Phelan v. Hazard

19 F. Cas. 429, 5 Dill. 45
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern Missouri
DecidedJuly 1, 1878
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 19 F. Cas. 429 (Phelan v. Hazard) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Phelan v. Hazard, 19 F. Cas. 429, 5 Dill. 45 (circtedmo 1878).

Opinion

DILLON, Circuit Judge.

*Tbe gravamen of the plaintiff’s case is that the defendant is the holder, by transfer, of certain unpaid shares of stock in the La Motte Lead Company, and that, under the statutes of Missouri (1 Wag. St. p. 21)3, § 22), the plaintiff, as a creditor of that company (which is insolvent and dissolved), may compel the defendant to pay for the said shares held by him, or pay the balance due thereon. As between the transferrer of said shares and the corporation which issued them, it was agreed that the shares had been fully paid for by the transferrer to the company.

The charge to the jury was given without any opportunity to examine the law, and in accordance with what seemed, at the moment, to be the principle applicable, to the case as made at the trial. Mr. Broadhead’s argument, at the bar for the plaintiff, in support of the motion for a new trial, tended to shake the impressions I had at the trial; and this, in connection with the importance of the case, in the amount as well as the principles involved, has induced me to look into the matter with some care and deliberation.

[431]*431It will be observed that the petition charges no fraud in the agreement by which the corporation purchased the mining property and received a conveyance thereof, in payment for which, and as part of the same' transaction, it issued its paid-up shares of stock. The records of the corporation showed the whole transaction — that it had received and recorded a deed for the property, and paid the consideration agreed upon by the issue of full-paid certificates of stock to the vendors. This was long anterior to the creation of the indebtedness to the plaintiff’s assignor.

The plaintiff — a single creditor — does not for himself, or for himself and other creditors, file a bill to impeach as fraudulent this transaction between the corporation and the original shareholders; but he simply states that the shares of stock issued to Rowland G. Hazard have not been paid for, either by him or by the defendant, the transferee and present holder of the shares. Issue was taken on this averment, and the proof showed that the shares in question had been paid for precisely as they were originally agreed to be paid for, viz.: by a conveyance of the mining property to the corporation. This ■conveyance has been received and recorded by the corporation. Unless this agreement is rescinded or set aside for fraud, how can it be said that the stock has not been paid for? The parties have agreed that it has been paid for, and that agreement is conclusive, unless it is rescinded or impeached for fraud, and this cannot be done unless the attack is directly made. Undoubtedly, such an attack could be made while the stock was in the hands of the original takers of it; but it is not so clear that it could be made by a subsequent creditor of the corporation against, a transferee of the stock for value, who purchased the same in good faith as full-paid stock, relying upon the records of the ■corporation, which showed the shares to have been fully paid for, and the manner in which the payment had been made.

Lord Justice Mellish, in one case, seemed to be of opinion that a bona fide transferee of shares of stock which purported to be full paid, held the same exempt from a liability to be called upon to make payment therefor on the ground that .the original subscriber had not- fully paid for them. But it is not necessary, under the pleadings in this case, for us to consider or determine that •question.

The cases are numerous in which such • transactions as that which was entered into in this instance between the owmers of the mining property and the corporation which they formed have come before the courts, and, in absence of fraud, have been sustained. Pell's Case, L. R. 5 Ch. 11; In re Baglan Hall Colliery Co., Id. 346; Maynard’s Case, L. R. 9 Ch. 60; Schroder’s Case, L. R. 11 Eq. 131; Cleland's Case. L. R. 14 Eq. 387; Sichell’s Case, L. R. 3 Ch. 119; Jones' Case, L. R. 6 Ch. 48; Forbes’ Case, L. R. 5 Ch. 270; Pritchard’s Case, L. R. 8 Ch. 956; Ferrao’s Case. L. R. 9 Ch. 355; Bush’s Case, Id. 554; Dent’s Case, L. R. 8 Ch. 768; Carling’s Case, 1 Ch. Div. 115; Savage v. Ball, 17 N. J. Eq. 142; Smith v. North American Min. Co., 1 Nev. 423; Goodrich v. Reynolds, 31 Ill. 490; Spense v. Iowa Valley Construction Co., 30 Iowa, 407, 411.

The exigencies of the case now before the court do not require us to examine into the soundness or consistency of all these decisions. We shall refer to a few of them by way of illustration, and because, whatever else they hold, they clearly establish these propositions: (1) That such a transaction as that here in question is not ultra vires, and absolutely void. (2) That the contract is valid and binding upon the corporation and the original share-takers, unless it is rescinded or set aside for fraud, and that, while the contract stands unimpcached. the courts, even where the rights of creditors are involved, will treat that as a payment which the parties have agreed should be payment.

These propositions are decisive of the present case.

For the purpose above indicated, a brief statement of some of the English cases upon this subject wdll now' be given. In the origin, purposes, situation of the property, and fate of the company, the Case of Baglan Hall Colliery Co., L. R. 5 Ch. 346, is strikingly analogous to the Case of the La Motte Lead Company. In the ease just cited, nine-persons bought a moiely of a colliery from Parker for £10,000, and the ten, after working it for some time, agreed to form a company for carrying it on, and a company was accordingly registered, the memorandum of association of which was subscribed by the owners of the colliery for numbers of shares proportioned to their respective interests; the nominal amount of shares subscribed for being £20,000. The memorandum of association stated nothing as to the shares being treated as paid-up shares, but the articles of association provided that all the shares subscribed for in the memorandum should be treated as fully paid up. The colliery was made over to the company, but no other payment was made by any of the subscribers of the memorandum. No other shares than those subscribed for by the memorandum were ever allotted; and it was held (reversing the decision of Malins, vice-chancellor) that the subscribers of the memorandum of the association were not liable as contributories, for that the shares must be taken as having been fully paid up by the handing over the colliery. In pronouncing his judgment on appeal. Lord Justice Gif-fard said: “Here was a colliery in -which at first Parker was alone interested. He sold a moiety to certain gentlemen for £10,000, which was paid. The colliery was then subject to two mortgages, for £3,000 and £1,000. [432]*432The owners went on working the colliery, not very successfully, and then determined to form a limited company, in order to avoid incurring further personal liability. It was the policy of the companies act to enable this to be done, and with the soundness of that policy we have nothing to do.”

After stating that the colliery had been handed over to the company in consideration for the shares of the subscribers, the lord justice adds: “According to the decided cases, this, in the absence of fraud, was an effectual paying up of the shares in full. The test to be applied is this: Could the company, by any proceeding, have set aside the transaction by which it was arranged that the owners of the colliery were to have paid-up shares as the price of their interests in the colliery V And 1 say, on the evidence, that the company clearly could not.

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19 F. Cas. 429, 5 Dill. 45, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/phelan-v-hazard-circtedmo-1878.