Weeks v. Silver Islet Consolidated Mining Co.

23 Jones & S. 1, 8 N.Y. St. Rep. 110
CourtThe Superior Court of New York City
DecidedJune 14, 1887
StatusPublished

This text of 23 Jones & S. 1 (Weeks v. Silver Islet Consolidated Mining Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering The Superior Court of New York City primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Weeks v. Silver Islet Consolidated Mining Co., 23 Jones & S. 1, 8 N.Y. St. Rep. 110 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1887).

Opinion

By the Court.—O’Gorman, J.

The action was tried at special term, and its main purpose was to obtain a decree cancelling the forfeiture of plaintiff’s 6,523 shares of the capital stock in the defendant corporation, because of his failure to pay assessments on said stock, and permitting him to redeem the stock so forfeited on his payment of the amounts due on such assessments with interest.

It is not alleged in the case on appeal that all the evidence received at the trial is set forth in the case, and therefore the findings of fact made by the learned trial judge must be assumed to have been supported by competent and sufficient evidence. From these findings of fact, it appears that plaintiff, before November, 1881, had purchased in the open market, and was, since then, the owner of 6,523 shares of the capital stock in the defendant company, which is a corporation duly created and organized by and under the laws of this state, with a capital of one million dollars, divided into 40,000 shares. The plaintiff paid, in common with the other stockholders, eight assessments on his shares. He did not pay an assessment of one dollar per share duly called for by the corporation and due on May 1, 1884, being the ninth regular assessment, and he did not pay another assessment of one dollar per share, duly called for by the companjq and payable on November 1,1884, being the tenth assessment. As to the former of these calls, on March 8, 1884, the defendant company caused to be served on plaintiff a notice in the following words : “New York, March 15,1884.—Notice is hereby given that the directors of this company, by authority specially conferred by the shareholders, hereby call for a 6 contri[10]*10bution or assessment ’ of one dollar per share, payable on the first day of May next. Stockholders are requested to read and conform to the stipulation on their share certificates, as failure to pay is without remedy. Interest at the rate of seven per cent, per annum will be allowed on payment made prior to 1st May.—B. E. Strong, Vice President.” About- April 15, 1884, a further notice was sent by defendant corporation to plaintiff, which was in these words: “New York, April 15, 1884.—Stockholders are reminded that after May 1, next, all certificates for shares, on which the contribution or assessment then due is unpaid, will be i null and void,’ pursuant to stipulation, indorsed on all certificates, and that the directors and company will be powerless to restore' any interest to delinquent shareholders. —B. E. Strong, Vice President. N. B. As a matter of form, the above reminder is sent to every stockholder of record; therefore, to holders ivho have paid the ‘ contribution or assessment ’ due as above on their stock, this will not be considered a notice of delinquency.” As to the latter of these calls, being for payment of an assessment on November 1, 1884, the defendant company also caused notices to be served on the plaintiff, in one of which, dated September 15, 1884, was included the following statement: “ This notice does not apply to the following certificates, which are already void for non-payment of an assessment due .May 1, last;” and the notice also contained a list of certificates of stock so forfeited, including the delinquent shares of the plaintiff. And thenceforth in all communications from the company to the plaintiff, his said delinquent shares were treated as having been forfeited. Neither of these assessments was ever paid by the plaintiff. On September 18, 1884, plaintiff was notified that all of the stock forfeited for non-payment of these assessments would be offered for sale on November 7, 1884, at a price not less than the sum due thereon and interest; and that parties desiring to re-acquire their interests could have [11]*11no preference upon offers for stock in excess of the minimum rate therein fixed, of §2.05 a share. The company derived its authority to make these calls and serve these notices on stockholders, from an agreement between it and them, set forth below. When the plaintiff purchased his stock in the company, he received a certificate therefor, in the same words and to the same tenor and effect as all the certificates given by the company to all others of their stockholders. On each of these certificates the following words were indorsed: u The capital stock of this company, having been issued full paid for property, pursuant to law, this certificate is issued and received with the understanding, and the holder hereby stipulates, that the directors of this company may from time to time, but at intervals of not less than six months, make calls on certificate holders for contributions or assessments, of not more than one dollar each per share, and to an amount not exceeding ten dollars per share in the aggregate. The payment of such calls to be optional with the holder, but the failure to pay any such call when due and payable—time being of the essence of this stipulation—shall be, and be taken to be, a relinquishment by the holder of the shares on which payment shall so fail to be made, and this certificate, or any interest thereunder in regard to such shares, shall be null and void.” On or about September 15, 1884, and November 7,1884, and subsequently, the defendant company assumed to forfeit plaintiff’s stock for non-payment of these assessments, and on the latter day advertised a sale of all its delinquent stock, including all the stock of the plaintiff, at a minimum price of §2.05 per share, but none of the plaintiff’s shares ¡was then or since then ever sold by the company. Adjournments of this threatened sale took place from time to time. On January 19 and 20, 1885, plaintiff requested from the company, through its then president, an adjournment of the sale of his delinquent stock, which sale had been previously adjourned to January 20,1885, [12]*12and plaintiff then received from the company, acting through its then president, who was also its chief executive officer, the promise and assurance that the sale of the plaintiff’s delinquent stock should be kept alive and adjourned from time to time, until plaintiff’s arrangements were completed to protect his stock; and that plaintiff should have full and ample notice of any sale or of any adjournment affecting his stock or of anything affecting his stock. Plaintiff believed and relied on these promises and assurances. He did not subsequently receive from the company any notice of any sale or adjournment of sale of his delinquent stock; but he did. receive, in answer to his telegram to the president, a letter written by the secretary of the company to the effect that, at the request of plaintiff, the sale of the delinquent stock which had been rendered null and void for his non-payment of assessments, was further adjourned to the 20th of January, 1885. In June, 1886, he made formal protest, in writing, against any forfeiture of his stock as illegal, and against any transfer of the same. Plaintiff never made any tender to the company of the amounts due and unpaid on account of these two assessments, or either of them, and tiffs action was begun by him on July 16, 1886.

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

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
23 Jones & S. 1, 8 N.Y. St. Rep. 110, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/weeks-v-silver-islet-consolidated-mining-co-nysuperctnyc-1887.