Lefker v. Harner

186 S.W. 75, 123 Ark. 575, 1916 Ark. LEXIS 514
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedMay 8, 1916
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 186 S.W. 75 (Lefker v. Harner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lefker v. Harner, 186 S.W. 75, 123 Ark. 575, 1916 Ark. LEXIS 514 (Ark. 1916).

Opinion

Wood, J.,

(after stating the facts). The law under which the Ozark Trust Company was organized provides that in no event shall the paid-up capital stock of such corporations be less than $50,000. Kirby’s Digest, section 889.

(1) The allegations of .the complaint show that the transaction under review resulted in a depletion or reduction of the capital stock of the Ozark Trust Company to less than the amount required under our law. The transaction was therefore invalid. The purposes for which trust companies may he organized are set forth in chapter 31, subdivision V, section 888 Kirby’s Digest. The ninth subdivision is as follows: “To buy and sell all kinds of government, State,, municipal and other! bonds, and all kinds of negotiable and non-negotiable paper, stocks and other investment securities.” This statute does not authorize a transaction of the character set forth in the complaint, but refers to investments made by corporations in shares of stock of other corporations. The purpose of the law was to allow a trust company to make investments and to add to its assets, thereby increasing the value of the capital upon which it does business. But manifestly an investment of the capital stock of a corporation in its own shares of stock where these shares are not again reissued and sold, can have no other effect than to deplete or reduce the paid-up capital of the corporation by the shares thus taken up. While the transaction may be in the form of a sale, in reality it is an extinguishment of the company’s capital by the amount turned over to' the shareholder for his stock,, and is, in legal effect, but a gift of the amount paid for the capital stock of the corporation to the individual shareholder whose shares are taken up in this way.

As is said by Mr. Morawetz: “A purchase by a corporation of shares of its own stock, in effect, amounts to a withdrawal of the shareholder whose shares are purchased from membership in the company, and a repay-' ment of his proportionate share of the company’s assets. There is no substitution of membership under these circumstances, as in case of a purchase and transfer of shares to a third person, but the members of the company and the amount of its capital are actually diminished. * * # Every continuing shareholder is injured by the reduction of the fund contributed for the common venture; and the creditors who have trusted the company upon the security of the capital originally subscribed, or who are entitled to .expect that amount of security, are entitled to complain.” Morawetz on Private Corp., % 112.

Mr. Thompson, quoting from a well known law writer, says:

“There is a great difference between dealing in the shares of other companies and in its own. The former is ordinary business, attended only with the usual risks of ordinary transactions but the latter tends inevitably to breaches of their duty on the part of the directors, and to fraud and rigging the market on the part of the corporation itself. Consequently, a corporation, to possess such power, must have it conferred by the plainest and most explicit language.” 4 Thompson on Corp., section 1076; Green’s Brice Ultra Vires, 95.

We are aware of the fact that where neither the charter nor the statute prohibits a corporation from- purchasing its own shares of stock, and where there is no statute expressly authorizing it to do so, there is great contrariety among the authorities as to whether it -may do so. 4 Thompson on Corp., section 4075. Whatever may be the rule in other jurisdictions, under our statute requiring trust companies to have a paid up capital of not less than $50,000, such companies have no power to .purchase the shares of its own shareholders with its capital stock. For, as we have seen, such a transaction, where the stock is not reissued or resold and the amount brought into the corporate treasury, but depletes or reduces the capital stock below the minimum amount required by our statute.

The statute contemplates that this amount of capital shall be in the treasury for the protection of those doing business with such company at all times. And this statutory requirement is tantamount to an express prohibition against paying out the funds constituting the capital stock to a shareholder for his shares of stock. In such case the corporation would have the surrendered certificate and the shareholder the money, and to the extent of the amount given him the corporate capital would be correspondingly reduced. See Kom v. Cody, Etc. Co., 76 Wash 540, 136 Pac. 1155. Such a transae-' tion is but in legal effect a refunding to the shareholder.-

Our statute also requires that the purpose for which corporations -are organized shall be specified by the stockholders- in their articles of association, and that the amount of capital stock shall be stated therein and the amount actually paid in, the names of the stockholders and the number of shares owned by each, and that these shall be filed in the office of the county clerk where the corporation'has its principal place of business, and that the president and secretary shall annually make a report showing the amount of capital stock paid in, the name and number of shares of each shareholder, and the business of the corporation. Kirby’s Digest, sections 839, 845, 848. All these provisions show that the capital stock of corporations, under our law, is intended to be kept intact for the benefit of those who have business dealings with the corporation. Any transaction which results in a diminution of this capital stock at any time in any way is detrimental not only to existing and subsequent, creditors, but to the shareholders themselves.

(2) The .allegations of the complaint are sufficient to show that the transaction under review reduced the capital stock of the Ozark Trust Company and rendered it insolvent. This court long ago recognized the doctrine that the capital stock of a corporation is a trust fund that must be devoted to its debts, and that neither the corporation nor the individual stockholder can divert it directly or indirectly from this purpose. Carter v. Union Ptg. Co., 54 Ark. 580; Tiger v. Rogers Cotton Cleaner & Gin Co., 96 Ark. 1-5.

In the latter case, we quoted from Mr. Cook on Corporations, section 311, as follows: “If the corporation is insolvent at the time of the .purchase it is clearly an invalid transaction and will be set aside. The rule goes still further and declares that if a corporation, by a purchase of shares of its own capital stock thereby reduces its actual assets below its capital stock and debts, or if the actual assets at that time are less than the capital stock and debts, said purchase may be set aside and the guilty corporate officers, as well as the vendor of stock, may be rendered liable thereon at the instance of the corporate creditor.” See also Jones v. Dodge, 97 Ark. 248.

Appellant contends that there is no allegation in the complaint of the insolvency of the trust company at the time the transaction under consideration took place, and that there is no specific allegation that it was done with the intent to defraud the appellee, who was a subsequent creditor. The recitals of the decree show that the cause was heard upon the evidence. Under such recital, in the absence of a showing to the contrary, we would have to presume that the evidence proved every issue of fact essential to the correctness of the court’s conclusion of law.

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Bluebook (online)
186 S.W. 75, 123 Ark. 575, 1916 Ark. LEXIS 514, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lefker-v-harner-ark-1916.