Louisiana Purchase Exposition Co. v. Kuenzel

82 S.W. 1099, 108 Mo. App. 105, 1904 Mo. App. LEXIS 16
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 1, 1904
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 82 S.W. 1099 (Louisiana Purchase Exposition Co. v. Kuenzel) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Louisiana Purchase Exposition Co. v. Kuenzel, 82 S.W. 1099, 108 Mo. App. 105, 1904 Mo. App. LEXIS 16 (Mo. Ct. App. 1904).

Opinion

RETBURN, J.

— This proceeding was instituted by plaintiff against the defendant, as a delinquent subscriber, for the enforcement of his subscription to its capital stock. The petition narrated, that with many others, appellant united in subscribing a written agreement to become a stockholder, for an enumerated number of shares in a corporation to be organized to solemnize the one hundredth anniversary of the Louisiana Purchase, upon condition that such subscription should not become obligatory until the full amount of five millions of dollars should have been subscribed, and agreeing to make payment for such subscription in manner detailed; that the total of the requisite and named amount was duly .subscribed, the proposed corporation organized, and all steps adopted required by law for the incorporation of such company; that it had accepted such subscription of defendant and, relying upon the subscription of defendant and his associates, it had proceeded to obligate itself for and expend large sums of money in its organization, construction of buildings and other preparations for a World’s Fair in the city of St. Louis. Continuing, the petition charged the making of the various calls upon the subscribers to its stock in manner provided by such subscription instrument and notice thereof to appellant, that he had paid the first installment of ten per cent, but had defaulted in subsequent calls and judgment therefor was asked.

The answer admitted the execution of the subscription, but making denial of all other allegations of ihe petition, by way of affirmative defense, averred that the amount of five millions of dollars essential to render defendant’s subscription binding never was subscribed, but that the aggregate subscriptions fell short of such amount. A jury was waived, and the trial before the [108]*108court terminated upon the close of the evidence offered by the plaintiff, the defendant tendering no proof but profferring a demurrer to the evidence which was overruled, and a finding and judgment were had in favor of plaintiff.

1. The initial contention of appellant is that his agreement to become a subscriber to plaintiff’s stock was not absolute and unqualified, but was conditional and dependent, and the burden devolved upon plaintiff to establish by competent legal proof,- due compliance with the antecedent conditions before recovery was warranted, and that it had failed to demonstrate such performance by legal evidence.

The first section of the legislative act, general in character but special in its practical application and employment, being an act of the Fortieth General Assembly of the State of Missouri, under which, together with subsequent amendatory acts not material herein, the plaintiff was brought into legal existence, April, 1901, and denominated “World’s Fairs and Centennial Expositions” (Laws 1899, 130) and adopted to commemorate and solemnize the centennial anniversary of the Louisiana Purchase by holding a World’s Fair at the city of St. Louis, in defining the recitals to be set forth in the articles of agreement for the legal creation of a corporation, to be invested with the powers and authority of such legislative act, and for the purposes enumerated in section 6, especially the inauguration and maintaining of national, international and World’s Fairs, centennial and other expositions, commemorativof any historical event or for the promotion. and encouragement of the arts, sciences, professions and industries by the exhibition of products of the arts, industries and manufactures and of soil, land and sea, prescribed that the amount of the capital stock of the corporation, the number of shares of a minimum par value of ten dollars and maximum of one hundred dollars per share, and that not less than one-half of the entire [109]*109amount thereof had been subscribed in good faith and ten per centum of the amount subscribed, actually paid up in lawful money of the United States and was in possession of the directory or had been disbursed for preliminary expenses of organization, should be set forth, and section 3 provided that the stock of such corporation should not fall below $500,000 nor exceed $20,000,-000, reiterating that at least one-half of the capital stock should be subscribed for in good faith and no less than ten per centum paid up at the time of filing the articles, the remaining ninety per cent to be subject to the call of the board of directory, in such sums and at such times as might be agreed upon by the subscribers in the association articles. The instrument of association, introduced at the hearing, responded to the requisites of the act in question by embracing provisions and recitals that the authorized amount of the capital stock should be six millions of dollars, divided into six hundred thousand shares of the par value of ten dollars, five millions dollars of which capital stock had been subscribed in good faith, and that ten per cent of ihe amount subscribed was either in the custody of the first board of directors or had been appropriated to expenses of organization, and upon the faith of such instrument embodying all other statements and specifications made requisite by the act, after its execution by an appropriate number of subscribers, recording and like formal steps, the certificate of incorporation issued from the office of the Secretary of State and after recording the latter, the legal creation of the plaintiff was perfected.

The evidence received, presently further considered, being the testimony of a witness familiar and entrusted with the subscription lists and original subscriptions, which had been preserved and transferred under his individual direction, by him personally verified and compared, and the aggregate amounts computed, established that the subscription lists, accounts [110]*110and books were bulky and voluminous, comprehending over twenty-three thousand individual subscriptions, appearing in exceeding one thousand different lists, making' a total subscription of over $5 276,000, from which total at time of hearing $4,686,000 had been realized in cash. Confronted by such facts and from the language of the act under which the plaintiff was organized, the legislative intent may be fairly gathered and the reasonable inference drawn that upon the original incorporators, who in obedience to the statutes signed and acknowledged the agreement of association, were devolved the discretion and duty of determining and adjudging as an existing fact, the true amount of the capital stock subscribed, and that such conclusion by these incorporators was a final determination of this question; and it logically follows, further, that in legal contemplation and intendment ' the signers of such agreement exercising such authority and power, in their sound judgment were acting as the authorized representatives of the whole mass of stock subscribers upon whom such action and their deduction, in absence of fraud or bad faith, of which this record contains no intimation, were and are determinate and binding. While this proposition may be held up at present for the first instance to- the contemplation of an appellate court in Missouri, cases analogous and eliciting the expression of similar principles abound, and have been submitted by industrious counsel.

In Litchfield Bank v. Church, 29 Conn.

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Bluebook (online)
82 S.W. 1099, 108 Mo. App. 105, 1904 Mo. App. LEXIS 16, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/louisiana-purchase-exposition-co-v-kuenzel-moctapp-1904.