This is an action against appellants, and others not appealing, for alleged unpaid stock subscriptions. In January, 1909, the George Henseler Oil Company, a $10,000 corporation, was doing business in oils and kindred commodities in the City of St. Louis. None of these appellants were stockholders in this company. It enjoyed a lucrative business. The Mercantile Supply Company was a $50,000 corporation having $30,000 of its capital stock paid up. All of these appellants were stockholders therein. A suggestion of merger or consolidation of the two companies was made, agreed to and consummated in January and February, 1909. The Mercantile transferred all its assets and good will to the consolidated corporation, the Henseler Mercantile Oil Supply Company, for stock issued to the several shareholders thereof to the extent of $25,000. The merged or consolidated company did business with varying success until in 1914. Some time in 1912 appellant Diesing, while the corporation was solvent, disposed of his stock. Appellant Hahn disposed of all his stock to his wife, who was a defendant below, saving four shares. In March, 1914, the directors realized the company was in financial straits and attempted to settle with their creditors. As a result there was a meeting of the creditors held on the 26th day of March, 1914, when there was presented to them an expert accountant's statement of the condition of the company. It was proposed to do anything the creditors might direct. The creditors finally appointed a committee of three to determine the course to be pursued. It decided to transfer the assets and property of the company to a trustee. In the meantime the creditors had charge of the affairs of the company. They prepared a deed, named their trustee, the transfer was made to him and he took charge without bond or the taking of an inventory or appraisement of the assets and attempted to operate the business. The first two *Page 326 months he made a profit of $3,145. Thereafter the creditors enlarged the business, created various liabilities and assets began to depreciate and decrease and the liabilities increase until in October or November, 1914, when the trustee advised discontinuance, but the creditors were obdurate and a substitute trustee was appointed at the request of the Union Petroleum Company, one of the largest creditors. The new trustee attempted to operate the business until in March, 1915. The result was disastrous financially and the Union Petroleum Company applied for the appointment of a receiver, and the present plaintiff was appointed as such. According to the books of the company in March, 1914, the assets exceeded the liabilities, that is, the assets were in excess of $37,000 and the liabilities less than $34,000. During the operation of the trusteeship under the direction of the creditors the entire assets were dissipated, lost or squandered and the liabilities increased, with the result that when the receiver sold the assets on hand there was not enough to pay the liabilities incurred during the trust.
Thereafter the receiver brought this suit against the then and former stockholders for balances due on their unpaid stock.
The petition alleges the appointment of a receiver, sets forth the facts upon which the liabilities of the defendants were based, to-wit, the amounts due and unpaid by each upon their respective shares of stock, the assets on hand, the debts, the order authorizing the receiver to institute this action, the allowance of claims amounting to $27,037.94 and that there remained but $1,300 in the receiver's hands with which to pay the same, that the defendants were liable as subscribers for their unpaid stock, the incorporation of the Henseler Mercantile Oil Supply Company, that the two former corporations had been so operated that their capital stock was impaired and that on the 30th day of January, 1909, there was but $7,253.72 as assets on hand in payment of the capital stock of the Henseler Mercantile Oil Supply Company, that said articles represented $50,000 of the stock was *Page 327 paid up and all of it subscribed, that there were no assets of the value of $50,000 paid in in payment of the capital stock, and that the difference between the value of the property paid over to said corporation and the face value of the stock was therefore due.
An account was prayed to be taken of the amount due the creditors and costs and the amount paid by each of defendants on account of the subscriptions and the stock issued to them, and that judgment be entered for the amount due respectively from each of the defendants on unpaid stock and for other relief.
The answers, which were several, were, first, general denials, and, second, pleas of estoppel. Other defenses were also pleaded but the assignment of errors does not render a reference to them necessary, there being no question as to the sufficiency of the pleadings. The reply was a general denial.
A hearing was had before the court in which it was decreed that plaintiff have and recover from defendants Frederick Nobbe, Peter Hahn, Belle Gregory, Victor Diesing, James H. Roach and William Grafeman the sum of $27,037.94 and that execution issue against said defendants as follows: against Frederick Nobbe, $21,793.58; Peter Hahn, $874.06; Belle Gregory, $1748.12; Victor Diesing, $874.06; James H. Roach, $874.06; William Grafeman, $874.06.
If for any reason any one or more of said apportionments could not be made out of the defendants then such apportionment so in default was to be levied out of the property of the other defendants in proportion to their respective liabilities as hereinbefore set forth.
After unavailing motions for new trial and in arrest, this appeal was perfected.
Much of the foregoing statement, seemingly irrelevant, is inserted that a clearer understanding may be had of the grounds of appellants' defense.
