In the certificate of incorporation of the Pottsville and Hew York Railroad Company, a corporation organized under the laws of Pennsylvania on the 23d of March, 1882, the plaintiff’s name appears as a subscriber for twenty-one hundred shares of the capital stock of the par value of $50 per share. Attached to the certified copy of the articles of association appearing in the record is an affidavit of three of the directors to the effect that ten per centum upon the total amount of stock subscribed had been paid in. This is the only evidence in the case that the plaintiff was or com tinued to be a shareholder, as no certificate or other evidence of his right as such shareholder was ever issued to him, or any of the other persons who signed the subscription paper. In the month of February, 1887, about five years after this subscription, the Pottsville Company, under a statute of Pennsylvania, merged and consolidated its franchises and capital stock with the defendant, another railroad corporation of that state. Its capital stock was fixed at 40,000 shares of the par value of $50 per share.
The merger or consolidation agreement made between the two corporations in conformity with the statute provided that each stockholder in the Pottsville Company should, upon surrendering to the treasurer of the consolidated company any evidence he might possess, by certificate or otherwise, of his right to stock, if he had any such evidence, and if no such evidence had been issued to him, then, upon due demand being made upon the treasurer, should be entitled to receive from him a certificate of the capital stock of the consolidated company in the proportion of two shares in face value of the*424Pottsville Company for one share of the same value in the consolidated company. The plaintiff brought this action to compel the delivery to him of this certificate, alleging that he was a shareholder in the Pottsville Company, and had demanded the certificate from the treasurer of the defendant, who refused the same. These allegations were substantially denied in the answer. The precise relief demanded in the complaint is that the defendant issue to the plaintiff a certificate for one thousand and fifty shares of its capital stock of the par value of $50 each, and that in case of the failure of the defendant to issue the same, then that the defendant pay to the plaintiff the sum of fifty-two thousand five hundred dollars damages. The trial court dismissed the complaint, and the General Term has affirmed the judgment. It is not necessary to hold, and we do not hold, that a person who has subscribed for the stock of a corporation, and thus has become bound to receive and to pay for the same, is not in some sense a stockholder. ■ We see no reason to doubt that a person so situated sustains the relation of a stockholder, at least, in many respects, both to the corporation and its creditors. ( Van Alen v. Ill. Cent. R. R. Co., 4 Abb. Ct. App. Dec. 443 ; Curry v. Scott, 54 Penn. St. 270; Rutter v. Kilpatrick, 63 N. Y. 604; Buffalo & N. Y. C. R. Co. v. Dualy, 14 id. 336-346 ; Spear v. Crawford, 14 Wend. 20.)
But we agree with the court below that the plaintiff did not make out a case for the relief asked. He did not even prove that he had ever demanded the certificate, or any other evidence of his right from the defendant. The allegation of the complaint that such demand was made is denied in the answer. True, the other allegation that there was a refusal is not denied, but if there was no demand, there could not well be a refusal. On any fair construction of the pleadings, the plaintiff was bound to prove the demand. It is true, as is urged by the learned counsel for the plaintiff, that the absence of proof of a demand is not generally regarded as an insuperable obstacle to relief in a court of equity in a proper case, and possibly this point might be overlooked here if the case was established in other respects. The only proof that the plaintiff gave of *425any interest in the Pottsville Company was the subscription paper signed some six years before. The fact that the plaintiff agreed, in 1882, to purchase and pay for twenty-one hundred shares did not necessarily prove that he had any interest in the company in 1888, unless there is a presumption that his relations to the company continued. However that may be, it is clear that he could not maintain any action against the defendant that he could not maintain against the Pottsville Company before the consolidation. What he asks is the issue to him of ten hundred and fifty shares of paid-up stock, and there is no finding or proof that he ever paid anything but the ten per cent. 1STothing would seem to be plainer than that the plaintiff is not entitled to negotiable or transferable certificates of full-paid stock on such a state of facts, and yet the plaintiff, in his complaint and at the trial, did not ask for anything less. If the plaintiff still retains the interest in the Pottsville Company, represented by the subscription and the payment of the ten per cent on the same, it is quite likely that a court of equity would be disposed to compel the defendant to deliver to him some proper evidence of this right. But we have no right to reverse the judgment for the purpose of enabling the plaintiff to procure a measure of relief that he did not ask either in his complaint or at the trial.
The judgment should be affirmed, with costs.
All concur.
Judgment affirmed.