Plaintiff’s action is based on a petition containing nipe counts; each for the recovery of judgment on a promissory note executed by defendants; •in the first of these counts the note is for $1000, and in each of the remaining eight the note is for $500; the whole aggregating $5000. The defendants answered separately. Defendant Pyron’s answer to the first count was a general denial; that the note was given without consideration; that it had been fully paid; and that it was given for plaintiff’s accommodation only. His answer to each of the other counts was that the notes were given without consideration; that they each had been fully paid, and that the other defendant, the “Bob Pyron Land Company,” had been organized in the State of Texas as a corporation dealing in the sale of lands, with a capital stock of $10,000, divided into one hundred shares of $100 each-, that defendant, one W. E. Oliver and plaintiff were the incorporators of such corporation, with Oliver and plaintiff each subscribing for thirty-three shares and' defendant for the remaining thirty-four shares; that $500 was actually paid in cash, on such subscriptions. That Oliver afterwards “contributed on his stock $1283,” and defendant “also contributed and paid into the treasury of said company on his stock large snms of money.” That plaintiff was called upon to pay the balance upon his subscription and that he paid in response the sum of $1000. But before making this payment he asked Oliver and the de*678fendants tí give and endorse the note to hitn of $1000 which he has sued upon in the first count, as an accommodation note for him to use in borrowing the money with which to pay the $1000 on his stock subscription, and that this was done, solely to favor and accommodate him. That some time after the organization of the corporation defendant bought Oliver’s stock, paying him therefor $1283, the amount he had paid into the treasury on it, making defendant’s total stock to be sixty-seven shares. That shortly afterwards, on the 28th of November, 1906, plaintiff and defendant entered into a written contract whereby defendant bought of plaintiff his thirty-three shares of stock for $5000, of which $500 was paid in cash and a note for-$500 due the 1st of January, 1907, and eight notes, each for a like amount, one due the first of each month thereafter. These notes were secured by the certificates of stock being endorsed by plaintiff and deposited in bank and also by an assignment of certain commissions due defendant amounting to $2000. That the cash was paid and the first note falling due was also paid by defendant. But the others are the ones sued upon in this action. It is then pleaded that at the time of making this contract, it was understood and agreed that the $5000 thus agreed to be paid for the stock, included the note for $1000 sued on in the first count,' and it was to be cancelled and' delivered to defendant. But that plaintiff has refused to so cancel and deliver it and in consequence “the consideration for all of said notes in the petition and the $500 cash paid and the consideration for the $500 note which defendant paid, has failed; in consequence of which, defendant has the right to elect and does elect to rescind the contract aforesaid:.” Wherefore it is alleged that plaintiff has become liable to pay him back the $1000 so paid, and for which judgment is asked as a counterclaim, and that the first note be can-celled.
*679The separate answer of the land company was, first a general denial except it admitted its incorporation; second, want of consideration for any of the notes sued on; third, payment; fourth, that the note for $1000 sued on in the first count was given for plaintiff’s accommodation, that he might borrow money thereon; fifth, that giving the note by defendant was not within the power of the corporation; sixth, that a certain contract already described in Pyron’s separate answer,.was made between the parties and that it had been violated by plaintiff and that it had been rescinded, and pleading a counterclaim for $450 “for money paid to plaintiff;” seventh, the corporation law of the State of Texas is plead and it is alleged that the defendant corporation was formed with plaintiff as one of the original subscribers of stock in the sum of $3800, on which he had paid $1250, leaving still unpaid $2050, for which judgment was asked.
Plaintiff’s reply set up estoppel, in that defendant had joined in the organization of the corporation; had participated in the issue of the stock and stamping it paid and non-assessable, and that he was enjoying the benefit of the sale made by plaintiff to him.
The cause was tried by A. F. Smith, Esq., of the Kansas City bar, as special judge. The judgment was for the plaintiff on all of the counts. On the first, it was against both defendants; but on the eight other counts it was against defendant Pyron only.
The foregoing statement, though of some length, is much shorter than that made by the parties., We have omitted much detail which- could be of no service in stating the reasons for our conclusions. It appears that a land company corporation was formed, in the State of Texas with a capital stock of $10,000, divided into one hundred shares of the par value of $100 each, and that one Oliver, plaintiff and defendant Pyron were the incorporators, the two former taking thirty-three shares each and the latter thirty-four shares. That af*680terwards defendant Pyron bought Oliver’s stock, making his holding to be sixty-seven shares; and that after-wards he bought plaintiff’s shares. There was evidence tending to prove that there was dealing between plaintiff and defendant Pyron, not necessary to describe in detail, whereby he was indebted to plaintiff by reason of the latter making advancements to him in addition to a loan made for which the note of $1000, sued on in the first count, was given. After a time, plaintiff having grown restive about the affairs of the corporation, which was managed by Pyron, the latter proposed to buy him out. After some negotiation, it was determined that plaintiff would sell to Pyron Ms stock and his interest and his unsettled claims against the company, for the sum of $5000. A written contract was thereupon made whereby plaintiff sold his stock and all his “claim, right, title and interest in and to said company of any kind whatsoever,” for $5000, to be paid by $500 in cash and nine notes for $500 each. The cash payment was made and' the first note was paid, while the remaining eight and the note for $1000 are the subject of this action.