Error is assigned in the trial court's holding that the receiver was not authorized to maintain this action. The attitude assumed by appellants is best stated in *Page 328 their own language, which is as follows: "Where the creditors of a financially embarrassed or insolvent corporation, after being duly advised of its condition, take over its business and assets while there is a dispute as to the amount of the liabilities and the value of the assets, without adjusting that question and also the question as to whether the assets, if disposed of and the proceeds applied to the debts, were sufficient to satisfy the debts, and they continue the business of the company after being warned by the receiver of the inadvisability of such a course and they refuse to heed his warnings and upon his resignation secure the appointment of another trustee and thereafter there is an utter failure of the business as conducted by the trustee and none of the original debts are paid but all of the assets dissipated, the creditors cannot disregard the assets they had in their possession and which they squandered or dissipated but which might have been applied by them on the liabilities, and then hold the stockholders for their unpaid stock, if there remained when the creditors took charge of the assets sufficient funds to pay the liabilities then extant."
In short, it is contended, that the receiver is but the creditors, whose conduct has been such as to estop him from prosecuting this action.
I. The right of the receiver, under the order of the court, to institute and maintain an action of the character here under review, is too well established to require discussion. [Lyons v. Corder, 253 Mo. l.c. 559 and cases.] Nor is itAction by necessary in defining the legal status of aReceiver. stockholder who has not paid for stock subscribed for by him, to say more than that the prevailing rule is that upon his having made the subscription, such a promise is implied that he will pay for the stock in full, as to authorize an action against him by the corporation or its assignee or receiver, after the conditions of the subscription have been performed, to recover the amount due and unpaid thereon. [Berry v. Rood, 168 Mo. 316; Shields v. Hobart, 172 Mo. 491.] The reason of this rule becomes apparent *Page 329 when we consider the relation which the stockholder and the receiver bear to the corporation. Upon the failure of the former to pay a stock subscription there is created a liability on his part in the nature of debt to the corporation; and the latter by his appointment being invested with the title of the property and the rights of action of the corporation, becomes the proper party to enforce obligations due to it by legal proceedings. [Coleman v. Hagey, 252 Mo. 102; Thompson v. Greeley, [07 Mo. l.c. 590.]
II. This brings us to the affirmative defense that the receiver is estopped from prosecuting this action on account of the conduct of the directors. Preliminary to a consideration of this contention it is not inappropriate to refer briefly to what has been declared necessary to constitute estoppel. OurEstoppel. reports, as well as those of other jurisdictions, are replete with definitions of this defense. Among others are the following: A preclusion in law which prevents a man alleging or denying a fact in consequence of his own previous act, allegation or denial of a contrary tenor. [Reid's Admr. v. Benge, 112 Ky. l.c. 814, 57 L.R.A. 253; Coogler v. Rogers, 25 Fla. l.c. 873; Gavin v. Graydon, 41 Ind. l.c. 566.] A conclusive ascertainment of a fact by the parties, so that it can no longer be controverted between them. [Wilkins v. Suttles, 114 N.C. l.c. 556.] A fictitious statement treated as true. [Gen. Finan. Co. v. Liberator Bldg. Soc., 10 Ch. Div. 15.] The conclusion of a truth. [Moore v. Willis, 9 N.C. l.c. 558.] Where a man has done some act which the law will not permit him to gainsay or deny. [South v. Deaton, 113 Ky. l.c. 320.] Where one is concluded from speaking against his own act or deed. [Demarest v. Hopper,22 N.J.L. 619.] Our rulings are in effect the same as the foregoing. [De Lashmutt v. Teetor, 261 Mo. 412; Osburn v. Court of Honor,152 Mo. App. 652; Spurlock v. Sproule, 72 Mo. 503; Acton v. Dooley, 74 Mo. 63; Hart v. Giles, 67 Mo. 175; and numerous other cases cited in 16 Cyc. 679, note 1.] *Page 330
As concisely applying the foregoing definitions, the St. Louis Court of Appeals in Henson v. Mercantile Co., 48 Mo. App. 214, holds that to constitute an estoppel three things must occur, first, fraudulent representations or withholding the truth when it is one's duty to speak; second, reliance upon such representations; third, the consequent act by the defrauded party to his disadvantage. Let the facts determine, therefore, whether the doctrine can be applied here. It is conceded that the management of the business of the company under the trusteeship created by the directors was a losing venture. The creditors, however, did nothing nor made any false representations which misled the defendants, including appellants, which caused them to execute the trust deed whereby the loss was incurred in their attempting in this manner to continue the business. The proposition and plan pursued did not originate with the creditors, but with the defendants.
