Morrow v. Iron & Steel Co.

87 Tenn. 262
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 3, 1889
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 87 Tenn. 262 (Morrow v. Iron & Steel Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Morrow v. Iron & Steel Co., 87 Tenn. 262 (Tenn. 1889).

Opinion

Lurton, J.

The Hashville Iron, Steel & Charcoal Company is a manufacturing corporation, organized in 1887 under the general incorporation laws of this State. Complainant’s hill charges that it was organized upon the following scheme or basis, namely:

“ The capital stock was fixed • at $350,000, in shares of $100 each; the company was also to issuei $350,000 of $1,000 negotiable, interest-bearing coupon bonds, to run twenty years, secured, principal .and interest, by a first mortgage, in the usual form, upon the company’s plant. Every subscriber was to have bonds and also stock of the company, each to the amount of the subscription — that is to say, a subscriber to the amount say of $1,000 was to pay $1,000, and therefor was entitled to and was to receive $1,000 of said bonds and $1,000 of said stock of the company.”

Complainant alleges that “ upon this basis and plan of operations, as the defendant company well knew, your orator * * * subscribed for $10,000 of said stock and bonds each — that is, he took an interest to the extent of and subscribed $10,000, and he was to pay the said $10,000 upon calls to be made.”

[264]*264Upon this subscription be afterward paid $1,000, and executed Ms three negotiable notes each for $3,000, and payable in March, April, and May, 1888. Subsequently the corporation refused to carry out the scheme by which subscribers were to receive bonds to an amount equal to their stock, and instead resolved to mortgage their property only to the extent of $100,000, and these bonds they resolved to sell upón the market, applying the proceeds to corporate purposes strictly. This change in the plan of operations seems to have been assented to by all of the subscribers save complainant, who caused his protest to be entered.

The bill alleges that the notes executed by complainant have been transferred to the Commercial national-Bank in payment of a pre-existing debt, with notice of the consideration upon which they were executed. This change, the case being heard upon demurrer, together with the fací that the insolvency of the iron company does not appear, justifies us, for the purpose of this case, in treating the bank, as the holder of these stock notes, as standing upou no higher ground than the assignor.

The complainant seeks to be relieved from his. subscription upon the ground that the company has refused to carry out its agreement concerning its bonds; that his notes be canceled, and that he have a decree for the money paid in on his subscription. lie further prays, in the event he be [265]*265held liable upon his subscription, that the contract by which he was to receive bonds be specifically performed.

The hank and the iron company join in a demurrer, which questions the validity and legality of the contract by which the complainant was to receive the bonds of the company. This demurrer was sustained by the learned Chancellor, and the bill of complainant dismissed.

In considering the meaning and legal effect of the contract set up by the complainant it is important at the outset to observe that this is not the case of a purchase of stock and bonds, or either, in an organized and going corporation. Upon the contrary, the bill states that the contract into which complainant entered was that upon which all shares were to be issued, and that the contract between himself and the corporation constituted what the pleader properly designates the “ basis of organization”

"Whether this “basis of organization” be construed to be a contract whereby each subscriber to the stock was to be given a bond as a bonus, or each subscriber to the bonds was to be given paid-up stock as a bonus, or as an agreement by which each contributor to the capital stock was to receive the obligation of the company, secured by a primary mortgage, that he should be répaid the amount of his subscription with interest, such an agreement would clearly be illegal and ineffective as to existing or subsequent creditors of the cor[266]*266poration, either upon the ground that the payment for the stock was unreal and simulated or that the "bond had been issued upon no consideration. Morawitz on Corporations, Sec. 824; Sawyer v. Hoag, 17 Wall., 610; Scovil v. Thayer, 105 U. S., 143.

The learned counsel for complainant has very ably and earnestly presented the well understood distinction between contracts which are invalid as to creditors, and yet are legal and binding upon the corporation, a distinction well illustrated by the cases just cited from the Supreme Court of the United States; and he insists upon the doctrine of these cases, that however invalid such an agreement may he as against creditors, that inasmuch as all the subscribers to shares were parties to the same agreement with the corporation, that the arrangement and contract cannot be questioned by such stockholders or by the corporation, and that as between the subscriber and the company the agreement is legal and binding.

