussed in behalf of the plaintiff in error.

The first question presented is the validity of the subscription. It appears by the evidence offered on the trial, — and it is in substance stated in one or more of the pleas, — that the subscription for stock was made and contracted by the plaintiff in error with one Wheeler, acting under authority from John Childe, the general agent of the company, appointed by the board of directors to obtain subscriptions of stock, and appoint agents and commissioners for that purpose; that Wheeler’s acts in obtaining subscriptions were from time to time reported to and approved by the board of directors, and that compensation was allowed him for his services. And it is now insisted, in behalf of the plaintiff in error, that the board of directors had no power to take and contract for subscriptions, nor to appoint agents with power to do so, nor to ratify them when so taken; but that this power is conferred upon the commissioners named in the first section of the charter of the company, and other stockholders to be associated with them, who alone are authorized by the third section of the charter to receive subscriptions. Hence [584]*584it is contended, that this subscription was void, neither conferring upon the subscriber the rights of a stockholder, nor creating any liability to pay the stock subscribed.

This position appears to be based mainly upon the provisions of the third section of the charter. That section authorizes certain persons named in the first section to open books to receive subscriptions to the stock, at such times and places as they, or a majority of them, should appoint, giving notice thereof, and to receive subscriptions under such regulations as they should adopt; “ and if more than five thousand shares of stock should be subscribed, they should have the power to make the shares so subscribed the capital stock of said company:” Provided, they should not exceed one hundred thousand shares. And in case the subscriptions should exceed one hundred thousand shares, the same should be reduced and apportioned in such manner as might be deemed most beneficial to the corporation.” And it is said that the fifth section adds strength to this view. It provides that those persons authorized to receive subscriptions, are also authorized, after the books of subscription to the capital stock of said company are closed, or when the sum subscribed shall exceed two hundred and fifty thousand dollars, to call the first meeting of the stockholders,” for the purpose of choosing directors to the company. These provisions, it is insisted, contemplate -the exercise of the power of receiving subscriptions, by the commissioners named for that purpose, after the directory should have been elected and the company organized, and until the subscriptions for stock should be closed, and all the stock taken. But we do not consider the position at all tenable.

It is manifest, that it was the object of the charter, in appointing commissioners to receive subscriptions for stock, to take preliminary steps for the organization of the corporation, — to ascertain who were the constituent members who were to form the company, to the end that such persons might proceed to organize it, by electing directors to take charge of it and manage its concerns; for without some such initiatory steps, such a company could never go into operation. The powers conferred upon the commissioners must be viewed with reference to this object, and in their nature are preliminary and temporary, to answer the necessity of the case.

By the third section, they are authorized to receive subscriptions, [585]*585under sucb rules and regulations as they might adopt. This was for the purpose of ascertaining what persons should vote for directors, and in order that the corporation should be regularly organized; and accordingly, by the fifth section, they are authorized, after the books of subscription are closed, or when the subscriptions shall exceed the sum of two hundred and fifty thousand dollars, to call the first meeting of the stockholders, to elect directors. They are authorized to establish who are the stockholders entitled to vote for directors. But after the directors have been elected, the end of their appointment has been accomplished, and there appears to be nothing in the charter contemplating a continuance of their power.

The provision in the third section, that “ if more than five thousand shares of stock should be subscribed, the commissioners should have the power to make the shares so subscribed, the capital stock of said company,” cannot be justly construed to continue their powers after the organization of the company; for that would he to give them power over the directory, to determine a question which they have not the information properly to determine. It cannot be supposed, that it was intended to give such persons authority to determine so important a question, to the exclusion of the power of those, to whom the entire interests of the corporation were committed. And yet such appears to be the literal import of the language, and the construction contended for. But the provision must receive such a construction as will harmonize with the general scope of the charter, as to the powers of the board of directors, and, at the same time, preserve to the commissioners their proper functions. So considered, we think that it was intended to give to the commissioners the power to make the shares subscribed before them, the capital stock, to the end that the subscribers should be entitled to vote for directors, according to the shares ascertained and declared by the books of subscription.

This view is consistent with the fifth section, which requires, that when the books of subscription are closed, or so soon as the sum subscribed shall exceed two hundred and fifty thousand dollars, the commissioners shall call the stockholders, to choose directors. The clause,

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Bluebook (online)
36 Miss. 572, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ellison-v-mobile-ohio-railroad-miss-1858.