As it now appears a mistake was made by the defendants as well as the creditors in attempting to continue the business. But the record discloses no act of the latter essential to sustain the plea of estoppel. The assets were such, due to the nature of the business, that they were practically worthless except to a going concern; if, therefore, the business was discontinued the property practically ceased to have any commercial value and if subjected to sale would have commanded no greater price than the separate value of the wood and iron it contained, classified by the respondent as "junk." This will apply to the filling stations and other equipment. Moreover, a large proportion of the accounts receivable were afterwards shown to be uncollectable. If, under this state of facts, the affairs of the company had been liquidated, the assets, if any had been realized from a sale, would have been nominal. The receivership inaugurated by the directors, therefore, viewed from any vantage, was a mistake, but it does not appear that another course would have wrought a different pecuniary result or have resulted in any greater advantage. In *Page 331 no sense was the conduct of the creditors such as to justify the plea of estoppel now sought to be interposed by appellants, whose legal relation to the company is nothing more than that of debtors made so by their own obligations.
III. The liability of a stockholder for unpaid stock, if not made clear by what has been said, is too well defined to admit of question. Our statute (Sec. 1312, R.S. 1909) provides explicitly that capital stock shall be paid up in lawful moneyPayment: In of the United States. The articles of this companyMoney Or recited that this had been done and that it was thenProperty. in the custody of the board of directors. It now appears that this statement was false and the receiver, to sustain this action, was only required to establish this fact and the several liabilities by reason thereof of the appellants, when it became their duty to show, if payment was pleaded otherwise than in money, that the substitute therefor was equal in money value to the extent of the par value of the stock.
As we said in Van Cleve v. Berkey, 143 Mo. l.c. 136, "the proposition that the stock of a corporation must be paid for `in meal or in malt,' in money or in money's value, is not a mere figure of speech but really has the significance of its terms. It may be paid for in property, but in such case the property must be the fair equivalent in value to the par value of the stock issued therefor; that it is the duty of the stockholders to see that it possesses such value; that when a corporation is sent forth into the commercial world, accredited by them as possessed of a capital in money, or its equivalent, in property, equal to the par value of its capital stock, every person dealing with it, unless otherwise advised, has a right to extend credit to it on the faith of the fact that its capital stock has been so paid and that the money or its equivalent in property will be forthcoming to respond to the legitimate demands. In short, that it is the duty of the stockholder, and not of the creditor, to see that it is so paid." *Page 332
IV. In the case at bar the incorporators of the Henseler Mercantile Oil Supply Company stated in the articles of incorporation, in the language of the statute, thatGood Will. $50,000 of the capital stock of this company had been paid up in lawful money of the United States.
The creditors had a right to rely upon that statement. Therefore, when the receiver showed that this statement was false and that the incorporators had not paid up the $50,000 in lawful money of the United States, but, in truth, had merely transferred to the new company property with a real value of some $7,000 and good will, in payment of the remainder of the $50,000, then the duty devolved upon appellants to show that what was called good will was in fact a real asset and had a value equal to the value placed on it in their books, to-wit, $30,433.10 (afterwards increased to $34,268.73). A portion of the $50,000 capital stock was never paid up, even by good will. This is evident from the following facts: Some of the defendants were owners of the Geo. Henseler Oil Company, others were owners of the Mercantile Oil Supply Company. The two sets got together; as a result, all the assets of the two companies were transferred to defendants, including appellants, and these in turn transferred them to the new company and received back 500 shares of its stock as full paid. The assets of the Geo. Henseler Oil Company were set out in the books of the new company as amounting to $25,000, in which was included good will at a valuation of $14,143. However, in the agreement by which these assets were turned over to the new company it was further provided that the new company should pay the debts of the Geo. Henseler Oil Company, amounting to $7,606.75. Some of these accounts receivable were worthless. When these accounts and the amount of liabilities assumed by the Geo. Henseler Oil Company were deducted from the real assets, it left net assets actually turned over to the new company by the Geo. Henseler Oil Company, good will, of course, excluded, of only $2,219.56. *Page 333
The assets of the Mercantile Oil Supply Company, also transferred to the new company, were entered on the books of the Henseler Mercantile Oil Supply Company at $25,000, and include good will, $16,290, and other assets, $8,710, but included in these assets are a number of accounts worthless at the time and subsequently charged to good will so as to increase the amount of good will on the books. Deducting these bad accounts from the real assets left net real assets of $5,592.55. From this is to be deducted a dividend paid to the stockholders of the Mercantile Oil Supply Company by the new company, under an agreement to that effect, amounting to $800, making real net assets received by the new company from the Mercantile Oil Supply Company of only $4,792.55. We have, therefore, in the first instance, capital stock to the extent of $30,433, represented by alleged good will of the two constituent companies, afterwards, to the extent of $34,268.73, being the aggregate debts of the Geo. Henseler Oil Company, the dividend paid to stockholders of the Mercantile Oil Supply Company, worthless accounts receivable of the Mercantile Oil Supply Company, and the remainder, $7,012.11, which represents tangible assets of approximately that value.
