Union Agricultural & Stock Ass'n v. Neill

31 Iowa 95
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedJanuary 28, 1870
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 31 Iowa 95 (Union Agricultural & Stock Ass'n v. Neill) 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
Union Agricultural & Stock Ass'n v. Neill, 31 Iowa 95 (iowa 1870).

Opinion

Day, J.

l. corporachangeof articie. — I. Tbe subscription of tbe defendant was made on the 26th day of October, 1867. It appeared upon tbe trial Pri°r t° this date articles of incorporation written out and signed by tbe several incorporators. Of these, article ten was as foll0WSj to wit Í '

[96]*96“ This company may elect their officers, giving three days’ notice, and commence business whenever there shall be $10,000 of the stock subscribed; which officers shall act ,until their successors have been duly elected as provided in article three, and the company shall continue and exist for the term of twenty years from January 1, 1868, subject to renewal for such longer period as may be determined'by vote of two'-thirds of the stockholders then in the company.”

After the defendant had subscribed, the articles were copied, and on the 28th day of October,the copied articles were signed and acknowledged. Before the, acknowledgment, the following changes were made, to wit: in article ten it was provided that the company should continue for the term of twenty years from .this date (the date of acknowledgment) subject to renewal by a vote of, tlvreefou/rths of the stockholders.

It is claimed that in consequence of this change the •organization to which defendant subscribed is not the one which is attempting to enforce the'subscription, and that the defendant, consequently,, is not liable to the plaintiff.

It may be admitted that a material and radical change in the objects of the • association would release the defendant from his liability upon his subscription. Hartford & N. H. R. v. Croswell, 5 Hill, 388. But the changes here made are not of such character. The first simply provides, that the organization shall continue twenty years from the 28th day of October, 1861, instead of twenty years from the 1st day of January, 1868. This amendment simply incorporates into the articles of association a condition, which, if not inserted, the law would imply.-

By section.1158 of the Revision, the duration of this corporation cannot exceed twenty years. After the lapse of that timé from its organization, it must expire by limitation of law, although the articles of incorporation provide for a longer duration; and the same is true of the change providing for rehéwal upon the vote of three-fourths instead [97]*97of two-thvrds of the stockholders. Under said section such renewal can be had only upon such three-fowrths vote.

If the change had not been made, the provision requiring a two-thirds vote would have been simply inoperative. If the articles had remained as originally drawn, or if they had been entirely silent with regard to duration and mode of renewal of the corporation, the law would have attached to them the same consequences as now. In either case the corporation would endure twenty years from the date of its organization, with a right of renewal by a vote of three-fourths of the stockholders.

It follows that the changes are entirely immaterial. The defendant could not possibly be prejudicially affected by them. They do not precipitate a call for installments' on his subscription. The original articles provide that the company should commence business when the subscription reached $10,000.

The amended articles contain the same provision. Under both, the same contingency renders defendant liable to a call for payment. In fact $10,000 had been pledged before the defendant subscribed, so that his liability to a demand for payment was created at the time of his subscription. The change being immaterial, does not exonerate defendant from his obligations. Hartford & N. H. R. v. Croswell, supra.

g. evidence: II. The plaintiff introduced R. S. Ruddick, as a witness, who referred to a conversation which he had with defendant in St. Louis, about the 15th day of October, The plaintiff then asked the following questions: “'What did defendant say to you, if any thing, respecting taking stock in the association or desiring to take stock in said association ? ” The defendant’s objection that this question was irrelevant and immaterial was overruled, and the witness answered as follows: “ Mr. Neill was at St. Louis when I went down; he asked about the general news at Keokuk; I told him the principal thing was a [98]*98stock association for the purpose of buying grounds and of holding the same; I told him the ground we talked of buying, and the price it could be bought at; I told him the amount of the stock and the number of persons who were proposing to go into it. That is about the substance of what I told him. Defendant expressed his approval of such an association; said it was a good thing, and such .a thing as we ought to have here. Defendant remarked that if the stock was not all taken that he would like to have the opportunity of taking some stock. I told him I was coming home and I would make a reservation of stock for him of $500. I told him of the different parties who had taken $500 of stock, and that is the amount he proposed to take. I am a director in this company.” Plaintiff then asked the following question: “ State what you did, if any thing, in respect to the wish expressed by the defendant, after you got home, respecting stock in the association ?” The defendant’s objection to this question, upon thé same ground as before, was overruled, and witness answered: “ I think the next day after I got home, I saw H. W..Sample, who was active in getting up this association and told him I wanted $500 of that stock for Mr. Neill; that I had seen Mr. Neill and that he, Neill, said he would take it. Mr. Sample told me to sign his name for him. I told Sample that Neill would be home in a few days and he would do it.” The admission of this testimony is assigned as error. Its connection with the'case is rather historical than otherwise. Its relevancy a,nd materiality are not very apparent, and yet, if altogether immaterial and irrelevant, it is difficult to perceive in what manner the defendant can be prejudiced thereby. If these answers had been entirely withdrawn from the jury, their finding upon the material facts would ■not have been affected. The defendant’s liability to the plaintiff grows out of his subscription. The fact that upon a prior occasion he expressed a desire to subscribe, and that this desire was communicated to the agent of the plaintiff, [99]*99neither increases nor diminishes his liability under the subscription ; nor can it be presumed that it had any controlling effect upon the minds of the jury. There is but one question upon which it can be supposed to bear, that of the alleged fraud of Sample in obtaining the subscription. But, as appellant’s counsel expressly waives a consideration of that question, we need not consider the effect of this evidence thereon.

Plaintiff also asked the following question: State when the-articles of incorporation of the Union Agricultural and Stock Association were adopted ? ” To this the defendant objected that it was irrelevant and incompetent, and that the articles themselves were the best evidence. The objection was overruled and the question answered. This ruling is assigned as error. It is a'sufficient response, to this objection that the hill of exceptions shows that the answer of the witness, so far as it refers to the time of adoption of the articles of incorporation, was by the court withdrawn from consideration of the jury.

A. M.

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31 Iowa 95, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/union-agricultural-stock-assn-v-neill-iowa-1870.