Sarbach v. Kansas Fiscal Agency Co.

122 P. 113, 86 Kan. 734, 1912 Kan. LEXIS 371
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedMarch 9, 1912
DocketNo. 17,489
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 122 P. 113 (Sarbach v. Kansas Fiscal Agency Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sarbach v. Kansas Fiscal Agency Co., 122 P. 113, 86 Kan. 734, 1912 Kan. LEXIS 371 (kan 1912).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

West, J.:

The Interstate Fiscal Agency Company was organized to sell insurance and proceeded to sell stock in its own company. In March, 1907, a dividend of 18 per cent was paid and in September following a dividend of 22 per cent. On the 5th of April the in-tervenor subscribed for one hundred shares, signingthe following receipt, April 9:

“I hereby acknowledge receipt of Certificate No. 330 for 100 shares of the capital stock of the Interstate Fiscal Agency Company purchased by me on the 5th day of April, 1907, and herewith authorize the Secretary or President of the Company to receipt the stock book for said certificate.”

On September 2, 1907, the intervenor receipted for $156.50 being a 22 per cent semiannual dividend “on Certificate No. 330, for 100 shares of the capital stock of said Company owned by me Aug. 15, 1907.” When the stock was subscribed for in April the following paper was given the intervenor by the agent of the company:

“It is agreed hereby between The Interstate Fiscal Agency Company and T. A. McNeal that his note given in payment for stock shall not be discounted before maturity thereof and that if at' any time said T. A. McNeal for any reason desires to surrender stock certificate he may do so and receive his note back, together’ with any profit that might accrue in the re[736]*736placing for said stock, also any money he may have paid on said note.”

The charter authorized the company to deal in its own stock. Before its maturity the note was negotiated and the intervenor was compelled to pay it. The company, on petition of certain stockholders, was placed in the hands of a receiver, being insolvent and the venture having been substantially a failure. The petition alleged, among other things, fraudulent misrepresentations on the part of the officers and that none of the money paid for stock went into the treasury but that it was appropriated by the president and his associates to their own use except a small portion used to pay dividends. The prayer was that an account be taken, that the affairs .be wound up, that a receiver be appointed, and for general relief. A receiver was appointed and now has in his hands about $1400. The ■intervenor filed his petition setting up that his purr chase of the stock was conditional and that his note was to be surrendered if he concluded before its maturity not to take the stock, and that the company, through its agent, treated the sale as an absolute one and negotiated the note, that before its maturity the company became insolvent and practically without assets, and the capital stock entirely worthless, “or rather, it became apparent that said stock never in truth and fact had any value at any time,” and that when he demanded his money back his demand was refused to his injury $1500, praying for a judgment in his favor and the allowance of the sum of $1500 as a just claim and that the same be paid out of the funds in the possession of the receiver to the intervenor or his-just proportion thereof with other allowed claims, with interest. The trial court decided against the in-tervenor and he appeals.

The question presented is whether the collateral agreement to take back the stock and not to negotiate the note before maturity is such a valid one as en[737]*737titles the intervenor to the relief prayed for. The receiver insists that the transaction shows a bona fide subscription for the stock, that the receipt therefor and the subsequent receipt for the dividend thereon are proof that the stock was issued and operated as a recommendation to other subscribers or victims, and that the collateral agreement was void and that the intervenor as against the other stockholders of the insolvent and defunct corporation i's not in equity entitled to the preference sought.

It is urged by the intervenor that the transaction was legal and that he is entitled to receive his money back from the company which negotiated his note in violation of its collateral agreement. It is argued that he did not become a stockholder but only gave a conditional subscription for stock amounting to an option. We are unable to take this view of the matter. The receipt itself indicates a purchase of stock, the receipt for. the dividend expressly states that it is for stock owned by the intervenor, and the collateral agreement states that his note “given in payment for stock” shall not be discounted before maturity and that if at any time the intervenor for any reason “desires to surrender stock certificate he may do so.” The most that can be said about the transaction is that it was a purchase of stock and the payment therefor accompanied by a collateral agreement to repurchase in case the subscriber should desire the company to do so. But until such desire was manifested there can be no question that he was in fact a stockholder to all intents and purposes.

Ophir Consol. Mines Co. v. Brynteson, 143 Fed. 829, was a case in which the company gave the subscriber a writing stating that he had paid $15,000 for 50,000 shares of its stock issued to him and binding itself to return the money with interest eighteen months after date if he was not satisfied with the investment. The subscriber sued for the return of his money and the writing was held to be a “sale or return contract” [738]*738(syl. ¶ 2) and valid as between the subscriber and the company. But the rule is well settled that a subscription upon condition subsequent ordinarily renders the subscriber liable as a stockholder and the company liable on the collateral agreement, and this is the only rule which could give effect to the plain language used in this case.

“A subscription on a condition subsequent contains a contract between the corporation and the subscriber, whereby the corporation agrees to do some act, thereby combining two contracts, one the contract of subscription, the other an ordinary contract of the corporation to perform certain- specified acts. The subscription is valid and enforceable whether the conditions are performed or not. The condition subsequent is the same as a separate collateral contract between the corporation and the subscriber for breach of which an action for damages is the remedy.” (Cook on the Law of Stocks and Stockholders, § 78.)

Thompson in his work on corporations calls such a transaction a “subscription upon special terms” (1 Thomp. on.Corp., 2d ed., § 625) and says:

“On the other hand, a subscription on special terms is an absolute subscription which makes the subscriber a stockholder and renders him liable as such from the time when his subscription is accepted, whether the conditions are performed or not. The special terms attached to a subscription are regarded as independent stipulations, the remedy for the breach of which is an action against the corporation for damages.” (1 Thomp. on Corp., 2d ed., § 626.)

The rule thus stated applies when the condition is contained in the contract of subscription. Herd it was embodied in a contract separate from the subscription and separate from the receipt for the stock. It is, therefore, the case of a stockholder claiming to be damaged by the company’s failure to purchase back the stock owned by him, or, to put it in another way, by its failure to purchase such stock and repay him therefor after having negotiated his note which he was com[739]*739pelled to pay.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
122 P. 113, 86 Kan. 734, 1912 Kan. LEXIS 371, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sarbach-v-kansas-fiscal-agency-co-kan-1912.