Hayden v. Charter Oak Driving Park

27 A. 232, 63 Conn. 142
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedMay 5, 1893
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 27 A. 232 (Hayden v. Charter Oak Driving Park) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hayden v. Charter Oak Driving Park, 27 A. 232, 63 Conn. 142 (Colo. 1893).

Opinion

TokrANCE, J.

The plaintiff brings this action to compel the defendant company to issue and deliver to him a certificate for eighteen shares of its capital stock, or to recover *144 damages for tbe value of such shares. The facts upon which be bases bis claim are in substance the following :—

From about the time of the organization of the defendant corporation in 1873, one Harbison, under whom the plaintiff claims, was its secretary, down to March, 1878. He was then chosen president of the corporation, which office he held continuously till March, 1882, when his official relations with the defendant ended. In February, 1881, a certificate for forty-one shares of the defendant’s capital stock was issued to Harbison in proper form, signed by him as president. At this time Harbison was in fact the owner of and entitled to only twenty-three shares of the stock, but by mistake the certificate was issued to him for eighteen shares more than he was entitled to. Harbison then and always believed that he was the owner of and entitled to the number of shares represented by the certificate. At no time has the defendant issued stock up to the limit of its authorized capital.

On March 30th, 1888, the certificate showed on its face that Harbison was the apparent owner of thirty-five shares, he having previously transferred six shares to other parties. On that day the plaintiff held sundry notes of Harbison’s, upon which there was due about nine hundred dollars. Just before this day Harbison had bargained to one McGovern ten of the thirty-five shares, but had not transferred them. The certificate itself was in the possession of one Adams, and the plaintiff then supposed that it was thus held by Adams in pledge for him. Whether it was in fact thus held in pledge is not found.

In this situation Harbison and Hayden agreed that the former should assign and transfer the remaining twenty-five shares represented by the certificate to Hayden, after the transfer to McGovern of his ten shares, and that Hayden should, in consideration therefor, surrender to Harbison and discharge the notes held by Hayden as aforesaid.

Having made this agreement, the plaintiff and Harbison together procured the certificate at Adams’s office, and Har-bison indorsed thereon in proper form a transfer to McGov *145 ern of ten shares, and then indorsed thereon a transfer of the remaining twenty-five shares to the plaintiff as agreed. Harbison then wrote a letter to the defendant’s secretary-notifying him of these transfers. This letter with the certificate was inclosed in an envelope on the same day and sent by mail to the defendant. Nothing else was done by Harbi-son or the plaintiff at this time towards the performance of the agreement, and said notes were not then canceled or surrendered, but remained in the plaintiff’s hands for many months thereafter.

Upon the receipt of the letter and certificate the defendant issued a certificate to McGovern for ten shares and to the plaintiff a certificate for seven shares. On receipt of the last certificate the plaintiff called at the office of the company for an explanation, and was then informed by the secretary that Harbison had been entitled to only twenty-three shares originally instead of forty-one, that the original certificate had been issued by mistake, and that Harbison was then entitled to only seven shares. He was then also shown the books, whereon the truth of this claim appeared.

The plaintiff had further interviews with the officers of the company upon this subject, wherein the same information was repeated, and he was fully advised of the determination of the company not to recognize Harbison’s right to the eighteen shares, and not to issue a certificate therefor to the plaintiff.

The notes remained in the plaintiff’s hands until long after these interviews, when, with full knowledge of the claim and determination of the defendant in the matter, he surrendered them to Harbison, by whom they were destroyed.

At the time of the agreement the plaintiff, relying upon the representations of the certificate, which then showed that Harbison was the apparent owner of thirty-five shares, believed that Harbison was such owner, and the plaintiff’s agreement was made upon the faith of such belief. Prior to the first visit of the plaintiff to the defendant’s office as aforesaid the company had never notified Harbison or the plaintiff that said eighteen shares represented an irregular issue *146 of the stock. In January, 1890, the plaintiff made a formal demand on the defendant for the issue to him of a certificate of eighteen shares of its stock, which was then worth fifty-five dollars per share. The defendant then and ever since has refused to do so.

The plaintiff claims upon these facts to be entitled to the relief which he seeks against the defendant. This claim is based upon two propositions. The first is, that the representations of the defendant upon its certificate of stock es-top it from claiming, against a bond fide purchaser for value, that the same was an over-issue of stock in excess of the actual share-holding of Harbison. The second is, that the plaintiff, under the facts as they appear of record, was a bond fide purchaser for value.

It is not enough that the plaintiff proves one of these propositions ; the truth of both is essential to his success. If either one of them is untrue his claim is without foundation.

As to the first proposition, it is to be observed that the eighteen shares of stock issued to Harbison by mistake in excess of his actual share-holding, were not strictly speaking over-issued stock. “ By over-issued stock is to be understood stock issued in excess of the amount limited and prescribed by the act of incorporation. Certificates of stock issued in excess of the certificates that represent the full authorized capital of the coi-poration represent over-issued stock. Such stock is spurious and wholly void. This is the settled law, and it prevails equally whether the over-issue is the result of accident or mistake, or want of knowledge of the law, or is due to fraud and intentional wrong doing. * * * So rigid and well established is this rule that not even a bond fide holder of such stock can give to it any validity or vitality.” Cook’s Law of Stock & Stockholders, § 292. In such cases, however, where certificates of over-issued stock signed by the corporate officers having authority to issue stock are actually issued by them to bond fide purchasers for value, the corporation may be liable in damages to such purchaser. Cook’s Law of Stock & Stockholders, S 298.

*147 In the case at bar tbe corporate officers by mistake issued stock, not in excess of the capital stock, but what may perhaps be called stock forming a part of the un-issued original capital stock. When the certificate was issued to Harbison in 1881, we may perhaps for the purposes in this case regard the eighteen shares issued to him by mistake as held by the company, to be issued in the usual way on payment of the price thereof.

Now upon the assumption that the plaintiff was a bond fide

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Bluebook (online)
27 A. 232, 63 Conn. 142, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hayden-v-charter-oak-driving-park-conn-1893.