Hoagland v. Cincinnati & Fort Wayne Railroad

18 Ind. 452
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedMay 15, 1862
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 18 Ind. 452 (Hoagland v. Cincinnati & Fort Wayne Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hoagland v. Cincinnati & Fort Wayne Railroad, 18 Ind. 452 (Ind. 1862).

Opinion

Woedest, J.

This was an action by the railroad company against the appellant, upon a subscription to the capital stock of the company. Judgment for the plaintiff.

The defendant, it appears, was one of the subscribers to the articles of association, and subscribed for ten shares of stock, at 50 dollars per share. The articles of association fixed the amount of capital stock at 2,500,000 dollars, to consist of shares of 50 dollars each, with a provision for the increase of the stock from time to time. The terms of the subscription required payment to be made to the company, or the board of directors, “ in such proportions, and at such times, as they or their successors might from time to time order or require.” Subscriptions to the articles of association were received to the amount o.f only 60,800 dollars.

The ground relied upon for a reversal is, that as the whole 'amount of the capital stock, as fixed in the articles of association, has not been subscribed for, no calls can be made, nor will an action lie upon the subscription thus made.

In support of this position, several authorities are cited, and amongst others, the case of Stoneham Branch Railroad Co. v. Gould, 2 Gray 277. In the case cited, it was said by the Court, that “it is a rule of law too well settled to be now questioned, that when the capital stock and the number of shares are fixed by the act of incorporation, or by any rate, or by-law passed conformably to the act of incorporation, no assessment can be lawfully made, on the share of any subscriber, until the whole number of shares has been taken.” The following cases, also cited by counsel for the appellant, tend more or less strongly to sustain the position assumed. Salem Mill Dam v. Ropes, 6 Pick. 23, and the same case, 9 Pick. 187; Central Turnpike Co. v. Valentine, 10 id. 142; Cabot & West Bridgefield Bridge Co., v. Chapin, et al., 6 Cush. 50; Worcester & Nashua R. R. Co. v. Hind, 8 id. 110; Old Town & [454]*454Lincoln R. R. Co. v. Veazie, 39 Maine 571; Penobscot Ken R. R. Co. v. Dunn, 39 Maine 595; Littleton Man. Co. v. Parker, 14 N. H. 543; Contoocook Valley R. R. Co. v. Barker, 32 N. H. 363; New Hampshire Central R. R. v. Johnson, 10 Poster 390. See, also, 4 Man. Grang. & Scott 404; 5 Mees. & Welby, 2; 1 Mood. & Mal. 151; 6 Bing. 776.

Whatever may be the intrinsic merits of these decisions, and whatever weight should be attached to them as the adjudications of Courts of unquestioned ability, still they should not be allowed to control, if our statute, under which the subscription in question was made, will not admit the application of the doctrine established by them.

It may be remarked, that the law providing for the organization of railroad companies, and for receiving subscriptions to the stock thereof, enters into, forms part, and determines the effect of subscriptions, as fully as if it were written out and formed, in terms, a part of the contract of subscription. Woolfaulk v. The State, 10 Ind. 582.

The first section of the act for the incorporation of railroad companies, (1 R. S. 1852, p. 409,) provides, that when stock to the amount of 50,000 dollars (or 1,000 dollars for each and every mile of the road,) shall have been subscribed, the subscribers shall elect directors, and subscribe articles of association, setting forth the name of the corporation, the amount of the,capital stock of the company, (which may afterwards be increased,) the number of shares of which the stock shall consist, the number and names of the directors, the names of the places from and to which the proposed road is to run, and the counties through which it is to pass, and its length, as near as may be.

The second section provides for filing a copy of the articles of association in the office of the Secretary of State. This being done, the organization is perfect. The corporation is brought into existence with all the rights and powers con[455]*455ferred upon it by tbe act in question; among which is the power to procure the right of way, construct, and operate the proposed road. All this may be done, although only 50,000 dollars has been subscribed to the capital stock, whatever may be the amount fixed upon as the entire capital stock. This would seem to imply, necessarily, the power to collect the subscriptions thus made, in order to proceed with' the work. But the right to thus make collections is not left to implication. The eighth section provides, that “ it shall be lawful to call in and demand from the stockholders respectively, any sums of money by them subscribed, in such payments or installments as the directors shall deem proper.”

Thus the law provides for the organization of the company when 50,000 dollars shall be subscribed to its stock, (let the . amount of capital stock be what it may,) and for the exercise of its corporate franchises, as well as for the calling in of the amounts subscribed.* The contract of subscription must be deemed to have been made with a view to the law, and the right of the company to call in such subscriptions; and it would seem to be clear that a subscription for the whole amount of the capital stock fixed upon, can not be a condition precedent to the right of the company to collect subscriptions. But authorities are not wanting to support this view; indeed, the only authorities that we are aware of, based upon statutes similar to the one under consideration, fully sustain’ it. The Newcastle &c., Turnpike Company v. Bell, 8 Blackf. 584, is in point. There the corporation was created with a capital stock of 100,000 dollars, but with the right to exercise its corporate franchises when 300 dollars should be subscribed. It wTas held, that a subscription of the whole amount was not a condition precedent to the right of collecting the subscriptions made. The case of The Schenectady, &c., Plank Road Co. v. Thatcher, 1 Kernan, 102, is also directly in point. The following extract from the opinion of the Court in that case [456]*456will show the point decided, and the ground of the decision, being in every respect applicable here. Says Parker, J., delivering the opinion:

“Nor was it necessary that the whole amount of stock should have been ■ subscribed, before calls for installments could be made. The act not only makes no such requirement, but it expressly permits the directors of any company incorporated, &c., to require payment of the sums subscribed to the capital stock, at such times and in such proportions as they shall see fit. It first authorizes an incorporation to take place in subscribing a certain amount, and then, in section 39, authorizes the directors to require payment of the ‘ sums subscribed.’ The decisions, therefore, in the Courts of Massachusetts, relied on by the defendant’s counsel, are entirely inapplicable. The same amount of stock subscriptions which is necessary to the organization of the company, is all that is requisite, as preliminary to a call for its payment by installments.”

In the ease of Kennebec, &c., R. R. Co. v. Jervis, 34 Maine, 360, it was held, that “ where the amount of stock, which a corporation may hold, is not fixed in the charter,

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18 Ind. 452, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hoagland-v-cincinnati-fort-wayne-railroad-ind-1862.