Oil City Land & Improvement Co. v. Porter

JUDGE LANDES

delivered the opinion oe the court.

The appeal in this case was certified to this court by the Superior Court, which court had reversed a judgment rendered by the Barren Circuit Court in an action in which the appellant company was plaintiff against theappelleeupon. two promissory notes executed by the appellee for stock in the appellant company, for which he had subscribed or agreed to take. The company was incorporated and organized in November,-1889, under chapter 56 of the General Statutes, and the articles of incorporation were recorded in the office of the clerk of the county court of Jefferson county.

The general nature of the business of the corporation, as provided in the articles, was to buy, lease, sell and improve lands, and to acquire timber, mineral, oil and natural gas privileges. Besides, by one of the provisions of the articles, the company was authorized to subscribe for stoch in other companies or corporations. By a prospectus or “subscription list,” bearing date the 16th day of October, 1889, many of the promoters and proposed stockholders of the company then in contemplation pledged themselves respectively to take certain amounts of the capital stock, which was to be fixed at $100,000, in shares of a par value of $100 per share, but which the subscribers were to take and pay *257for at the rate of $25 per share. This paper contained the following paragraph: “It is proposed to organize a town company, purchase these lands and build a town. The Kentucky Southern Oil and Gas Co. have agreed to locate within ninety days, a large refinery on the property, this company agreeing to donate ten acres for this purpose, besides subscribing for one thousand shares of the said Kentucky Southern Oil and Gas Go. at-$5 per share to be paid upon completion of said refinery.”

The lands which it was proposed to purchase for the contemplated town site were situated in Barren county, on the railroad between Glasgow Junction and the city of Glasgow. The lands were eventually purchased and laid off into lots, the oil refinery built on the land donated for the purpose, and one thousand shares of the Kentucky Southern Oil and Gas Go. taken by the appellant company, and paid for at $5 per share, with the money received from the subscribers to the capital stock of the appellant company.

About the 19th of October, 1889, three days after the date of the “subscription list” above referred to the appellee through the, solicitation of Judge Ritter, then of Barren county, and one of the promoters of the organization of the appellant company, and a subscriber to said preliminary or subscription paper, agreed to take forty shares of the stock of the proposed company, which was communicated to one of the promoters in Louisville by Ritter by a letter written by him, and the name of the appellee was signed to the paper by the person to whom the letter of Ritter was addressed, thus apparently pledging the appellee in writing, in advance of the actual incorporation and organization of the company, to take and pay for forty shares of the stock of the company at $5 per share.

*258The- proof does not show that the appellee authorized, either verbally or in writing, the signing of his name to this paper, and there is nothing in the record to show that he even knew that it was expected that he would sign the paper. But it satisfactorily appears from the evidence that he recognized that he was pledged to take forty shares of the stock of the company on the terms named, for when it was necessary that there should be a meeting of those who were pledged to take the stock for the purpose of organizing the company, which meeting was called for and held on the 4th day of November, 1889, he verbally authorized Ritter, who attended the meeting at Louisville, to represent him and vote his stock, for which he was pledged, in the organization of the company under the articles of incorporation, which it seems were formulated and recorded on the 2d day of November. And afterwards, in the month of January, 1890, he executed his three notes to the organized company for $333.83 1-3 each, covering the amount of stock which he had verbally agreed to take, one óf which notes he subsequently paid off. Failing to pay the other two notes after they fell due, the company commenced action on both of them in the Barren Circuit Court on the 18th day of September, 1891.

Defense was made toi the action on the alleged ground that he was not aware, when he told Ritter that he would take forty shares of the stock of the company, that it was proposed to subscribe for the one thousand shares of the stock of the Kentucky Southern Oil and Cas Co., which fact he averred was fraudulently concealed from him by Ritter, and he alleged that the expenditure of $5,000 of the, cash of the appellant company for the stock of said Oil .and Cas Co. was made without his knowledge or consent, *259and was unlawful and without authority, and was a misappropriation of the-assets of the appellant company to the extent of $5,000. It was also alleged that the Kentucky Southern Oil and Gas Go. had become insolvent, which was true, and that the appellant company was also insolvent which latter insolvency was brought about principally by the alleged unauthorized expenditure of the $5,000 aforesaid, while it was claimed in behalf of the' appellant company that it was necessary that it should recover the money due on the notes of appellee in order that the company might be able to pay its debts. The case having been transferred to equity, the appellee sought to have a receiver appointed and having made his answer a cross-petition against the directors of the company, he prayed that they might be compelled to account for the said $5,000, that the affairs of the company might be settled up, and the company restrained from collecting the notes sued on.

