Kent v. . Quicksilver Mining Co.

78 N.Y. 159
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 16, 1879
StatusPublished
Cited by237 cases

This text of 78 N.Y. 159 (Kent v. . Quicksilver Mining Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kent v. . Quicksilver Mining Co., 78 N.Y. 159 (N.Y. 1879).

Opinion

*176 Folgee, J.

These are suits in equity to perpetually restrain the Quicksilver Mining Company from taking certain action, on the one hand proposed by it with the expressed assent of some only of the stockholders in it; and on the other hand, demanded of it by certain other of the stockholders in it, which demand it and still other stockholders resist.

Whatever the frame of the pleadings in the several actions, and whatever the formal prayer for judgment, the purpose of the litigation in each is to reach a final and binding judgment, whether certain “preferred stock,” heretofore created by that company, is so far valid as to be recognized in the future business of the company as giving to the holders thereof the peculiar right expressed in the certificate thereof.

What is meant by “preferred stock” is well enough known in law and business, without definition or circumlocution hero.

All the powers which that company had were given to it by its charter (Laws of 1866, chap. 470, p. 1021) ; and by the Revised Statutes (vol. 1, pp. 599-600, §§ 1, 2, 3). Thereby it had the usual general powers of a corporation ; (see Angelí & Ames on Corporations, § 110.) It had also the peculiar power of holding, improving and working-mining lands in California and elsewhere, and of disposing of the product thereof. It had also the power to issue certificates of stock, representing the value of its property, in such form and subject to such regulations as it might from time to time by its by-laws prescribo ; and to regulate and prescribe in what manner and form its contracts and obligations should be executed. It is claimed that it had also incidental- and implied powers. So it had, so far as permitted by the Revised Statutes which declare that in addition to the powers therein enumerated and to those expressly given in its charter, it should not" possess nor exercise any, except such as should be necessary to the exercise of the powers so enumerated and given. (1 R. S., 600, § 3.)

Plainly a mining corporation, for the exercise of its power of mining in its lands, must have money. Hence if it has- *177 it not, and cannot otherwise readily get it, it must, as necessary to the use of its corporate rights; have the power to borrow it; and in any way, and upon any obligation or security to bé given by it, that is not ■ unlawful. (Curtis v. Leavitt, 15 N. Y., 9.) It may borrow it from the stockholders in it, as well as from other parties; and it may determine and agree to borrow from them only. This cor•poration was in need of money to carry on its authorized business. It did got money, for that purpose and because 'of that need, from some of the stockholders in it; and in that instance from some of them alone. If the mode, by 'which that money was got was a borrowing, within the sense which the law and common acceptation give to that term, ■then the transaction so far would have been lawful; and it Avould have remained to inquire whether the obligation ' given Avas a lawful instrument. But it Avas .not a borrowing. The idea of a borrowing is not filled out unless there is in the agreement therefor a promise or understanding that what is borrowed Avill be repaid or returned; the tiling ' itself or something like it of equal value, Avith or without compensation for the use of it in the meantime. To borrow is the reciprocal action with to lend ; and to lend or to ’ loan, say the dictionaries, is the parting .with a thing of value to another for a time fixed, or indefinite yet to have ■’ sometime an ending, to be used or enjoyed by that other, the thing itself, or the equivalent of it, to be given back at the time fixed, or when lawfully asked for, with or Avithout compensation for the use as may be agreed upon. / In ' this transaction with some stockholders, that corporation ■' had not the right, nor was it under the liability to ever pay baek the five dollars per share furnished by them to it; that Avas not named in the terms of the, obligation given, " nor Avas it contemplated in the negotiation and bargain. The stockholder had not by the scope of his bargain, .nor by the terms of the written evidence of it, any right ever to ask for repayment of the money furnished by him. ‘ "In short, there was not formed thereby- the relations of *178 debtor and creditor. The stockholder parted forever with the money furnished, inasmuch as the charter of the company is perpetual, and the company made a perpetual charge upon its net earnings. Though there was a compensation fixed for the use of the money, and though it was to take the form of a yearly payment, and at a rate the same as the then lawful rate of interest, yet we cannot conceive that the transaction was a loan and borrowing of money, with a compensation for the use of it. If it had been, though the compensation was great for the sum furnished, yet it was not a violation of the usury laws of which the corporation could avail itself (Laws of 1850, chap. 172); and the courts might not overhaul it; save, perhaps, as an unconscionable and extortionate agreement (1 Story Eq. Juris., §§ 216-331) ; as to which we will speak again before the close. The transaction is not to be looked upon as other than a preference of one class of stockholders to another; as giving to the first class a perpetual inextinguishable prior right to a portion of the earnings of the company before the other class might have anything therefrom. It was none other than the creation .of a “ preferred stock.”

Then there arises the query, whether there was at that time power in the corporation to distinguish between the stockholders in it, to form them into two classes, and to give to one class rights in the corporate property, business and earnings, from which the other was shut out.

We are not prepared to say that, at tile first, the corporation might not have lawfully divided the interest in its capital stock into shares arranged in classes, preferring one class to another in the right it should have in the profits of the business. The charter gave power to make such by-laws as it might deem proper, consistent with constitution and law ; and to issue certificates of stock representing the value of the property. We know nothing in the constitution or the law .that inhibits .a corporation from beginning its corporate action by classifying the shares in its -capital .stock, with peculiar privileges to one share over *179 another, and thus offering its stock to the public for subscriptions thereto. No rights are got until a subscription is made. Each subscriber would know for what class of stock he put down his name, and what right he got when he thus became a stockholder. There need be no deception or mistake ; there would be no trenching upon rights previously acquired; no contract, express or implied, would be broken or impaired.

This corporation did otherwise. A by-law was duly made, which declared the whole value of its property and the whole amount of its capital stock, and divided the whole of it into shares equal in amount, and directed the issuing of certificates of stock therefor.

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Bluebook (online)
78 N.Y. 159, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kent-v-quicksilver-mining-co-ny-1879.