Hambleton v. Baltimore City Passenger Railway Co.

1 Balt. C. Rep. 278
CourtBaltimore City Circuit Court
DecidedOctober 25, 1892
StatusPublished

This text of 1 Balt. C. Rep. 278 (Hambleton v. Baltimore City Passenger Railway Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Baltimore City Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hambleton v. Baltimore City Passenger Railway Co., 1 Balt. C. Rep. 278 (Md. Super. Ct. 1892).

Opinion

WICKES, J.

When Miss Cordelia Hollins died, her executors found belonging to her estate, eighty-five shares of the old stock of the City Passenger Railway Company, of this city, and a subscription for eighty-five shares of the new stock of the same company made at her request by her agents, McKim & Co. Mr. Hollins McKim, a member of the firm, was also executor of the will of Miss Hollins. In the settlement of the estate he sold to Mr. John A. Hambleton, the complainant in this cause, both the old and the equitable interest of the decedent in the new stock. The company defendant transferred upon its books the old stock and issued to the complainant a certificate, but declined to transfer to him upon its books the new stock subscribed for, and duly assigned to him by the executor.

At the time the complainant made his demand upon the company for a transfer of the new stock, the refusal was placed upon the ground that until the entire amount of the subscription price of the stock was paid up in full, the company did not intend to issue any certificates or make any transfers upon its books. At that time no money had been paid upon the subscription, and no call had been made by the company for any part of it, as is still the case.

The company defendant, however, in its answer to the bill of complaint and in the argument of the case, sets out a number of additional reasons why the subscribers themselves to this stock are not entitled to transfer it in any way, and especially why this defendant should not be permitted to have the stock in question transferred to him.

[279]*279We will briefly examine the reasons as they are presented:

It is first urged that a distinction must be taken between a subscription to original stock and a subscription to new stock; that while the one qualifies subscribers to become stockholders at once, so that they may immediately act as necessary constituent parts of the corporation, that in the case of new stock no such necessity exists, and that the subscription is to be considered purely as a contract between the corporation and the subscribers, respectively, who are only “intending purchasers’’ of the stock to be issued. That so long as it is executory, it is a contract and nothing more.

Again it is urged that the contract in this ease is entirely personal on the side of the subscriber, and that the company has never accepted any of these subscriptions, and is hence not bound to recognize them, much less in the hands of those to whom the original subscribers have assigned their rights.

There is undoubtedly a different rule applicable to the two classes of subscriptions as stated, but it is difficult to see how the difference effects any principle applicable to this case upon its facts. Subscribers to original stock, before the formation of the corporation, contract with each other, and not with the company, for it has at that time no existence. The statutory subscription is merely the method of bringing the association into being, but a subscription for stock made after the organization of a corporation does not etc proprior vigore constitute a subscriber a member of the corporation until it has been accepted by the corporation.

But when the subscription to stock has been accepted or in any way becomes binding upon the company as well as upon the subscriber, the effect is to constitute the subscriber a shareholder immediately, and that too, whether any money has been paid upon the stock or not. Of course a subscriber must pay the instalments upon the stock as they become due or he is in default — but in the absence of any omission on his part to comply with his contract, certain rights and liabilities flow from this contract, which are well defined in the textbooks and cases.

Nor is this relation affected by the fact that no money has been paid upon the subscription. In Spear vs. Crawford, 14 Wend. 20, it was held that subscribers to stock who had paid nothing were liable to creditors under a statute making stockholders liable. The Court said “The subscription puts it in his power to become a stockholder in the broadest and most unqualified sense of the term, by compelling the corporation to give him the legal evidence of his being a stockholder upon his complying with the terms of the subscription.”

Much must of course depend upon whether in the case before us, the company defendant is to be regarded as having accepted in advance the subscriptions to the new stock, or whether they must yet do some act to bind the company.

The facts are briefly as follows:

The company defendant procured an act of Assembly (Acts 1890, page 295) authorizing it to increase its capital stock and it is provided in the act that the stock shall be issued at its par value “paid for in money, as and when the Board of Directors shall call for the same',” and that “all the shareholders of the said company shaM have the privilege of subscribing for the said new or additional stock ratably and in proportion to their respective holdings. This act was approved April 3, 1890.

On July 2d, 1891, the stockholders of the company defendant met and decided to issue forty thousand shares of slock at par and give to the stockholders the privilege of subscribing for it, share for share, according to their holdings. A circular was sent to each shareholder stating these facts and calling their attention to the further facts that the right to subscribe was valuable — that the payment for the stock would be called in instalments only as needed for construction expenses and that the first instalment of two and a half dollars per share would not be called before September 1, 1891. At this time the company gave notice in the newspapers of this city of its action, and stated that the Board of Directors had “allotted the additional stock” among the shareholders share for share, and “requested the said stockholders” to subscribe for their respective shares, &c.

[280]*280Miss Hollins was therefore entitled by the very terms of the Act of Assembly and became a subscriber for this stock, because that privilege was given to the old shareholders of whom she was one. The company advised her by its circular that the privilege was a valuable one, and that the terms of payment would be made easy, and by public notice through the press notified her that the shares had been “alloted," and requested her to subscribe for them. The company then opened a book for “Subscriptions to the additional issue of stock, July, 1891.”

At the top of the page is written, “We, the undersigned, hereby subscribe for the number of shares of additional stock set opposite to our name, respectively,” and below among others was the name of “Hollins, Miss Cornelia D., 85,” and opposite to this under date of July 30, “McKim & Co., 85.”

It is difficult to imagine what fur- , ther action could well be taken by the company to render this subscription valid and binding upon it. There is nothing the company can accept unless it be the money, as it is called. It allotted Miss Hollins eighty-five shares of stock and requested her to subscribe for it. She could have declined to do so had she chosen, but she accepted the offer and that seems to be the end of it. If Miss Hollins had applied to the company for this stock, and the shares had been allotted to her and notice given her of the fact, the cases rule that the contract would be complete.

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Related

Spear v. Crawford
14 Wend. 20 (New York Supreme Court, 1835)
Clippinger v. Creps
2 Watts 45 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1833)
Baltimore City Passenger Railway Co. v. Sewell
35 Md. 238 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1872)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1 Balt. C. Rep. 278, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hambleton-v-baltimore-city-passenger-railway-co-mdcirctctbalt-1892.