The opinion of the Court was delivered by
Fenner, J.On the 29th of March, 1875, the New Orleans Gas Light Co. and the Crescent City Gas Light Co., two corporations chartered under the laws of this State, amalgamated, united and consolidated themselves into one consolidated Company, in pursuance of the provisions of an Act of the General Assembly, No. 157 of 1874, entitled, “An Act to authorize the consolidation of business or manufacturing corporations or companies.”
That Act authorized such consolidation into “ one consolidated company, holding and enjoying all the rights, privileges, powers and franchises belonging to each, and under such corporate name as they may adopt or agree upon,” the consolidation “ to be made by agreement in writing, by or under authority of the Board of Directors and the assent of the owners of at least three-fifths of the capital stock of each of said corporations.”
All requirements of the Act were fully complied with.
The name adopted for the consolidated Company was “ The New Orleans Gas-Light Company.”
The capital stock of the consolidated Company was fixed at $10,000,000, of which the sum of $3,750,000, or 37,500 shares were to be then issued as full paid. Of these, 25,000 shares were to be divided pro rata among the stockholders of the old New Orleans Gas Light Company.
With reference to the stock of the other Company, the Articles contained the following provisions : “ All certificates for stock issued by the Crescent City Gas Light Company are hereby annulled and can-celled, and considered as of no legal effect, or iu any manner binding on tlie consolidated Company, to which Company the said cancelled certificates, together with the archives, and rights and property of said *415Crescent City Gas Light Company are to be transferred and conveyed and surrendered upon the ratification of this agreement; and in lieu thereof, there shall be issued to Henry Y. Attrill, as representative of all the stockholders of said Company, and at their request, 12,500 shares of full paid stock of the consolidated Company, amounting to $1,250,000, the same being the proportional part of the $3,750,000 of full paid stock allotted under this agreement to the stockholders of the Crescent City Gas Light Co.”
Before these 12,500 shares of stock were issued to Mr. Attrill, who claimed to represent all the stockholders, it appears that the president and directors received notices from persons not represented by him and claiming to hold stock; and asa guaranty against such claims, with his consent, there was endorsed upon 1,200 shares of the stock issued to him, the following statement: “ this certificate is issued subject to the right of this Company to cancel the stock it represents on the books of the Company, in case it becomes necessary to indemnify itself to cover claims of any person who may establish rights to stock in the Crescent City Gas Light Co., and is only assignable subject to this condition.” This stock so endorsed is aptly termed, “ black-eyed stock,” and the evidence establishes that 630 shares of it still stands in the name of Attrill.
The plaintiff in the present case alleges that, long prior to the consolidation, he became and remains the owner of one hundred shares of the stock of the Crescent City Gas Light Co.; that he took no part, and was unrepresented by Attrill or anyone else, in the consolidation ; that, after the consolidation, he promptly notified defendant of his rights; that he is entitled to stock in the new Company in the proportion to his old stock stipulated in the'articles of consolidation, with all dividends declared thereon from the date of his notice.
The defenses urged in- pleading and argument are as follows:
1. It is denied that plaintiff was a stockholder in the Crescent City Gas Light Co., as claimed. The evidence satisfies us that he was, and we conceive this defeuse to be substantially abandoned.
2. It is claimed that Attrill was a necessary party to this suit. -
The circumstances of this case are entirely different from those presented in the cases of St. Romes vs. Cotton Press, 20 An. 383, and Reid vs. Ins. Co., 32 An. 548. In those cases the plaintiffs claimed ownership of particular shares of stock in the defendant corporation, which had been transferred to third persons and was claimed by them. It was held that the stock in controversy could not belong, at the same time, to the plaintiffs and to the transferrees, and that the question of ownership could not be determined except contradictorily with the latter. But here Fee has never owned, and does not claim, any particular *416shares of stock in the defendant Company. The only particular shares of stock he evey owned, were one hundred shares in the Crescent City Gas Light Co. It is not, pretended that he, or any other person acting as his agent, has ever transfeired these shares of stock to any one on the books of that Company, nor is it claimed that anybody pretends to be the owner thereof.. His ownership of these shares entitles him, under the articles of consolidation, to the stipulated equivalent in the stock of the new Company. This equivalent stock has never been set aside or allotted to him, and he now claims that this should be done. He has nothing to do with Attrill... If the new Company has given Attrill more stock than he was entitled to, this cannot operate to the prejudice of plaintiff. It is not a case where all the stock of the. corporation has been issued and where, therefore, however clear his rights, they could only be enforced by.way of damages. The articles of consolidation show that the corporation has a large amount of unissued stock, which, in the worst event, could be used in satisfaction of his demand. But fortunately, in the. “ black eyed stock,” the defendant has made ample and sufficient provision for its own protection against injury from the excessive issue to Attrill. That, however, is a matter between defendant and Attrill, with which plaintiff has no concern.
3. It is contended that the consolidation does not give plaintiff a right of action against the new Company.
We cannot take this view.
The articles of consolidation and the legislative Act by authority of which they were executed, evidently present a ease of complete and perfect amalgamation, the effect of which was', under American authorities, to terminate the existence of the original corporations, to create a new corporation, to transmute the members of the former into members of the latter, and to operate a transfer of the property, rights and liabilities of each old Company to the new one. Brice Ultra Vires, pp. 606-608, 637; Field on Corporations, Sec. 434; Indianapolis R. R. vs. Jones, 29 Ind. 465; Paine vs. Lake Erie, 31 Ind. 283.
These authorities, and the reason of the matter, satisfy us that plaintiff can and must look to the defendant Company for the satisfaction of whatever rights he had against the Crescent City Gas Light Co., in the mode and on the terms provided in the articles of consolidation.
4. It is urged that inasmuch as plaintiff sues in affirmance of the contract of consolidation, he is estopped from disputing any of its provisions, and is, therefore, bound by that provision'which authorized the delivery to Attrill, as representative of all the stockholders, of 1,250 shares in satisfaction of all the stock to which the stockholders of the Crescent City Gas Light Co. were entitled.
*417Numerous authorities are cited in support of the general proposition above stated ; but their inapplicability results from the fact that he is not affirming, but only submitting to the contract. He was no party to the contract, and he is bound thereby just in so far as the contracting parties had the right to bind him, and no further. The law conferred upon three-fifths of his fellow-stockholders the power to effect a consolidation without his consent and even against his will, and he is bound by that consolidation and by the legal effects thereof, which we have heretofore stated. But the law did not confer upon three-fifths or ninety-nine one hundredths of the stockholders, the power to place his rights as a stockholder on a different and inferior footing to their own rights as stockholders in equal case ; nor did it confer upon them the power, without his authority, to transfer his rights to any third person whatever. He has the right to repudiate any such attempt. Bound by the consolidation, he-is entitled to the same rights in the. new Company which were secured to his fellow-stockholders, and no payment or delivery to any unauthorized third person can be setup in satisfaction of those rights. The evidence establishes no express or implied acquiescence in, or ratification of, the delivery to Attrill of any stock in satisfaction of plaintiff’s rights.
This disposes of the case; for the mere inaction of plaintiff in not inviting the Crescent City Gas Light Co. to sue him for assessments on his stock which he did not believe to be legal, was a violation of no legal duty, and was without legal effect. It is not pretended that his stock was forfeited, and not even any claim for the alleged assessments is now set up.
If plaintiff has acquired the valuable fruits resulting from the judgment herein for a song, he is, in that respect, only in common case with his brother stockholders in the speculative concern known as the Crescent City Gas Light Co.
Judgment affirmed at appellant’s cost.