Conceding, therefore, that the capital stock of the corporation may be represented by good will of constituent companies where no money passes and that all the stockholders of the constituent companies become stockholders of the new company, did these constituent companies have any real good will? There was no competent proof offered of the value of the good will of either of these companies. One witness, it is true, testified that he thought the good will of the Mercantile Oil Supply Company was worth $15,000, because that company had always paid a dividend and had also paid its debts. In this statement he evidently ignored the fact that these dividends had been paid out of the capital stock, as is sometimes done in mushroom organizations, to which class none of these companies, it is but fair to say, belonged. The position of the receiver was that the good *Page 334 will of a company can only be estimated by the results of its business operations from the time it commences until it ceases to do business; and, where the consolidated company, as here, was controlled and managed by the same people as those who managed and controlled the constituent companies, good will may also be shown by the results of the business operations of the consolidated company. The books of these companies showed that the Geo. Henseler Oil Company started out with a paid-up capital stock of $10,000 and that after five years operation it wound up with assets of only $2,219.56. The Mercantile Oil Supply Company commenced business with a paid-up capital of $30,000, of which $15,000 was preferred and $15,000 was common stock. The common stock paid no dividends, but during the five years of operation the preferred stock paid a dividend of eight per cent. At the close of these five years of business, the net assets of this company amounted to only $4,792.55. Inasmuch as during that period the company paid out to its stockholders $5,200 in dividends, it is proper, in order to arrive at the total loss, to add this to the assets above stated, making $9,992.55. Deducting this from $30,000 assets with which the company started, leaves a balance of $20,000, which represents the net loss of the company in five years of operation. The two companies, therefore, during their business lives show an operating loss in the one case of 77 per cent and in the other case 66 per cent of their respective capitalizations. Under this state of facts the companies can hardly be said to have had a good will which can be represented by dollars and cents when the continued business was managed by the same persons as when operated at the loss stated. It was further shown that the consolidated business with the added good will of the former companies, when operated by the same persons who had owned and operated said former companies, resulted in no profit, but, on the contrary, suffered a net loss in its five years of business. *Page 335
We have defined good will to be "the advantage or benefit acquired by an establishment beyond the mere value of the capital stock, funds or property employed therein in consequence of the general public patronage," etc. [Milling Co. v. Hanebrink, 247 Mo. l.c. 221.] If in consequence of the general public patronage, such declared advantage or benefit turns out to be a disadvantage and a loss, then the good will becomes nothing more than a purely imaginary quantity. Paraphrasing a Pauline mysticism, it is neither "the substance of things hoped for nor the evidence of things not seen." Heb. xi-1.
V. During the five years of business, although this company possessed wagons, horses, tools, oil stations, etc., yet it charged nothing off for loss, depreciation orDepreciation. waste, except $90 for the loss of a horse. Everthing else it owned or possessed was carried during the five years of business at orginal cost. The loss which, according to its books, was due to operation, is much less than the actual loss. An expert accountant found that there was an actual deficit of difference between assets and liabilities of $13,302.68. As we have shown, the company commenced business with real assets of about $7,000. Five years later, when the books were examined, not only had the capital stock been dissipated, but the company owed $13,000 more than it had assets; therefore, there was a total loss during this priod of $20,314.79. While this was but the estimate of an experienced accountant, the events proved it to be fairly accurate and tallied with that made by the receiver two years afterwards.
VI. The sale of their unpaid stock by certain of the appellants before the institution of this suit will not relieve them from liability to the creditors of the company for theirSale of respective balances due on such stock. [Eyerman v.Stock. Krieckhaus, 7 Mo. App. l.c. 457; Epstein v. Clothing Co., 67 Mo. App. l.c. 226.] *Page 336
We have thus reviewed the facts to enable it to be determined whether there was a payment in any manner by these appellants of the amounts they respectively obligated themselves to pay upon their subscription for and the issuance to them of the shares of their stock. We do not find that the stock was paid for either "in money, meal or malt;" and if good will be held to be property, however its existence may be ascertained, it constitutes no factor in the determination of the matter at issue, because it did not exist; if it did exist, its value was negligible.
Under no view of the facts in this case have appellants interposed a meritorious defense and the judgment of the trial court is therefore affirmed. All concur.