Green v. Abietine Medical Co.

31 P. 100, 96 Cal. 322, 1892 Cal. LEXIS 950
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 4, 1892
DocketNo. 14458
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 31 P. 100 (Green v. Abietine Medical Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Green v. Abietine Medical Co., 31 P. 100, 96 Cal. 322, 1892 Cal. LEXIS 950 (Cal. 1892).

Opinions

Vanclief, 0.

— The defendant is a California corporation which was organized on the twenty-second day of May, 1885, for the purpose of manufacturing medicines from the sap of trees known as abietine-trees, and the plaintiffs are stockholders of the corporation. The corporation levied an assessment of ten cents per share on its capital stock. The plaintiffs having refused to pay the assessment, their stock was advertised for sale. To prevent the sale, plaintiffs paid the assessment, under protest that the assessment was void and that they were under no lawful obligation to pay it.

The object of this action is to vacate the assessment, to recover from defendant the sum of the assessments paid by the plaintiffs, and to enjoin the defendant from further assessing plaintiffs’ stock.

Judgment passed for defendant, from which, and from an order denying his motion for a new trial, the plaintiff Green alone appeals.

The material facts found by the court and admitted by the pleadings are substantially as follows: —

On the day the corporation "was organized, May 22, 1885, A. F. Jones, John D. Williams, and the plaintiff Green entered into a written agreement with each other, reciting that they had “incorporated themselves into a corporation known as the Abietine Medical Company,” and that each of them owned certain described property necessary for the use of the corporation in its business, and agreeing that each would sell such property to the corporation in consideration of a specified number of shares of “full-paid, unassessable ” stock of the corporation. The plaintiff Green agreed to sell his property for 12,750 shares of such stock and $1,000 in cash, Williams agreed to sell his property for 5,000 shares of such stock, and Jones agreed to sell his property for 12,750 shares of the stock. The whole capital stock, as stated in the articles of incorporation, was one hundred thousand dollars, divided into fifty thousand shares.

The corporation was not a party to this agreement, but entertained it as a proposal, and thereafter, at a reg[326]*326ular meeting of its board of directors held on June 8, 1885, accepted the proposal, took the property described in the agreement, and ordered the issuance of certificates of stock to Green, Jones, and Williams, according to the terms of their agreement, and such certificates were then issued, stating, among other things, that the stock was “full-paid and unassessable.” At the meeting of June 8th, the board ordered the issuance of certificates for ten shares to E. W. Fogg, and twenty shares to Floyd Taber, which had been given them to qualify them to become directors. Of the remainder of the stock, nineteen thousand five hundred shares were reserved by the corporation to be sold for “ working capital,” and were ordered to be sold for not less than fifty cents per share, an d afterwards were sold to various persons for fifty cents per share.

Article 10 of the original by-laws of the corporation prescribed the form of certificates of stock, containing this statement, viz.: “And that the same [shares] is full-paid and unassessable stock.” But at a meeting of the stockholders held September 6, 1886, this by-law was amended by striking out the words “and unassessable.” At a stockholders’ meeting, June 2, 1885, it was unanimously resolved “ that no assessment be levied on the capital stock of the company without the unanimous vote of the stockholders.”

It also appears that there was no by-law authorizing the issuance of certificates of stock prior to full payment.

At a stockholders’ meeting, ■ September 6, 1886, at which all the stock was represented, “it .was unanimously resolved that it is the sense of the stockholders of this corporation that the directors thereof do levy assessments on the capital stock of said corporation when necessary for the business thereof to be properly conducted, said assessments not to exceed the amount of ten cents per share at any one assessment.”

At a directors’ meeting, April 25,1887, it was resolved to levy an assessment of ten cents per share. This assessment was levied on all the stock, and was all paid without objection.

[327]*327Again, August 18, 1887, another assessment of ten cents per share was levied on all the stock, and was all paid without objection.

From the organization of the corporation until the commencement of this action the appellant Green was a stockholder and director, and voted for each of the above-mentioned orders and resolutions of the stockholders, and of the board of directors, except that at the meeting of August 18, 1887, he moved to amend the resolution by reducing the assessment to five cents per share, and when his proposed amendment was lost, he voted against the resolution.

The assessment to which appellant first objected, and which he seeks to avoid and set aside by this action, was levied November 14, 1889.

The court found that no part of the capital stock of defendant was ever subscribed for by any person, but that the whole stock had been sold by the corporation to various persons as full paid-up stock; that the stock sold to Green, Jones, and Williams in exchange for their property was not sold for its par value of two dollars per share, and that the consideration paid by them in property did not exceed fifty cents per share; that the nineteen thousand five hundred shares reserved for working capital were sold to various parties for cash at fifty cents per share, and that all the certificates issued to purchasers of stock were precisely in the same form, — all contained the statement that the stock was full-paid and unassessahle that there was no unpaid subscription price due or owing to the corporation on any part of the nineteen thousand five hundred shares sold for working capital, nor upon any other stock; that all the stock of the corporation—fifty thousand shares—had been issued and is held as fully paid stock, and all stands upon the same footing; that fifty cents per share was the full value of the nineteen thousand five hundred shares sold for working capital at the times it was sold; and that the purchasers thereof never subscribed for any part thereof and never promised to pay the par value thereof, nor [328]*328any price exceeding fifty cents per share, which they paid.

As conclusions of law, the court found that all the stock is alike assessable, and that the assessment in question is valid.

It is, tacitly at least, and I think correctly, conceded by appellant’s counsel that where all the stock of a private corporation in this state is fully paid, it is assessable. (Santa Cruz R. R. Co. v. Spreckles, 65 Cal. 193.) But counsel contends that the stock issued to Green, Williams, and Jones in exchange for property was fully paid up, while the nineteen thousand five hundred shares reserved for working capital, and sold for fifty cents per share, must be considered as having been subscribed for by the purchasers thereof at its par value of two dollars per share, and that until this is called in or paid, the alleged fully paid stock issued to Green, Williams, and Jones in payment for property cannot be assessed.

Passing all questions as to the correctness of this theory, it will be sufficient to say that the most material of the assumed facts upon which it is constructed are negatived by the findings of the court.

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Bluebook (online)
31 P. 100, 96 Cal. 322, 1892 Cal. LEXIS 950, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/green-v-abietine-medical-co-cal-1892.