Sherman v. Smith

185 Iowa 654
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedOctober 25, 1918
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 185 Iowa 654 (Sherman v. Smith) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sherman v. Smith, 185 Iowa 654 (iowa 1918).

Opinion

Salinger, J.

1 Corporations • otiíer than3 ior money-The statute requires a permission from the executive council if it be proposed to issue stock shares for something other than cash. It attaches certain consedaence8 for so selling without Such permiss*01b an(l affixes a penalty where corporation officers make false certificates. Chapter 104, Section 4, Acts of the Thirty-third General Assembly (Section 1641-d, Code Supplement, 1913) ; Sections 1641-b, 1641-e, 1641-f, Code Supplement, 1913. Plaintiff filed a certificate which stated falsely that stock had been paid for in money.' No permission ivas had to issue for anything but money. Shares of this stock are the sole consideration for plaintiff’s notes. And appellees assert that, because of the statute violations aforesaid, said shares are aliso[656]*656lutelj null and void, and that, therefore, the notes are wholly unsupported by any consideration.

This argument necessitates a fuller analysis of the statute, or rather, of its penalties. The said act of the thirty-third general assembly provides that the capital stock of -any corporation issued in violation of the terms and provisions of statutes on this matter shall be void, and that, in suit brought by the attorney general on behalf of the state, a decree of cancellation shall be entered ; and, if the corporation has -received any money or thing of value for the stock, same shall be returned to the one from whom it was received. Section 3641-e is that any corporation violating the provisions of the chapter shall, on application of the attorney general, on behalf of the state, be dissolved, its affairs wound up, and its assets distributed among the guiltless stockholders; Section 1641-f, that any representative of a corporation, or any officer or agent thereof, who violates any of the provisions of the chapter, shall, on conviction, suffer fine or imprisonment.

[657]*6572. Words and phrases : “void” and “voidable.” [656]*656We are of opinion that, when the statutes are read together, as they should be, it was not the legislative intention to make stock issued under the conditions at bar ipso facto void, but to make violations of this chapter a cause for having the stock cancelled at the suit of the attorney general, and to inflict other punishments for the violation, which, however, do not include that the stock issue shall be void, instead of voidable. The failure to have the approval of the executive council lias been dealt with in this court, and it was held, in First Nat. Bank v. Fulton, 156 Iowa 734, that the clear purpose of the particular statute provision dealing with this point was “to protect the corporation, as such, against the issue of its corporate stock in payment for property or services or other things at fictitious value.” And it is expressly ruled that a note given [657]*657for corporate stock issued in violation of this provision maybe collected. We liave not had occasion to deal with the other violation — the false certificate. But in the law generally, the words “void” and “voidable” are frequently used by legislatures interchangeably ; and where the word “void” is used to secure a right to or confer a benefit on the public, it will, as a rule, be held to mean null and incapable of confirmation ; but, if used respecting the rights of individuals capable of protecting themselves, it will often be held to mean voidable. See Van Shaack v. Robbins, 36 Iowa 201, and cases cited; and numerous authorities to like effect may be found in our own reports, — more, that so hold as to clauses in insurance policies which provide for their becoming void upon certain contingencies. In Toledo, St. L. & K. C. R. Co. v. Continental Trust Co., 95 Fed. 497, the court construed a statute that all stock, bonds, or securities of a railroad company purchased of the company by a director thereof for less than par value should be null and void, and held that, because the purpose of the statute was the protection of the corporation, the word “void” should be construed to mean “voidable.” In Matter of New York & L. I. Bridge Co. v. Smith, 148 N. Y. 540 (42 N. E. 1088), an act incorporating a bridge company provided that the construction of a certain bridge should be begun within two years and be continued without unreasonable delay until completed, and that otherwise, the act and all rights and privileges granted thereby “shall be null and void.” It was held that “null and void” here meant voidable. Against this, we are cited to 7 Oyc. 745, which is, “Commercial paper cannot be based on any consideration which is a violation of an express statutory provision.” This.does not quite meet the situation. The consideration here Avas shares of stock. They had infirmities for Avhich they might, on proper action by the attorney general, ha\-e been cancelled, and, after be[658]*658ing cancelled, they would have furnished no consideration. But, while the shares were issued without complying with all statute directions on the subject, they were still shares of stock whose validity might never be attacked by the auihorities of the state. The shares themselves were not a violation of law, say, like larceny. To illustrate, a note given for the transfer of a note whose consideration was furnishing game killed in violation of the game laws would not failed consideration on the ground that the note transferred was itself a transgression of the statute. The maker might choose to pay it. On the other hand, a note given for services in killing game in defiance of the game law would be vulnerable to a plea of want of consideration; for the very plea would be a tenable resistance to paying.. On the whole, we are inclined to hold that consideration for the notes in suit is not lacking because some statute provisions were disregarded or violated in the issuance of the stock.

1-a

3. Principal and SURETY: judgment_ against pvmeipal binding on surety. Be that as it may, the trial court gave the plaintiff judgment on the note against the principal debtor, Smith. From this action no one has appealed, and all that this action necessarily involves is thé law of the case, though the case is reviewable here ; ° novo. Babcock v. City of Des Moines, 180 Iowa 1120. As to Smith, then, it is settled that the stock furnished a sufficient consideration. But it appears clearly, Smith was paA-tioeps crimims, and the judgment against him might rest on that fact, and, therefore, be not necessarily a finding that the stock was good consideration, despite the law violations involved in its issuance. But there are at least two reasons why this will not avail the appellees: While, because Smith was partioeps ci’iminis, he can have no affirmative relief by asserting his own wrong, if the stock was void for criminality Smith could successfully defend against a note based on such stock only, and [659]*659have purely defensive relief, even though he participated in the crime. Therefore, a judgment against Smith on the note is, of necessity, a finding binding, on all parties before the court that the stock constitutes a valid consideration, even though they were not adversative, and were on the same side. Smith v. Cretors, 181 Iowa 189, and cases cited.

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185 Iowa 654, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sherman-v-smith-iowa-1918.