Painesville National Bank v. King Varnish Co.

4 Ohio Cir. Dec. 511
CourtSummit Circuit Court
DecidedApril 15, 1894
StatusPublished

This text of 4 Ohio Cir. Dec. 511 (Painesville National Bank v. King Varnish Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Summit Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Painesville National Bank v. King Varnish Co., 4 Ohio Cir. Dec. 511 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1894).

Opinion

Hale, J.

The King Varnish Co. was a corporation, organized under the laws of Ohio in January, 1883, and soon thereafter commenced and continued to carry on business in the city of Akron until January, 1889, when it made an assignment of .all its assets to Albert T. Page, for the benefit of its creditors. The assets prove to be insufficient to pay the debts of the corporation.

The plaintiff, The Painesville National Bank, recovered a judgment against the corporation after the assignment had been made, and brought this action for two objects and purposes. First, to enforce the payment of subscriptions to the •capital stock, which it is claimed have not been paid and are yet due to the corporation. The first proposition is to collect unpaid subscriptions. Second, to ■enforce the individual liability of the stockholders, under the constitution, and sec. 3258, Rev. Stat., for the benefit of the creditors — both claims being made in behalf of all the creditors of the corporation. The original petition filed omitted the first claim; that is, the claim against the stockholders for the non-payment •of the stock subscriptions, but it was afterward brought into the case by amendment. I need not stop to recite how. The two claims are before this court to be adjudicated.

The first proposition made is this: That there having been an assignment by the corporation to an assignee for the benefit of the creditors, this court has no jurisdiction to enforce the payment of the unpaid subscriptions to the stock, if there be any.

It will be conceded that if no assignment had been made, the creditors could maintain this action to enforce the payment of the unpaid subscriptions to the ■stock; and if that cannot be done in this action, it is because of the fact that there has been an assignment to an assignee.

It will be noticed that the same issue, in the attempt to enforce the individual liability in behalf of these answering stockholders, is made as upon the other issue, and this court must determine, for the purpose of determining whether an •assessment shall be made against the particular stockholders answering, whether that particular person is or is not a stockholder in the corporation; and I can readily see that it would lead to some confusion to hold that this court* has no jurisdiction. Supposing that we should determine that these answering defendants who make this question are not stockholders of the corporation, and, therefore refuse to assess them, I suspect that they would answer, when called upon in another court to answer to the assignee for unpaid subscriptions, that that question had been settled in a Case in which both were parties. I am not saying that it would be a good answer, but certain it is that that issue must be passed upon, not upon the question of whether the unpaid subscriptions shall be paid or not, but upon the question whether an assessment shall be made against these parties upon their individual liability. The assignee being before the court, and consenting that this issue may be determined here, we hold that the same result would follow as if there had been no assignment; that is, that we have jurisdiction to determine that question and end the controversy, and we so hold. The assignee is a party here; he makes no objection, and, as we understand, counsel who represent him consents that that issue may be tried and •determined. ,

The first proposition made, which is common to all defendants answering, is, that at the time of the subscription that was made by these defendants to the pre[513]*513ferred stock of the corporation, there was no preferred stock, and no power in the corporation to issue preferred stock, and therefore the subscription, in such form, is without any validity and cannot be enforced. The facts are these: The first step taken towárds the issuing of preferred stock by this corporation was that the stockholders, at a meeting on January 11, 1886, passed this resolution:

1 ‘Resolved, That in view of the statement rendered the company by the president, that the stockholders recommend the board of directors to take immediate steps to increase the sale of the company’s stock in such manner as in their judgment shall seem best.”

On January 18, 1886, the directors passed this resolution:

“At a directors’ meeting, held January 18, 1886, D. L,. King, Geo. W. Crouse, A. L. Conger, Joseph Hugill, A. T. Paige being present. On motion it was resolved to issue preferred stock to carry out the resolution of the stockholders, passed 11th inst., and the president is requested to prepare a subscription book and solicit subscriptions to the preferred stock, to be binding upon the subscribers when forty thousand dollars is subscribed, and to report to the directors at a future meeting.”

In pursuance of that resolution the president of the company prepared a subscription book, which is as follows: ,

“We hereby subscribe to the preferred stock of the King Varnish Co. the number of shares written opposite our respective names, and agree to pay therefor the sum of one hundred dollars per share, in such installments as may be ordered by the board of directors of said company, not exceeding twenty per cent, a month, the holders of said preferred stock to be entitled to a dividend of six per cent, per annum out of the net profits each year, before any dividend is paid to the holders of common stock.
“Akron, January, 1886.”

This Was signed, or another precisely in terms like it, by all of these defendants who contest the validity of this subscription and their liability as stockholders.

On May 3d, this subscription having been taken, there was a meeting of the stockholders, and all present assented to the scheme that had been inaugurated for the issuing of preferred stock, and all the old stockholders, except two, were present at the meeting. Mr. Miller, as I understand, was not present, and Howell S. King. Mr. Miller subsequently subscribed for fifty shares of this preferred stock and paid for it, and acted as stockholder in the corporation. I think it may be safely said that he assented to this arrangement. It is in testimony, also, that young King gave his assent; and we find, without any further discussion, that all the stockholders in the King Varnish Company who were such prior to May 3, 1886; assented to and agreed to this issuing of preferred stock; and the question is, “What is the effect of such an arrangement?” It is claimed that preferred stock in the corporation could only be issued alter the organization of the corporation in pursuance of the provisions of sec. 3263, Rev. Stat., and plainly, this issuing of preferred stock by the King Varnish Co., was not in •pursuance of that section of the statutes; it was not an increase of the capital stock of the King Varnish Co.; it was a disposal of stock that already existed. No certificate of the increase and no certificate was filed with the secretary of state which would authorize the company to issue, other than common stock. But notwithstanding that, we hold that the existing stockholders of the corporation may, for the purpose of inducing others to subscribe to the unissued stock of the corporation, agree that the new subscribers shall be paid a stipulated annual dividend out of the net profits of the corporation, if profits are realized, before any dividends are paid to the stockholders then existing; and that subscriptions to the stock, obtained under such an arrangement, are valid and binding upon the subscribers to the stock.

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4 Ohio Cir. Dec. 511, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/painesville-national-bank-v-king-varnish-co-ohcirctsummit-1894.