Stagg v. Spray Water Power & Land Co.

*591Waiter, J.,

after stating tbe case: This case, witb others, involving substantially tbe same questions, was exhaustively discussed by counsel and well prepared briefs filed presenting numerous points; but we do not deem it necessary to consider more than two or three of them.

The defendant contends that there has been no breach of the guaranty, as it only extends to the payment of such dividends as are earned and declared by the warehouse company, and is, therefore, merely a contract to the effect that if such dividends are not paid, the guarantor will pay the same, which would amount to no more than a guaranty of the honesty and fidelity of the officers to pay dividends if earned and declared. This, we think, would be a very narroAV construction of the contract of guaranty, and is one which we could not adopt. The principle in regard to the interpretation of such instruments as the one we are now considering may, as gathered from the authorities, be thus stated: When it is said that a guarantor is entitled to stand upon the strict terms of his guaranty, nothing more is intended than that he is not to be held liable for anything that is not within the express terms of the instrument in which his guaranty is contained; that his liability is not to be extended by implication beyond these limits, or to other subjects than those expressed in the instrument of guaranty. But for the purpose of ascertaining the meaning of the language which he has used, and thus determining the extent of his guaranty, the same rules of construction are to be applied as in the construction of other written instruments. His liability is not to be extended by implication beyond the terms of his guaranty as thus ascertained. The language used by him is, however, to receive a fair and reasonable interpretation for the purpose of effecting the objects for which he made the instrument, and the purpose to which it was to be applied. If this language is fairly susceptible of two interpretations, either of which is within the spirit of the guaranty, he is not at liberty to say that the person to whom it is given was not justified in acting upon either, or that he should have acted upon one rather than the other. London, etc., Bank v. Parrot, 125 Cal., 472; 1 Brandt on S. and G., sec. 103; E. C. Ry. Co. v. Maryland Casualty Co., 145 N. C., 114; 20 Cyc., 1423. This guaranty means what its terms express, that if the warehouse company fails, in any one year during the continuance of the contract, to pay “the dividends, or any part thereof, called for upon the face of the certificate,” the defendant agrees to pay any and all such deficiency in the dividend as may arise from such failure. It is not a promise that the warehouse company will pay illegal dividends, for it does not require that the latter will pay, at all events, so much money, but that it will pay any deficiency only in the event that the warehouse company fails to declare and pay its stock dividends from *592its earnings, and that is what it clearly means. If the warehouse company fails to earn, declare, and pay any part of its dividend, the amount to be paid would be 6 per cent on the-par value of the stock, and if it earns, declares, and pays but a part, then the difference between the amount so paid and the full dividend of 6 per cent would be the amount due under the guaranty. Lorillard v. Clyde, 142 N. Y., 456 (24 L. R. A., 113). It was in no sense a guaranty that the warehouse company would do the illegal act of declaring a dividend, not payable from earnings applicable thereto, but from its other assets. We will, incidentally touch upon this question again when discussing the relation of the warehouse company to this contract of guaranty. We, therefore, decline to hold that the guaranty of the defendant is illegal, because, as defendant contends, it calls for the performance of an unlawful act by the warehouse company.

It is next contended by the defendant that the contract of guaranty is not within the corporate powers of the defendant company as conferred by its charter, which fixes the limit of its authority to contract. ' This is a very serious question and is involved in very grave doubt, but we do not consider that a decision of it is indispensable to a full disposition of this appeal, and, therefore, we may well omit any discussion of it, and withhold our views until we are required to decide it. This renders unnecessary any consideration of the doctrine of uWra vires and estoppel, so fully treated by counsel in their briefs. We have now come to what we regard as one of the decisive questions in the case. It is alleged in the complaint, and of course admitted by the demurrer, that the warehouse company has been adjudged to be a bankrupt by a Federal court having jurisdiction of the case, and it has ceased to do business, its affairs and assets now being under the control and management of that court for the purpose of being administered according to the Federal statute in such cases made and provided. It is not, therefore, a going concern; its functions as a corporation being, at least, suspended, and since the adjudication of its bankruptcy, viz., on 8 March, 1915, the Legislature by a public statute ratified on that day declared the charter of all corporations to be forfeited if they had been adjudicated bankrupts. We will refer to these matters more specifically hereafter.