The defense to the notes, except the one in the first court, the $1000, is based on an attempt to investigate and determine the rights of the parties without recognition of the binding force of the written contract between plaintiff and defendant Pyron. That contract is couched in plain and unambiguous language to the effect that for plaintiff’s stock and for his advancements to the company, Pyron was to pay Mm $5000; of which $500 was to be in cash and the balance in nine notes, one of which was paid and the others now in controversy. » The trial court properly informed the jury that the contract bound the parties and that there was no defense to .the notes. Under the evidence the court could have done no less than this without committing-error against the plaintiff. The whole effort to show other matters, contracts and understanding outside of, *681in addition to, or contradiction of the contract, was in the face of a fundamental rule governing written contracts.
And the same may he said of Pyron’s counterclaim for $1000, and it was properly disallowed by a peremptory instruction. And the same may be said of the' effort to include in the contract the note of $1000, sued on in the first count, by insisting that it was sold by plaintiff along with the stock. The same also may be said of the counterclaim for $2050, hereinbefore referred to.
The note last mentioned, as already shown, wás claimed by plaintiff to be for borrowed money, and defendant claimed it was merely an accommodation note to enable plaintiff to borrow money. The issue was submitted to the jury and the finding is supported by the evidence.
The counterclaim of the defendant land' company of $450 “for money paid to plaintiff,” to which we have already referred, was properly submitted to the jury on evidence which supports the finding.
This brings us to what is the principal defense. Defendants claim that the issuance of stock in the manner this was issued, was contrary to law, against public policy, and therefore void.
It appears to be conceded by the parties that under the laws of both Texas and Missouri all fictitious issues or increase of stock of any corporation are void; and that no stock should be issued except for money paid, labor done, or property actually received. Under the laws of Texas a corporation could be formed with a capital as small as $10,000, and only one-half of the capital need be subscribed, and only ten per cent of that need to be paid in order to begin business. These parties, it seems, paid $500. Oliver was made president of the corporation and defendant Pyron secretary, and they as such officers issued to themselves and to plaintiff as the original stockholders these respective cer*682tificates of' stock, as already mentioned. Across the face of these certificates were the words “Full paid and non-assessable.” The most that can be said for the stock, issued in this case, is- that if it were not issued' without anything being paid, the payment made was far less than its face value. The question is, shall it be considered valid stock between the parties to this controversy?
It will help out an understanding of our conclusion by also stating what is not the question. It is not a question between stockholders and «editors, nor between creditors and the corporation. It is not a- question between the corporation and non-consenting stockholders. It is not a question involving an unexecuted contract as to the stock. It is a question between stockholders concerning an executed transaction, in which all agreed and all took part in doing what one of them now seeks to avoid the consequence of doing. The law is that as between the consenting stockholders, if an arrangement is made whereby stock is issued for less than its value, one cannot take advantage of that lack of compliance with the directions of the law, to the disadvantage of the other. [Skrainka v. Allen, 76 Mo. 384, 391; Hill v. Coal Co., 124 Mo. 153, 166; Woolfolk v. January, 131 Mo. 620, 634; Meyer v. Mining & Milling Co., 192 Mo. 162, 191, 196; Vogeler v. Punch, 205 Mo. 558, 571; Scovill v. Thayer, 105 U. S. 143; Standard M. M. Co. v. Hills, 68 Mo. App. 249; Roll v. Smelting & Mining Co., 52 Mo. App. 60.]
We cannot undertake to review a long list of authorities cited by defendants and content ourselves with the statement that far the greater part of them were contests over questions which we have said are not in this case. In Memphis & L. R. Ry. Co. v. Dow, 120 U. S. 287, 298, there occurs this statement: “Tlie prohibition against the issuing of stock or bonds, except for money or property actually received or labor done, and against the fictitious increase of stock or indebtedness, *683was intended to protect stockholders against spoliation, and to guard the public against securities that were absolutely worthless. One of the mischiefs sought to be remedied is the flooding of the market with stock and bonds that do not represent anything whatever of substantial value.”
It will be observed that nothing is said concerning the protection of stockholders against their own acts which have been accomplished.
But it seems clear to us that the defendants are, upon other reasons, without ground upon which to base their claim of total failure of consideration of the notes. The written Contract transferred not only the stock, but all interest in the corporation or claims against it. Plaintiff retired from the corporation and left it solely in defendant Pyron’s hands. Granting it may have been organized in an illegal way, it was, in point of fact, a going concern, earning money, and defendant was put into possession of all its assets and the possessor and owner of all its earnings which may have been then on hand. He seemed to want to have sole control, to manage with a hand untrammelled by the critical or inquiring or restraining hand of other interests, and he finally entered into an agreement whereby he would pay a certain sum to accomplish that desired end. We see no reason why he should now say there was no consideration, when asked to pay the price.
We think the case well tried, and the judgment for the right party. It is accordingly affirmed.
All concur.