Gardner v. Hope Insurance Company

9 R.I. 194
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedMarch 6, 1869
StatusPublished

This text of 9 R.I. 194 (Gardner v. Hope Insurance Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gardner v. Hope Insurance Company, 9 R.I. 194 (R.I. 1869).

Opinion

Bratton, C. J.

The charter of this company, as it was originally enacted, in June, 1858, provided, that after the capital stock should be paid, the directors should, once a year or oftener, cause a dividend of so much of the profits of the company as they may judge advisable. Provided, however, that in case of a diminution of the capital stoch hy losses, no dividend shall he made, until a sum equal to such diminution, arising from the profits, he added to the capital stoch.

There was another proviso, viz., section 3 of the charter, which- declares, “that the-stockholders of said company shall not be liable to any responsibility.farther than the amount of their respective shares and interest thereon, for or on account of any damage or loss sustained by said company, or for or on account of any debts due thereon.”

The charter was passed and made subject to the provisions of chapter 125, section 14 of the Revised Statutes, which provides, that “ all acts of incorporation hereafter granted may be amended or repealed at the will of the General Assembly, unless express provision shall be made therein to the contrary.”

In March, 1866, by chapter 635, it was enacted, that “ whenever the capital stock of any insurance company shall be diminished by reason of losses or from any other cause, the stockholders of such company, at any legal meeting thereof called for the purpose, may (after making due allowance from the *199 assets of the company of such amount as may be required to re-insure its outstanding risks) assess such further sum as may be necessary to fill up the capital stock to its original amount upon the several stockholders, in proportion to the amount of stock owned by each, and the stock of every stockholder shall be pledged and liable for such assessment.” '

The assessment in question was made under, and in strict conformity to, the provision of this chapter, and the questions raised is, whether the assessment so made is a valid assessment.

The plaintiff contends, that the stockholders had no lawful authority thus to assess any stock fully paid ; that the act purporting to confer such authority does not bind the corporation or the members thereof; and that it was not competent for the legislature to confer any such power ; and, so far as the act purports to authorize the assessment on plaintiff’s stock, it is simply void; and he says, in argument, that the legislature can have no constitutional power to alter or impair the obligation which the plaintiff had acquired by contract in the purchase of his shares of paid up stock; 'that he has a vested right of property in these shares, as to which he could not be disturbed or subjected to additional burdens contemplated by chapter 635. The proposition that the legislature cannot impair the obligation of a contract, would not require authority, so far as any right had accrued to the corporation, or any member' of the corporation, under the power conferred by the charter. It could not be impaired by taking away the power under which that right was acquired. No contract made by the'corporation with a third person, or with individual members of the corporation, could be impaired by any alteration of the chartér power. But this is quite different from the power to alter, or change, or repeal the powers themselves, so that no such rights could thereafter be enacted, and such contract thereafter be made.

The legislature have reserved the power, at any time to alter or repeal the charter, or any of its provisions. The corporators accepted it upon this condition, and agreed that- its provisions might be changed, and every purchaser of stock in this company has assented to these terms, and has agreed to hold his shares *200 subject to this liability to change. There is no limit to the power expressed in the act. In terms it is unlimited.

There is no difference between the parties here or their counsel as to the general rule, that the obligation of a contract in favor of or against the corporation or corporators cannot be impaired, nor can a right under the provisions of the charter be discharged or defeated.

But it is claimed by the plaintiff, that by the original charter he has a right vested in him to be free from assessment, and he rests this claim upon the provision in the charter, that stockholders shall not be liable to any responsibility beyond the amount of their respective shares. He claims that it was a contract entered into with the corporators, that this liability should not be extended. There is no ease among all those cited by the plaintiff which holds such doctrine, and he has not been able to find one which supports it.

The cases which are cited do not countenance it, but simply the contrary. It is one of those rights existing only between the corporators and the company as such, not by virtue of any contract entered into, or any act done under the powers conferred by the charter, but solely by force of act of incorporation-And the court, in the case of Bailey, Trustee, v. Trustees of Power Street M. E. Church, 6 R. I. 491, not cited,.held that such is not a vested right where the legislature has reserved the power to change, and that the exemption from taxation of the pews in the church, unless assented to by a majority of pew holders, was a right existing only during the pleasure of the General Assembly, and when the legislature repealed the provision requiring the consent of a majority thereof, and power to tax became unconditional, it impaired the obligation of no contract in the charter, nor did it derogate from any absolute right of the pewholder.

Commonwealth v. Essex Company, 18 Gray, 239. The company was indicted for violation of a statute, passed in 1856, requiring the company to make and maintain in and around their dam, a way for the free passage of fish. The charter of the company had been amended in 1848, by authorizing an increase of capital stock, upon condition that they pay all damage for *201 impeding passage of fish accruing to owners above their dam, which amendment the company accepted.

Shaw, C. J., said: “It seems to us that the power” (i. e., to amend or alter) “ must have some limit. Though it is difficult to define it.” The rule when stated is this : “ That where, under power in a charter, rights have been acquired and become vested, no amendment or alteration of the charter can take away the property or rights which have become vested under a legitimate exercise of the powers granted.” In that case, it was held, that the defendant company had, under their corporate power, by payment of all damages to the riparian proprietors above, purchased an exemption from any liability to provide other passes for fish, and that no alteration of the charter, however it might prevent the acquisition of similar rights in the future, could destroy those already created and vested.

In Old Town and Lincoln Railroad Co. v. Veazie,

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Bluebook (online)
9 R.I. 194, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gardner-v-hope-insurance-company-ri-1869.