In this state of the case, we must inquire what effect the bankruptcy and the forfeiture of its charter had upon the contract of guaranty sued on. The plaintiff says that they have no effect to change the obligation of the defendant or to terminate its liability upon the guaranty, while defendant insists that its obligation and liability have ceased and been determined thereby, as the contract was made in contemplation of the continued existence of the warehouse company as a corporation, and when it forfeited its charter-by reason of its bankruptcy, and was *593dissolved, it ceased to exist as a corporation, and there was nothing left to be done Avith respect to it but to Avind up and settle its affairs; that it ceased to have any earning capacity, so as to make and declare dividends, and its stock is held by its shareholders, including the plaintiff, only for the purpose of a final adjustment of its affairs and the distribution of its assets among those entitled thereto, whether creditors or stockholders.

We will first consider whether the contract of guaranty was made Avith reference to the continued existence of the corporation whose stock is held by the plaintiff. While the warehouse company is not a party to the guaranty, nor privy thereto, in the sense that, in law, it is at all liable thereon either to the plaintiff or to the defendant, or they to it, yet the continued existence of the company was a thing contemplated by both parties when they made the contract, and performance was impliedly made to depend upon it. They understood that as the basis of the contract there should be a corporation capable of earning dividends — not that it should actually earn them, but that it should be potentially able to do so; and this could not be said of a corporation Avhich had lost its charter and had ceased to do business. This Avas not an original and independent promise to pay each year, at all events, the equivalent of a full or partial dividend, without regard to the earning capacity or existence of the corporation, but the guaranty imposed a secondary liability, that is, one to pay so much provided that the warehouse company failed to earn and pay. The promise was, therefore, not absolute, but conditional. The failure of the other corporation to pay was to precede any liability on the part of the defendant, and this could not be so unless the former continued to haAre the capacity to earn and pay. Its continued existence was, therefore, presupposed by the parties. This question was substantially involved in Lorillard v. Clyde, 142 N. Y., 456. The contract of guaranty in that case was to last for seven years, but the corporation the payment of whose dividends was guaranteed was dissolved before the expiration of,that time, and the Court said: “The question whether the obligation of the defendants under their guaranty continued in force as to the part of the seven years unexpired at the time of the dissolution of the corporation, in the absence of any responsible agency of either party for the causes which led to the dissolution, must be determined by the intention of the parties as ascertained from the language of the contract, and, if ambiguous, from such language and the surrounding circumstances. The contract contains no explicit statement on the subject. It assumed that the corporation would be in existence during the whole period over which the guaranty extended. The guaranty was not for the yearly payment of a sum equal to 7 per cent on *594tbe capital of the plaintiff in the corporation, or on the nominal amount of his stock. It was that the dividends of the corporation should annually for seven years equal that sum. The plaintiff would under the contract and by virtue of his right as a stockholder be entitled to dividends declared by the company, whether they should be more or less than 7 per cent per annum, and if dividends less than that amount should be made, the liability of the defendants on their guaranty would be limited to a sum sufficient to make up the deficit. In case the dividends equaled or exceeded 7 per cent, there would be no liability; and in case no dividends were declared, then the guaranty would stand in lieu of dividends.” And again it was said with reference to the same question: “It is incontrovertible that the right to manage the business of the corporation and to earn and to receive the commissions on freight were the considerations upon which the guaranty rested. The plaintiff conceded these rights to the Clydes for this equivalent. The defendants could receive the benefits of the contract only in case the corporation should continue in being during the running of the guaranty. The death of the corporation would terminate their management, and prevent their earning commissions; the business would end, and the court, in administering the assets, would return to each party his proportion of the capital remaining for distribution. The death or dissolution of the corporation would withdraw all the capital invested so far as it remained, and take away for the future the whole consideration upon which the guaranty was based. There would thereafter be no corporation earning or capable of earning dividends, and nothing left upon which the obligation to pay them could be predicated:

