Woodruff v. McDonald

33 Ark. 97
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedMay 15, 1878
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 33 Ark. 97 (Woodruff v. McDonald) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Woodruff v. McDonald, 33 Ark. 97 (Ark. 1878).

Opinion

EakiN, J.:

Appellant sued McDonald, and a number of other defendants, who had joined in the alleged purchase, from him, of certain shares of stock in the Little Rock Bridge Company; chartered by special act of the General Assembly March 5, 1867.

This act, by section 2, appointed commissioners to superintend the opening of books for stock subscriptions ; and also (when $30,000 should have been subscribed) to call a meeting for the purpose of electing five directors, to organize and conduct the affairs of the company. By section 4 it was made the duty of the President and Directors, upon the payment of the capital stock of the company, or any part thereof, to issue certificates of stock to the stockholders, specifying the number of shares to which each might, be entitled. These certificates were made transferable under such rules and regulations as the President and Directors might adopt.

The complaint set up four written obligations executed jointly by defendants, on the 14th day of January, 1873, for $1250 each; in favor of complainant, Woodruff; due respectively at 9, 15, 18 and 24 months. These notes, each, recited that they were given in part payment for the assignment and transfer to the makers, by Woodruff, without recourse, of his two hundred and fifty shares in the capital stock of the Little Rock Bridge Company.” Taken altogether, they provide that if default be made in the payment of the first, when due, all shall become payable and bear an increased rate of interest. Such default, it is alleged, was made ; and judgment demanded for the whole $5000, with interest as stipulated.

The answer of the defendants is lost; but it is here agreed to have been, substantially, the same as that set up in another case now submitted with this, and, so taken, would show, that they admitted the execution of the several agreements in writing, as alleged. But they denied that either of them had received any assignment or transfer of any shares of stock. They denied that complainant had subscribed for any shares of such stock, or had paid anything for them to the company, or in short, had any; and further denied any consideration for the notes. They charged fraud and misrepresentation upon complainant in claiming to own said shares, when that was false, and alleged that the certificates which complainant pretended to assign and transfer, and which purported to be for paid up stock, had in fact been issued by collusion between complainant and the Directors of the company, when nothing had been paid thereon.

The case was submitted to the court, without a jury, which found for the defendants, and rendered judgment against plaintiff for costs. Motion for a new trial overruled and appeal granted.

The bill of exceptions shows that the court found the following facts:

First — The passage of the special act of incorporation approved March 5th, 1867.

Second — A book purporting to be the record book of the company, showing that the original stock had been taken by plaintiff and others named, each taking $25,000 of eapital stock. The entry, to this effect, was in the handwriting of Peter Hanger, one of the Commissioners to open books, and signed by plaintiff and A. M. Woodruff, two others of said Commissioners. The subscribers of stock did not subscribe in this booh, but had affixed their signatures to a form of subscription on a loose paper, which had been kept in the book, and passed with the book into the hands of defendants, but was not now produced. There was no proof that the Commissioners were qualified as such.

Third — Certificates of stock were issued on the 30th of May, 1867, to those who were shown by the books to have been subscribers.

Fourth — A Board of Directors of said company was organized and proceeded to do business.

Fifth — No part of stock was ever paid in.

Sixth — The note in suit was given as part payment for a transfer of said stock. The defendants bought all of the stock at the same time, knowing that nothing had been paid on the subscription — and for the avowed purpose of getting the fi-anchise of the company. They paid for the whole in cash $2500, and gave notes for the remainder. The whole purchase price amounted to $25,000. The:certificates were regularly transferred at the time of the sale. The defendants expressed the intention to go on with the company, and did actually act afterwards in an assumed corporate capacity, but after a while ceased and allowed the privileges of the charter to expire.

Upon this state of facts plaintiffs asked the court to declare the law to be, that there was a consideration sufficient to uphold the contract sued on, and that the finding should be for the plaintiff. This the court refused to do, but found as a conclusion of law: “ That said company was never legally organized, that the said certificates of stock were void, and that there was a total want of consideration to uphold the notes sued on, and that the finding should be for defendants.” To this refusal and declaration, the plaintiff excepted, and, as no evidence is brought up, this is the only matter now presented to this court upon appeal.

It is the prevailing doctrine of the Federal and State courts, in some of which it is fixed b}r statute, and in most adopted as resting upon reason and sound principle, that the finding of a court sitting without a jury, is in the nature of a special verdict, and conclusive as to the facts of the case, where the evidence is not set forth in full and exceptions taken to the findings as not supported by evidence. This court has recognized this practice in the case of Obermier & Co. v. Carr, Thompson & Co., 25 Ark., 562.

The written obligations import a consideration, and upon the issues made, the burden was on defendants to show that there was none. See Richardson v. Comstock for authorities collected, 21 Ark., 69. Do the facts, as found, show that?

This is not like a case of an action by the company against a subscriber to enforce payment of his subscription. In such case, if there be anything so irregular, informal, defective, or illegal in the subscription, that the company itself would not be bound if it had chosen to repudiate it, it might perhaps be well contended that for want of mutuality the contract was void. Nor is this like a case of a proceeding against the company for an abuse of its powers, or for acting without power, or in an unauthorized manner. Such proceedings are on behalf of the State, and in many cases the State alone can proceed to have the acts of corporations declared void.

The question here is, did the defendants acquire by the contract any advantages they would not have had without it, or did the plaintiff suffer any inconvenience, detriment, or loss. In either case the consideration would be good, and in an action at law, its adequacy is immaterial.

It appears from the facts, found by the court, that the subscriptions were made and signed upon a loose sheet of paper, which was put in a bound book appropriated to the records of the company, and the contents of the paper, with names and amounts of the subscribers were entered in the book, by the Commissioners appointed to open books. This was a sufficient compliance with the statute. The subscriptions do not appear to be invalid, and the burden of showing that, if true, was upon the defendants.

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Bluebook (online)
33 Ark. 97, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/woodruff-v-mcdonald-ark-1878.