Perkins v. Sanders

56 Miss. 733
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedApril 15, 1879
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 56 Miss. 733 (Perkins v. Sanders) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Perkins v. Sanders, 56 Miss. 733 (Mich. 1879).

Opinion

George, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The object of this bill is to collect an alleged indebtedness of the Perkinsville Manufacturing Company to the appellant.

[737]*737There were several demurrers, confessions thereof, and amendments to the bill; and, finally, a demurrer to the bill as amended was sustained, and leave given to the complainant to amend further, which he declined to do. The bill was dismissed, and the complainant appealed.

The bill is liable to the objection of vagueness and uncertainty in some of its most material allegations. It is difficult, if not impossible, to learn from the bill the nature and character of the appellant’s debt, even to the extent of being able to decide upon the objections raised by the demurrer, “ that the breach of the obligation sued on creates no right in favor of the complainant, and that the agreement on which the obligation is founded is ultra vires the corporation.”

It is the duty of the complainant to set out his casein plain, positive, and perspicuous language, so that his meaning may not be mistaken. Por the failure of the bill in this respect, the demurrer was properly sustained.

The appellant is a stockholder in the Perkinsville Manufacturing Company, and he also claims to be its creditor ; and by his bill he seeks to recover from the other stockholders, under a provision of the charter of that company, hereinafter to be set out, the amount of his debt. The bill is filed also in behalf of all the creditors of the company, and is against all the stockholders. The company itself is not made a party, which would have been the regular course in a bill of this character (a creditor’s bill), since it is not clear, from the alie-gations of the bill, that the company is either dissolved or entirely without assets.

The main point raised by the demurrer denied the right of the complainant, upon the ground that he was not a creditor of the company, because he did not show in his bill that the company was sufficiently organized under its charter to make the contract sued on, at the time it was made. This position is founded on the second section of the charter (Sess. Laws 1870, p. 194), which provides “that the capital stock of the said company shall amount to $60,000, and may be increased, [738]*738at the option of the stockholders, to $500,000, and that it shall be divided into shares of $100 each.”

The obligation sued on is dated in September, 1872, and is signed by the president and secretary of the company. The authority shown for the action of these officers is a resolution and a by-law passed by the stockholders, dated in December, 1871.

The bill alleges that $60,000 of stock was subscribed before the execution of this obligation, but it does not aver that this subscription was made before the date of the resolution and by-law which constitute the authority for making the contract. The chancellor sustained the objection; but in this we are unable to agree with him.

It will here be noticed that this is not a bill by a creditor to collect the unpaid balance of stock due by a stockholder to the the company, as was the case of Vide v. Lane, ante, p. 681, but a suit to enforce a personal liability of the stockholders for ■all the debts of the company. So that the only points to be decided are>, first, whether the obligation which the complainant sued on is a valid debt of the company; and, second, whether the circumstances exist which, under the provisions of the charter, make the stockholders liable for the debts of the company. It is, therefore, wholly immaterial whether the stockholders were liable to assessments on their stock, in virtue of the failure of the subscriptions to amount to $60,000, except so far as such failure may, in law, be an obstacle to the due organization of the company, and the creation by it of the debt sought to be enforced.

In charters which are mere propositions for the organization of a corporation, and which require certain acts to be performed precedent to the existence of the corporation, no corporation can exist, and of course no corporate act can be performed, till these conditions have been complied with. In all such cases, where a certain amount is named in the charter as necessary to be subscribed as the capital stock of the company, such subscription is regarded as a condition precedent to the [739]*739existence of the corporation, unless otherwise provided in the charter. Persons, therefore, who subscribe for stock under such a charter have a right to assume that they will not be called upon to pay until the amount named in the charter shall be subscribed; and, accordingly, in that class of charters it has been held that subscribers for stock are not liable to assessments on their stock until the full amount of the subscription has been made. But this rule does not apply if there be any thing in the charter which shows a right in the corporation to make the assessments before the full amount of the stock is subsci’ibed, as was decided in Selma and Marion Railroad Company v. Anderson, 51 Miss. 829.

The chai’ter of this company is not of that character. By the first section of it, it is provided that the twenty-one persons named in it, “ and all others who are now, or may hereafter become, associated with them, and their successors and assigns, be, and they ai’e hereby, ci’eated a body politic and corporate, under the name and style of the Perkinsville Manufacturing Company,” etc. This was no proposition to create a corporation upon the performance of precedent conditions, but it was itself the creation of a corporation, requiring no other act to be performed bjr the corporators than their acceptance of the chai’ter; and this, even, was unnecessary, if, as it is probable, the corporators had applied for the grant of the charter, and thus accepted it in advance. Action under the charter would be an acceptance of it, and hence there never could be any question as to the existence and due organization of the corporation, when determining upon the validity of a corporate act done within its charter powers; for the performance of the act itself would be an acceptance of the charter.

The distinction between the two classes of charters is thus seen to be, that in the first class the charter is a mere permission on the part of the Legislature for the formation of a corporation, upon the doing of certain acts prescribed in the charter as precedent conditions, and, as a necessary result, no corporate act can be done until these conditions have been [740]*740performed, except such as may be expressly permitted by the charter ; and as to those acts, it would be considered that the corporation had an existence before its full investiture with its corporate franchises. In the latter class, in which is this company, the corporation is in existence, for all the purposes of its creation, from the beginning, except so far as there may be restraints placed on it by the charter, either expressly or by plain implication.

As the bill alleges that the $60,000 of stock was subscribed before the execution of the obligation sued on, it is unnecessary for us to decide whether the charter so far restricts the power of the corporation to make contracts within the scope and purpose for which the charter was granted, as to prohibit the making of this contract until such subscription is made.

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Bluebook (online)
56 Miss. 733, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/perkins-v-sanders-miss-1879.