“The general doctrine that when a party voluntarily undertakes to do a thing, without qualification, performance is not excused because, by inevitable accident or other contingency not foreseen, it becomes, impossible for him to do the act or thing which he agreed to do, is well settled. This doctrine protects the integrity of contracts, and one of the reasons assigned in its support in the early case of Paradina v. Jane, Aleyn, 26, is that as against such contingencies the party could have provided by his contract. See Harmony v. Bingham, 12 N. Y., 99, 62 Am. Dec., 142; Ford v. Cotesworth, L. R., 4 Q. B., 134; Jones v. United States, 96 U. S., 24, 24 L. Ed., 644. But it is now well settled that when performance depends on the continued existence of. a given person or thing, and such continued existence was assumed as the basis of the agreement, the death of the person or the destruction of the thing puts an end to the obligation. Executory contracts for personal services, for the sale of specific chattels, or for the use of a building are held to fall within this principle. Dexter v. Norton, 47 N. Y., 62; People v. Globe Mut. L. Ins. Co., 91 N. Y., 174; Taylor v. Caldwell, 3 Best and S., 826. These cases are not exceptions to the rule that con*595tracts voluntarily made are to be enforced, but the courts, in accordance with the manifest intention, construe the contract as subject to an implied condition that the person or thing shall be in existence when the time of performance arrives. So if after a contract is made the law interferes and makes subsequent performance impossible, the party is held to be excused. Jones v. Judd, 4 N. Y., 412. It must be conceded that it is difficult to draw the line and to determine the exact limitations of the principle. When the executory contract relates to specific chattels, and the subject-matter is destroyed without fault of the party, the implied condition arises and excuses performance. But where the contract is based on the assumed existence and continuance of a certain condition, or upon the continuance of a subject-matter which, however, is not the direct object of the contract, is the principle in such cases excluded? The present case illustrates what we have in mind.
“The contract in question was not with the corporation whose life was extinguished by the judgment of dissolution. But the guaranty assumed that the corporation would continue in existence during the seven years period. The liability which the defendants assumed was in consideration of the benefits which might accrue to them from the management of the transportation business of the corporation during that period.
“Upon the assumption that the death of the corporation was brought about without their fault, were they thereafter bound? Is the doctrine of implied condition less applicable than it would be if the contract had been between the defendants and the corporation? If in the one ease the contract, so far as it was unexecuted, would be terminated, did not the happening of the same event terminate the engagement of these parties, based on the assumed continuance of the corporation in life?”

A similar contract was construed in Columbus Trust Co. v. Moshier, 100 N. Y. Suppl., 1066, and the Court held: “There is an express provision in the agreement referred to which makes the continuance of the corporate life of the company a condition precedent to the right to enforce the provisions thereof. As a general rule, the unqualified, undertaking of a party to perform an act is not to be excused because the situation existing when the contract was made did not continue to exist at the time stipulated for performance. Labaree Co. v. Crossman, 100 App. Div., 501, 92 N. Y. Suppl., 565; Lorillard v. Clyde, 142 N. Y., 456, 37 N. E., 489, 24 L. R. A., 113. This rule, however, is not without exceptions; and where performance depends on the continued existence of a given person or thing, and such continued existence was assumed as the basis of the agreement, the death of the person or the destruction of the thing puts an end to the obligation. *596Lorillard v. Clyde, supra; Babbitt v. Gibbs, 150 N. Y., 281-286, 44 N. E., 952; Herter v. Mullen, 159 N. Y., 28, 44; 53 N. E., 700, 44 L. R. A., 703, 60 Am. St., 517; Matter of Daly, 58 App. Div., 49, 68 N. Y. Suppl., 596. In such eases tbe courts bave implied a condition in tbe contract that a party is relieved from its terms wben its performance lias, without bis fault, become impossible. Herter v. Mullen, supra." . . . “I'think it clear tbat it was witbin tbe contemplation of both parties tbat tbe corporation should continue to exist during tbe life of tbe contract of guaranty, and tbat an implied condition should be read into tbe contract to tbat effect. Tbe agreement was not to pay a sum equal to tbe amount of a dividend, whether declared or not, but was a guaranty tbat dividends should be paid. Tbe payment of a dividend necessarily implies tbe existence of a corporation. Tbe word ‘dividend,’ wben used in connection with corporate stock, means a proportionate part of tbe profits which bave arisen from corporation transactions. They are payable out of profits alone. Taylor Priv. Corp., secs. 563, 565; 2 Purdy’s Reach Priv. Corp., secs. 451, 453. Again, tbe agreement bad reference to tbe sale of tbe capital stock in tbe company. Capital stock is tbe interest which tbe members of a corporation (tbe stockholders thereof) bave in tbe property of tbe corporation. 1 Purdy’s Beach Priv. Corp., sec. 184. When tbe corporation ceased to exist and its property was distributed there was no longer any capital stock. When tbe corporate stock was wiped out, of necessity there could be no profits from corporate transactions, nor any possibility thereof. Without tbe possibility of profits from corporate transactions, there could be no dividends. Tbe contract of guaranty did not fix a specific amount which Mr. Harrison was to receive. It provided tbat be should receive at least 3 per cent dividends. But so long as he remained tbe owner of tbe stock, be or bis transferee, if be bad transferred tbe same, would be entitled to receive all of tbe dividends earned and declared on such stock. If such dividends amounted to 10 per cent semiannually, tbe bolder of tbe stock would be entitled to receive tbat. If it amounted to only 2 per cent semiannually, tbe holder of tbe stock would receive tbat amount from tbe company and ' could then bold tbe guarantor for tbe difference between tbe 2 per cent dividends received and tbe 3 per cent dividends guaranteed. This being-so, tbe implied condition above referred to must be read into tbe contract, and it must be presumed tbat tbe parties contracted with reference to tbe continued existence of tbe corporation. Since this was tbe basis of the agreement, tbe destruction of the corporation terminated tbe obligation. This seems to me to be true both upon principle and authority. Mason v. Standard Distilling and D. Co., 85 App. Div., 521; 83 N. Y. Suppl., 843; Lorillard v. Clyde, supra." Tbat case was affirmed in 193 N. Y., at p. 634.