This presents a question of groat importance, and one which is entitled to receive grave consideration at our hands. There are undoubtedly a class of cases where subscriptions to initiatory stock upon special terms, not prohibited by the charter and not in contravention of any clearly defined public policy, have been, upon sound principles, held valid as between the subscribers and the corporation, and yet invalid in so far as the rights of creditors were affected upon a condition of corpo[267]*267rate insolvency ensuing. To this class of cases belong tlie cases of Sawyer v. Hoag and Scovil v. Thayer. The invalidity of the special terms upon which the contract of subscription rested in these two cases arose from the well settled doctrine that unpaid stock subscriptions constitute a trust fund for the benefit of general creditors, aiid that any arrangement or device by which a payment of a stock subscription is simulated or released is void' in so far as it operates to discharge a liability in favor of creditors by a subscriber to capital stock. In the first of these cases there was a contract whereby the stock was nominally paid in full, but immediately taken back as a loan to the subscriber. Row the only effect of this arrangement was to work a change in the character of the debt, whereby a debt due as for unpaid stock was to become a debt due as for a loan. The debt in the latter case was one which was subject to offsets in the hands of the borrower, while so long as it was a stock debt it was a trust fund, and the debtor could not apply it exclusively upon his own claim against the insolvent corporation.

Concerning the validity of such an arrangement as between the subscriber and the corporation, Mr. Justice Miller said:

“ Undoubtedly this transaction, if nothing unfair was intended, was one which the parties could do effectually so far as they alone were concerned. Two private persons could thus change the nature of the indebtedness of one to the other if it was [268]*268found mutually convenient to do so; and in any controversy which: might or could grow out of the matter between the insurance company and the appellant, we are not prepared to say that the company, as a corporation, could deny that the stock was paid in full.”

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Little Switzerland Brewing Co. v. Oxley
197 S.E.2d 301 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1973)
Fishel v. Miller
56 N.E.2d 955 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 1944)
Talbot v. Automobile Identification Underwriters, Inc.
43 S.W.2d 220 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 1931)
Bryan v. St. Andrews Bay Community Hotel Corp.
126 So. 143 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1930)
Bingaman v. Commonwealth Trust Co.
15 F.2d 119 (U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Middle Pennsylvania, 1926)
Eastern Products Corporations v. Tennessee Coal, Iron & R.
151 Tenn. 239 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 1924)
Wright v. Johnston
183 Iowa 807 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1918)
Williamson v. Collins
243 F. 835 (Sixth Circuit, 1917)
Canyon Creek Elevator & Milling Co. v. Allison
165 P. 753 (Montana Supreme Court, 1917)
Warren County Co-Operative Ass'n v. Boyd
88 S.E. 153 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1916)
Sullivan v. Farnsworth
132 Tenn. 691 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 1915)
Witt v. Nelson
169 S.W. 381 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1914)
Spencer v. Smith
201 F. 647 (Eighth Circuit, 1912)
Trent Import Co. v. Wheelwright
84 A. 543 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1912)
Weaver Power Co. v. Elk Mountain Mill Co.
69 S.E. 747 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 1910)
Rolapp v. Ogden & Northwestern Railroad
110 P. 364 (Utah Supreme Court, 1910)
Knight & Wall Co. v. Tampa Sand Lime Brick Co.
55 Fla. 728 (Supreme Court of Florida, 1908)
Sweeney v. Tennessee Central Railroad
118 Tenn. 297 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 1906)
Weed v. Gainesville, Jefferson & Southern Railroad
46 S.E. 885 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 1904)
Kraft v. Griffon Co.
82 A.D. 29 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1903)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
87 Tenn. 262, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/morrow-v-iron-steel-co-tenn-1889.