The allegations of fraudulent concealment and of unlawful and unauthorized ■ expenditure of the money of the appellant company were denied both by the company and tfhe defendants in the. cross petition. These were the principal matters in issue, and there was much testimony taken, especially on the charge of fraud. Bu.t while the testimony was conflicting the court below found on the issues made in favor of the appellee, and by. its judgment cancelled the appellee’s subscription to the capital stock of the appellant company, and dismissed the petition of the plaintiff and the cross petition against the directors, but gave a judgment over against the appellant company for the amount paid by the appellee on the note paid by him for the one-third of his subscription.

Conceding that the appellee never saw the subscription *260paper to which his name was signed as above stated before he was sued on the notes, and that Ritter did not tell him that it was the purpose of the company when organized to subscribe for one thousand shares of the Kentucky Southern Oil and Gas Co., and that he even intentionally concealed that purpose from him, still it would not follow that the appellee was entitled to have the notes he executed for the stock he agreed to take, or his subscription for the stock, which was made binding on him when he executed the notes, if not before, cancelled, or to have the money he paid on the first note repaid to him by the. company. There is not the slightest evidence in the record that Ritter was the agent of any of the promoters of the proposed corporation at the time he solicited the appellee’s subscription, or that any of the other promoters or subscribers knew that any concealment had been made, if indeed it was purposely made by Ritter, of the fact complained of by the appellee. He was not legally bound on the subscription paper, because it does not appear that any one had authority fromi him to sign his name to it, and if he had been thus bound it would have been only by reason of the fact that that it was a mutual undertaking on the part of all of the subscribers. But when the company was regularly incorporated and its organization completed, there was a different condition of affair's. It was not until nearly two months after this that the appellee did actually subscribe for the stock which he had previously agreed to take, and thus became legally bound to the body corporate for iris subscription. There is no evidence thát the company or any of its officers or agents deceived him, or induced him by any fraudulent means to execute his notes for the price of the stock, or to pay for any part of it. It must be presumed *261that at the time he executed the notes and paid one of them he knew the provisions of the charter or articles of incorporation of the company under which his subscription was made and of which he thus became a member. (Wight v. Shelby R. R. Co., 16 B. Monroe, 4; Parks v. R. R. Co., 23 Ind., 572; Jenkins v. Prewitt, 7 Blackford, 329; Walker v. R. R. Co., 34 Miss., 255; Ellison v. Mobile & Ohio R. R. Co., 36 Miss., 572.)

He must, therefore be charged with knowledge that the articles of incorporation contained the provision which has been referred to, and which authorized the purchase or subscription for stock in other corporations. And we hold that this applies as well to charters formed under the general law authorizing the organization of corporations as to those enacted directly by the Legislature. The rule on this subject is well stated in the opinion of the Superior Court in the following language: “It is a general rule that when a person is induced to become a stockholder of one of these associations by false representations fraudulently made by an agent thereof or by the fraudulent concealment of any material facts touching the condition of the company, the contract is voidable *át the option of the subscriber, and may be annulled by him. Such fraudulent representations or concealments, however, must be concerning facts not within the knowledge of the subscriber. Where they touch the powers of a corporation under its charter they are matters of law and will not vitiate the subscription. Where a party makes a contract he must at his peril inform himself of the legal consequences of his undertaking. So a subscriber for shares in a corporation must at his peril inform himself with regard to the provisions of its charter or of its articles of incorporate’-1 "

*262The appellee has failed to show a state of fact that would authorize the court to decree the cancellation of his contract of subscription fdr the stock of the appellant company.

The judgment of the lower court cancelling his subscription, dismissing the petition and recovering against the appellant in favor of the appellee the amount of the note paid by him for one-third of his said subscription is, therefore, reversed and cause remanded, with directions to render a judgment against the appellee for the amount due on the two notes sued on. And if further proceedings are necessary to settle the affairs of the appellant company they may be had, but to be consistent with this opinion.