*597Tbe question, therefore, is whether the guaranty becomes wholly inoperative for want of something' to which it is applicable, or whether, on the other hand, it can be understood as binding the defendant to pay the deficiency of the dividend in any contingency and to respond in damages to an equivalent amount in case of failure. The latter is the theory of the plaintiff, reading the contract as one not dependent in the least upon the corporate capacity of the warehouse company to earn and pay dividends and as operative without any regard to its continued corporate existence. We cannot assent to this view. It is not what the language of the contract imports, and evidently not what the parties intended. The condition precedent to liability on the guaranty was the existence of a corporation having stock and capable of earning and paying dividends thereon, but not necessarily able to do so. This was made an essential element of the guaranty. It referred necessarily to a live and not a dead corporation. We would not properly refer to a defunct or dissolved corporation as one which could earn or pay annual dividends. It would be proper to refer to the part or share to be received in the final division of its assets by its creditors or shareholders as a dividend, but that is not the kind of dividend which was intended by the parties to this guaranty when they used that word; but it is perfectly clear, on the contrary, that they meant an annual dividend, and nothing else. The language is if the warehouse company fails to pay its annual dividend. The contract must have a natural and reasonable construction. Justice Gooley said of this question in Lockhart v. Van Alstyne, 31 Mich., at p. 79: “A dividend to the stockholders of a corporation, when spoken of in reference to an existing organization engaged in the transaction of business, and not of one being closed up and dissolved, is always, so far as we are aware, understood as a fund which the corporation sets apart from its profits to be divided among its members. ... A dividend among preference stockholders’exclusively is understood to imply that the sum divided has been realized as profits, though the earnings do not yield a dividend to the stockholders in general. We hazard nothing in saying that this is the primary and universal understanding of a dividend on stock, except when made use of in respect to a final closing up and distribution of assets on the occurrence of insolvency or in view of a dissolution.” No one can well read this guaranty without being convinced that the parties intended and contemplated the continuance of the life of the company, whose default in paying annual dividends should raise a liability upon the guaranty to pay the liquidated damages. As a dead corporation could not pay the dividends, it was not in the minds of the parties when they drew their contract.

We have a case in our own Reports which clearly affirms the validity of the principle herein applied. Steamboat Co. v. Transportation Co., *598166 N. C., 582, at 587, 589. There the object of the contract was frustrated by the destruction of tbe property to which it mainly related, as nearly all courts seem to hold, and this Court held it fell within the exception to the rule that the obligation of a contract is imperative, which applies generally, but which is subject to the qualification that when the principal subject to which the contract relates ceases to exist, the obligation is at an end, citing and approving 9 Cyc., p. 627 et seq., it being said at p. 631: “Where from the nature of the contract it is evident that the parties contracted on the basis of the continued existence of the person or thing to which it relates, the subsequent perishing of the person or thing will excuse the performance. Thus, where the contract relates to the use or possession or any dealing with specific things in which the performance necessarily depends on the existence of the particular thing, the condition is implied by the law that the impossibility arising from the perishing or destruction of the thing, without default in the party, shall excuse the performance, because, from the nature of the contract, it is apparent that the parties contracted on the basis of the continued existence of the subject of the contract.”

