Union Savings Ass'n v. Seligman

92 Mo. 635
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedApril 15, 1887
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 92 Mo. 635 (Union Savings Ass'n v. Seligman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Union Savings Ass'n v. Seligman, 92 Mo. 635 (Mo. 1887).

Opinion

Henry, J.

This is a proceeding, by motion, in the St. Louis circuit court, for execution against Seligman •as a stockholder on a judgment in favor of plaintiff, against the Memphis, Carthage & Northwestern Railroad Company, an execution having issued thereon against said company, on which a return of nulla bona was made. Defendant resisted the motion, on the ground that he was never a stockholder in said company, and this is the only question which it is necessary to consider. The cause was tried upon an agreed statement of facts, and plaintiff succeeded in his motion in the circuit court, and again in the court of appeals, to which the cause was appealed, and, from the judgment of the latter court, defendant has appealed to this court.

The facts are, substantially, the following: The Memphis, Carthage & Northwestern Railroad Company, a corporation organized under the laws of the state, with an authorized capital of ten million dollars, entered into a contract, in writing, with J. & W. Seligman, on the tenth of March, 1872, in which it was agreed that the railroad company should furnish the capital necessary to a complete preparation of the road for iron, and would execute and deposit with the Seligmans, its entire issue of first-mortgage bonds, viz.: five million dollars, and [637]*637a majority oí their capital stock, the said stock to remain in the control of the Seligmans for one year, at least. The Seligmans agreed to purchase two thousand tons of iron, under the direction of the railroad company, and,, from time to time, to make advances of cash, during the progress of the work on the road, not exceeding two hundred thousand dollars, including amount paid for iron, and to receive interest thereon at the rate of seven per cent, per annum, until reimbursed by a sale of bonds. For twelve months they were also to have the privilege of purchasing any portion of the five million dollars of bonds, at the rate of seventy cents and accrued interest, less two and a half per cent., and if more bonds were sold than enough to iron the road, they were to advance-money to purchase rolling stock, two thousand dollars-per mile, the balance to remain on deposit with them, on: interest at the rate of call loans, to pay any deficiency in the net earnings of the road to meet interest on the bonds.

If the bonds, or part of them, could not be negotiated during the next twelve months, the company was to repay them all money advanced by them, with interest at seven per cent, per annum, and two and a half per cent, commission on all bonds returned. On the first of May, 1872, the company executed a deed of trust on its railroad and appurtenances, to Jesse Seligman and John H. Stewart, as trustees to secure said bonds, and in pursuance of the agreement and an order of the board of directors of said company, a certificate for sixty thousand shares of its stock was issued to J. & W. Seligman. The stock-transfer book of the company, which it was required to keep by law, contained the list of stockholders, and the stock issued to the Seligmans was entered therein as follows:

[638]*638In March, 1873, and again in March, 1874, at an election for directors of said company, the stock held by the Seligmans was voted at the first election by one Brown, and at the second by EL T. Blow, as proxies, and at the election in 1874, Joseph Seligman, one of the firm of J. & W. Seligman, was elected a director. The plaintiff’s judgment was obtained on a note for $6,339, dated November, 1872 — after the six million dollars of stock was issued to the Seligmans, but before any other act was done by them which could possibly be relied upon as an estoppel.

The simple act of accepting that certificate of stock, under an agreement in writing, which, as also the entry of the stock in the stock-book, the other records of the company, relating to the transaction, showed that it was held by them only as collateral security, does not make them liable, as stockholders, either to the corporation or its creditors. As long as they held the stock, under that agreement, doing no other act, their liability to creditors depended upon their legal relation to the company. If stockholders, 'as between themselves and the corporation, they would be liable, as such to creditors of the corporation, otherwise, not. Burgess v. Seligman, 107 U. S. 20.

The only ground upon which the defendant can be held liable as a stockholder is that of estoppel, and the act relied upon as creating it’ is that of voting the stock at elections of directors of the company. Waiving, for the present, a discussion of the question as to the right of the. Seligmans to vote the stock, that act did not change their relation to the corporation. That was fixed by the written agreement, and the single act of voting the stock affords no ground for an inference that that agreement had been modified, and the Supreme Court of the United States, in the case of Burgess v. Seligman, supra, seems to hold that in no case can one be held as a stockholder by a creditor of the corporation, unless [639]*639the facts are such that he could be so held by the corporation itself. “ The line of authorities usually quoted to show that those who actually hold stock, and who manifest a voluntary, or intentional holding, by voting-on it [are liable, as stockholders, to creditors of the corporation] * * consists mainly of cases in which parties have been held as corporators, or associates, as between themselves and the corporation, or joint-stock association, and, as such, incidentally liable to the creditors of such companies.” I have supplied the words included in brackets in the foregoing paragraph of the opinion delivered by Mr. Justice Bradley, in Burgess v. Seligman, supra.

The cases cited in the opinion delivered by this court, in the case of Griswold v. Seligman, 72 Mo. 110, are all cases in which the facts were such that the persons sought to be charged as stockholders, were held to be stockholders as betwixt themselves and the corporation. In many of the cases, suits were instituted by the corporation against individuals, alleging that they were, and seeking to charge them as stockholders. In none of the cases cited in that opinion was there, as in this, a special agreement, showing exactly what relation the parties, alleged to be stockholders, bore to the corporation. The cases of Upton v. Triblecock, 91 U. S. 45; Sanger v. Upton, 91 U. S. 56, and Webster v. Upton, 91 U. S. 65, are all cases in which the corporation, or its assignees, asserted the liability of the defendant as a stockholder, and no cases citedinthe opinion delivered in Griswold v. Seligman, supra, in which one was held liable as a stockholder, at the suit of a creditor of the corporation, who was not, as between himself and the corporation, held to be a stockholder.

The following quotations from Lindley on Partnership are cited, with approval, in that opinion: “ Whenever a person has been treated as"a shareholder, by the company, and has acted as a shareholder, both he and [640]*640the company will be estopped from denying that he is a shareholder.” Lindley on Part. 129.

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92 Mo. 635, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/union-savings-assn-v-seligman-mo-1887.