Washer v. Smyer

211 S.W. 985, 109 Tex. 398, 4 A.L.R. 1320, 1919 Tex. LEXIS 72
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedApril 17, 1919
DocketNo. 2931.
StatusPublished
Cited by58 cases

This text of 211 S.W. 985 (Washer v. Smyer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Washer v. Smyer, 211 S.W. 985, 109 Tex. 398, 4 A.L.R. 1320, 1919 Tex. LEXIS 72 (Tex. 1919).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice PHILLIPS

delivered the opinion of the court.

The case presents the question of whether a note given a corporation and accepted by it in payment for shares of its capital stock is enforcible in the hands of a bona fide holder for value, who acquired iti before maturity in due course of business and without notice of the nature of the transaction in which it was given.

The note involved here was given by J. F. Smyer to the Prudential Life Insurance Company of Texas in payment for shares of its capital stock for which a stock certificate was issued to him by the company. *403 It was secured by a valid first mortgage lien upon land admittedly worth double its amount. With the lien, it was transferred before maturing by the insurance company to Nat M. Washer in due course of business' in part payment for a building conveyed by Washer to the company. Washer is an innocent holder. The suit was by Smyer against the insurance company and Washer to cancel the note, the lien, and the stock, and to recover from the insurance company an amount paid by him as interest on the note, upon the ground that the entire transaction between himself and the insurance company wherein the note was given and accepted in payment for the stock, was void under the Constitution. By cross-action, Washer sought recovery on. the note and for the foreclosure of his lien. The trial court granted Smyer’s prayer for the recovery of the interest payment against the insurance company, and for the cancellation of the stock certificate, but rendered judgment against him, and the insurance company as endorser, in Washer’s favor upqn the note and for foreclosure of the lien, with a judgment over in Smyer’s favor 'against the insurance company for any amount he might have to pay under Washer’s judgment, including the amount realized at the foreclosure sale. The Court of Civil Appeals held that the stock transr action was void, as Smyer contended. It rendered judgment for Smyer both against the insurance company and Washer for cancellation of the note and lien, and against the insurance company for the “interest payment. It denied all recovery by Washer except against the insurance company on its endorsement of the note. Its judgment did not cancel the shares of stock issued to Smyer, but left them untouched. We granted a writ of error both to Washer and the insurance company.

The Constitution declares:

“No corporation shall issue stock or bonds except for money paid, labor done or property actually received, and all fictitious increase of stock or indebtedness shall be void.” Art. 12, sec. 6.

The effect of this provision upon the stock'transaction between Smyer and the insurance company is decisive of the case.

It is clear, in our opinion, that the note of a stock subscriber accepted by a corporation in payment for the stock issued him is not to be regarded as “property actually received” within the meaning of the constitutional provision. In such a transaction the subscriber does not pay anything into the treasury of the corporation. He merely gives the corporation his promise to pay. His indebtedness to the corporation arising from the stock subscription is merely evidenced in a different form. True, it is placed in a negotiable form, but in no actual sense is the liability to the corporation extinguished. It is only differently expressed. The transaction is in fact but in the nature of a novation. The corporation has received, at last, only another debt of the subscriber. It has been paid nothing. The real result is that the subscriber has secured an extension of the time of payment, and the corporation has received but a postponement of its right to demand payment. The *404 capital stock of a corporation should represent something other than the mere obligations of its subscribers to pay for their stock.

Undeniably, in the broad sense a note is property in the hands of the payee. So, in a literal sense, is everything property which is capable of ownership. All forms of choses in action are property in the same sense,—the right to recover a debt, the right to recover damages for breach of a contract, unsatisfied judgments, and other similar kinds of actionable demands. But the framers of the Constitution never intended that property of that nature should constitute the capital of a corporation. The term “property” was used in' this' section of the Constitution in no such sense. It means property readily capable of being applied to the debts of the corporation. As a rule, it should be property of the kind adapted to the charter uses of the -corporation and which it may legally acquire. There are some classes of property which are so. staple in character and so easily convertible into money as to be in actual commerce the ready equivalent of money, and it is possible that a corporation in its formative period would be authorized to receive such property in payment for stock though not, in a strict sense, adapted to its purposes. The different forms of valuable property and the different purposes for which corporations may he created, make it impossible to lay down other than general rules upon the subject.

The integrity of a corporation and the interests of the publici demand, however, that the assets of a corporation consist of something more than its stockholders’ debts. Its capital can not be thus constituted, and, therefore, it can not accept a stock subscriber’s note in payment for his stock. There is authority opposed to this holding, as there is authority which supports it. But it seems to us no authority is needed to establish it. -

Whether the same rule should apply to a subscriber’s note secured by a first mortgage lien upon land worth double the amount of the note, given in payment for stock in a life insurance company, such securities being a form of property in which by express statutory authority such a corporation may invest its-capital stock, is a question which it is not necessary that we here decide.

For the purposes of this case the note and lien given by Smyer to the insurance company may be treated as not constituting property which may be accepted by such a corporation in payment for its stock, yet under the Constitution they are clearly enforcible in a bona fide holder’s hands. This proposition is demonstrable from the language of the constitutional provision and the established rule of decision as to the effect of like prohibitions upon negotiable' instruments in the hands of innocent holders.

There is no declaration in the constitutional provision that a transaction in which something other than money, property, or labor is received in payment for the corporation’s stock shall be utterly void. It prohibits such a transaction and, therefore, makes it unlawful, but that is the extent to which it goes. If a security he accepted in payment *405 for the stock', such, for instance, as a subscriber’s note, which is not property for such a purpose, the Constitution does not say either that it, or the stock issued for it, shall be void. The acceptance of the note in payment for the stock and the issuance of the stock are only interdicted. The word “void” is used but once in the constitutional provision, and that, it is to he noted, is not in the clause which prohibits the issuance of stock for other than money, property or labor.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Kennard v. McCray
648 S.W.2d 743 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1983)
Emco, Inc. v. Healy
602 S.W.2d 309 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1980)
Area, Inc. v. Stetenfeld
541 P.2d 755 (Alaska Supreme Court, 1975)
Vermilion Parish Peat Co. v. Green Belt Peat Moss Co.
465 S.W.2d 950 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1971)
McCarty v. Langdeau
337 S.W.2d 407 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1960)
Gurecky v. Owens
271 S.W.2d 445 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1954)
Bearden v. Nesuda
259 S.W.2d 621 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1953)
National Bond & Investment Co. v. Atkinson
254 S.W.2d 885 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1952)
Sheppard v. Lone Star Gas Co.
195 S.W.2d 1013 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1946)
Bell, SEC. of Banking v. Aubel
30 A.2d 617 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1942)
Woodson v. McAllister
119 F.2d 924 (Fifth Circuit, 1941)
Arndt v. Abbott
32 N.E.2d 342 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1941)
McAlister v. Eclipse Oil Co.
92 S.W.2d 545 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1936)
Ipswich Printing Co. v. Engler
259 N.W. 497 (South Dakota Supreme Court, 1935)
Martin v. Farm & Home Savings & Loan Ass'n of Missouri
81 S.W.2d 779 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1935)
Brownfield State Bank v. Hudson
73 S.W.2d 140 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1934)
Gordin v. Bank of Forest
153 So. 375 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1934)
Dallas Trust & Savings Bank v. Brashear
65 S.W.2d 288 (Texas Commission of Appeals, 1933)
Temple Trust Co. v. Stobaugh
59 S.W.2d 916 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1933)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
211 S.W. 985, 109 Tex. 398, 4 A.L.R. 1320, 1919 Tex. LEXIS 72, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/washer-v-smyer-tex-1919.