It appears, therefore, that the ground upon which the promisor is excused from performance is that from the nature of the contract there is an implied condition that the thing upon which it depends will continue to exist. We take this to be the rule as declared in Taylor v. Caldwell, 3 Best and Smith, Q. B. (113 E. C. L., Ed. 1867), 824:

1. Where there is a positive contract to do a thing, not in itself unlawful, the contractor must perform it or pay damages for not doing it, although in consequence of unforeseen accidents the performance of his contract has become unexpectedly burdensome or even impossible.

2. But this rule is only applicable when the contract is positive and absolute, and not subject to any condition either express or implied.

3. Where from the nature of the contract it appears that the parties must from the beginning have known that it could not be fulfilled unless when the time for the fulfillment of the contract arrived some particular specified thing continued to exist, so that, when entering into the contract, they must have contemplated such continuing existence as the foundation of what was to be done; there, in the absence of any express or implied warranty that the thing shall exist, the contract is not to be construed as a positive contract, but as subject to an implied condition that the .parties shall be excused in case, before breach, performance becomes impossible from the perishing of the thing without default of the contractor.

This was recognized as a rule in itself in Blackburn on Sales, p. 173. There are instances where the implied condition is of the life of a human being, but there are others in which the .same implication is made as to the continued existence of a thing, or of an equity having a *599corporate, though artificial, as distinguished from a natural life, both being liable to perish. It is not a new doctrine, but quite an ancient one, for Pothier in his treatise on the Contract of Sale (Traite du Contractde Cente), part 4, sec. 307 et seq., and part 2, ch. 1, sec. 1, art. 4, sec. 1, thus states the .same rule: “The vendor should be freed from his obligation when the thing sold has perished without his fault, is a consequence of another-principle, that every obligation de certo corpore is destroyed when the thing ceases to exist, Traite des Obligations, part 3, ch. 6. This principle is founded in the nature of things, for the thing due being the subject of the obligation, it follows that when the thing ceases to exist the obligation can no longer exist, not being capable of existing without a subject.” See Blackburn on Sales, marg. p. 173.

The case of Atkinson v. Schoonmaker, 12 Mo. App., 425, is somewhat like the one under consideration. There the performance of the contract depended upon the continued existence of a corporation, a gaslight company, which was placed by order of a court in the hands of a receiver, and it was held that its corporate life or activity was suspended, and that the contract of the third parties, who had assumed the obligation declared on, could not be enforced during the period of the receivership. And in Appleby v. Myers, infra, Justice Blackburn said, in substance, that when the subject to which the contract related is destroyed without fault on either .side, so that performance becomes impossible — that is, the kind of performance contemplated by the parties — it is a misfortune affecting both parties, and excusing them from further performance of the contract, but giving a cause of action to neither. Many cases could be gathered here in illustration of the principle and showing how variously it has been applied by the courts. "We will only cite a few of them. Lovering v. B. M. Coal Co., 54 Pa. St., 291; Malcolmson v. Wapoo Mills, 88 Fed., 680; Livingston County v. Graves, 32 Mo. App., 478; Walker v. Tucker, 70 Ill., 527; Ward v. Vance, 93 Pa. St., 499; Appleby v. Myers, L. R. 2 C. P. (Exch. Ch.), 650, citing Taylor v. Caldwell, supra, and referring especially to an extract therefrom in which Justice Blackburn states the doctrine very clearly. See, also, The Tornado, 108 U. S., 342, where it was said that there was a condition implied from the nature of the contract that a certain ship would remain seaworthy and capable of earning freight, but had become disabled before she had broken ground for her voyage. The court held that the parties were excused from performance. In that case the reason for the rule was said to be that without “any express stipulation that the destruction of the person or thing shall excuse the performance,” “that excuse is by law implied, because from the nature of the contract it is apparent that the parties contracted on the basis of the continued existence of the particular person or chattel.” The case cites Taylor v. Caldwell, supra, and Appleby v. Myers, supra. In *600Walker v. Tucker, supra, the Court said at p. 543: “It is elementary law that when the contract is to do a thing which is possible in itself, the promisor will be liable for a breach thereof, notwithstanding it was beyond his power to perform it, for it was his own fault to run the risk of undertaking to perform an impossibility, when he might have provided against it by his contract. 1 Chitty on Conts. (11 Am. Ed.), 1074. But where, from the nature of the covenant, it is apparent the parties contracted on the basis of the continued existence of a given person or thing, a condition is implied that, if the performance became impossible from the perishing of the person or thing, that shall excuse such performance. Ib., 1076.

