Wright v. Lewis

158 A. 704, 161 Md. 674, 1932 Md. LEXIS 80
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedFebruary 3, 1932
Docket[Nos. 63, 64, October Term, 1931.]
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 158 A. 704 (Wright v. Lewis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wright v. Lewis, 158 A. 704, 161 Md. 674, 1932 Md. LEXIS 80 (Md. 1932).

Opinion

*677 Bond, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The trustees in bankruptcy of the Eastern Shore Brokerage & Commission Company^ a corporation, now, after answers were filed to their bill of complaint which was upheld in the case of Wright v. Lewis, 149 Md. 71, 130 A. 911, and after testimony was taken, have obtained a decree compelling the appellants, as subscribers to the stock of the corporation, to pay unpaid portions of the pax value of the stock. And the principal question is whether the appellants did become subscribers to the extent of the amounts unpaid. They were all found listed on the records of the corporation as subscribers in the amounts contended for, and correspondence and other documentary evidence found in the corporation’s possession showed payments by them of calls for percentages of the amounts listed, and references by them to their subscriptions, all without any dispute of the correctness of the total amounts for which, on the corporation’s books, they appeared to have subscribed, but the method followed in procuring subscriptions is shown to have been informal in some respects, and understandings and expéctations are urged as rendering the subscriptions incomplete, and there are questions of conditions attached to subscriptions and not performed on behalf of the corporation.

The corporation was formed under the- General Incorporation Law of Maryland in March of 1919, and began business about a month later. Its purpose, as stated in the articles of incorporation, included specifically, among others, those of carrying on a general commission and brokerage business, and buying and selling, importing, exporting, trading and dealing in, canned, dried and preserved fruits and vegetables and all other food products. It appears from the evidence, however, that the primary purpose in the minds of the promoters and subscribers was that of carrying on the brokerage and commission business, selling the products, of canners of fruits and vegetables. And it was contemplated that subscribers to the stock should be procured chiefly from among persons interested in the canning industry, most of whom would sell their products through the corporation. But there was no restric *678 tion of the business to> that of brokerage and commission transactions until April 19th, 1920, when at a meeting of stockholders it was formally resolved that the company should not buy any canned goods or other products for its own account, for profit or otherwise, except as might be deemed necessary by the executive committee to avoid loss. Hp to- that time the company had dealt in canned goods for its own account, and had sustained losses from which it never recovered.

It is questioned, first, whether it has been sufficiently .shown that the corporation became insolvent, so that recourse against the subscribers to the stock was justified. Code, art. 28, sec. 77. But on this we have met with no difficulty. We find from the testimony that the trustees made all due efforts to collect the assets, and that they were able to collect only $463.09 in all, and the claims filed against the bankrupt estate aggregate $28,260.39.

Whether the defendants did subscribe to the shares with which they are charged on the corporation records is, first of all, a question of completion of a contract to take so many shares. The total authorized capital stock was $100,000 in 1,000 shares of $100 each. There were no written signed subscriptions, but none were necessary to constitute complete subscriptions. Cantor v. Baltimore Overall Co., 121 Md. 65, 87 A. 1115; Musgrave v. Morrison, 54 Md. 161, 165; 2 Fletcher, Corporations, 1181, 1189. A list of probable subscribers was made up by the promoters of the enterprise, proportioned somewhat to the amount of business that each might be expected to have with the corporation, and the officers, or others who had already subscribed, solicited subscriptions of those not yet included. From the list so made up a stock journal was opened, and the payments were entered as made. It was generally assumed that there would be a demand for all the stock which the company might need to have subscribed, and that, if any person approached for a subscription should decline to take the number of shares allotted to him, all that he rejected could easily be placed among other persons. Ho one was to be permitted to take more than *679 stock to the par value of $5,000. In all, stock to the par value of $68,000 was put out, and appears on the stock journal as subscribed to. The promoters did not anticipate a need for more than half of the amount of money represented by so many shares, and to' expressions of hesitation by some of those approached for subscriptions assurances of some kind seem to have been given. Many of the defendants testified that they were given options or privileges, but they differ as to the terms of the options or privileges, some saying that they were to make only partial payments on fixed numbers of shares, and some that they were to take no fixed numbers finally, at the time of subscribing, but were to decide later how many they would take, up to the limit of the numbers -stated on the list of subscriptions. Hone objected to the listing of their names for the numbers of shares stated, and none later failed to accept the allotted numbers as the proper basis of payments of percentages called for. On the contrary, all of them, with a few exceptions, definitely and clearly calculated their liabilities on the basis of the number of shares allotted, many referring to their subscriptions as for so many shares. The few who did not accept the number as listed have been hold in the decree only for the number for which they did pay, if any. 'So far as the records of the corporation and the letters in its file show, all of the defendants agreed with the facts as now found by the lower court.

There are thirty defendants and appellants, counting partnerships as single subscribers, and twenty of them were present and taking part at a meeting of stockholders on May 26th, 1919, when it was voted that “the stock be issued full for the amount subscribed to each subscriber and ten per cent, be paid in cash and the remainder be paid for by non-interest bearing notes on demand and stock held on collateral to said notes, said notes to be subject to call as to part payments whenever needed by the company.” And these and the remaining ten subscribers alike responded to the calls on the basis of the listed amounts. It is not clear from the testimony how far the plan of taking notes for unpaid portions was followed; seven subscribers testify to having received *680 certificates for shares to the value of the amounts paid in, half the whole par value of the allotted shares, and a little more in two instances. In the months of April to> August of 1919, calls were issued for a total of fifty per cent, of the par value of the shares listed on the books as subscribed, the first three calls for ten per cent, each, and one or two calls — the number is left uncertain — for the remaining twenty per cent. In each call, letters to the stockholders demanded the given percentage of the listed amounts of subscriptions, and in many instances the subscribers themselves described their payments as the called percentages of their subscriptions.

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Bluebook (online)
158 A. 704, 161 Md. 674, 1932 Md. LEXIS 80, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wright-v-lewis-md-1932.