Several cases show that the doctrine applies where performance has become impossible by act of the law, as in the case where a receiver is appointed to take charge of the affairs of a corporation; and bankruptcy, of course, is within the same category; and so it was said, substantially, in Malcolmson v. Wappoo Mills, supra: It is a well settled rule of law that if a party, by his contract, charge himself with an obligation possible to be performed, he must make it good unless its performance be rendered impossible by the act of God, the law, or the other party. Unforeseen difficulties will not excuse him. Dermott v. Jones, 2 Wall., 1. But, as appears, the complete fulfillment of the contract was prevented by the order of this Court in the appointment of the receiver. A delivery of the rock by the company after that was impossible. It will be noticed, also, that the completion of the contract on the part of Mitsui & Co. was by the same action of the Court made impossible. If the company had tendered the delivery of the rock, the injunction of this Court forbade them to accept it. In like manner they could not have paid to the company the price of the rock. But when the contract cannot be specifically performed, and the only remedy is by way of damages, the. court will not inflict such damages on the corporation if the breach of contract for which damages are sought has been occasioned by the law, the performance of the contract having been made impossible, citing People v. Globe Mutual Life Ins. Co., 91 N. Y., 174. In the latter case, a corporation had entered into a contract with a general agent for his services for a specified time and at a stipulated salary. The contract continuing, and the services being rendered, the corporation was placed in the hands of a receiver, who did not continue the agent in his employment. He sued for damages. The court held that he could not recover, because, as it said, the company could not employ him, for the reason that it would be a violation of the order of injunction. The agent could not meddle in the affairs of the company, for that equally would violate the injunction. It was damnum absque injuria. The court adopted the principle as stated in the New York cases. The supposed answer to the *601application of this established doctrine is that the contract would be of no value in such a case; but this is a total misapprehension of the nature and scope of the contract and the principle. If the warehouse company had continued to exist as an active concern, capable of earning dividends, the contract would have remained in full force and effect during its corporate life, and the guaranty was made upon that basis, if we.are to be governed by its terms. So it is clearly seen that the contract was of value and great value, too.

As was said in one of the cases, it is the misfortune of the plaintiffs that something happened which does not seem to have been anticipated, and, therefore, was not provided against in the contract. There is a substantial promise to guarantee payment, to which the law annexes the condition that it shall last only during the life of the warehouse company, becau.se, in the absence of a negative provision, it will read such a term into the contract as one naturally arising from what is expressed. This discussion, of course, assumes (without deciding) the validity of the contract in other respects.

We conclude, therefore, both upon reason and authority, that a guaranty .such as we have in this ease is at an end when the company whose stock is to pay the dividend has been dissolved. This brings us to a consideration of the methods by which a corporation is dissolved.

The Constitution of this State provides, in Art. VIII, sec. 1: “Corporations may be formed under general laws, but shall not be created by special act, except for municipal purposes and in cases where, in the judgment of the Legislature, the object of the corporations cannot be attained under general laws. All general laws and special acts passed pursuant to this section may be altered from time to time, or repealed.” A well known text-writer says: “Although it has been frequently said that there are but four ways in which corporations may he dissolved, yet on a little reflection it appears that there are five ways: (1) By the expiration of the term of existence granted by the Legislature, either in its charter where it is organized under a special charter, or under its governing statutes where it is organized under a general law; (2) by an act of the Legislature, where power has been reserved for that purpose either .in its charter where it is created by a special charter, or in a constitutional provision or a general statute operative upon it; (3) by a surrender of its franchises, which is accepted, and a voluntary dissolution; (4) by a loss of all its members, or of an integral part, so that the exercise of corporate functions cannot be restored; (5) by a forfeiture of its franchises by a judicial proceeding, usually an information in the nature of a writ of quo wa-rranto, but sometimes, under the operation of statutes, a proceeding in a court of equity, which at the same time winds up the corporation and distributes its assets.” 10 Cyc., 1270. And again it is said in Cyc., at p. 1272: “Charters are *602protected from legislative alteration or repeal unless tbe power to alter or repeal bas been reserved by tbe Legislature in making tbe grant of tbe franchises, either in tbe particular act in which tbe grant is embodied or in some general law applicable to tbe subject. In tbe latter case a statute dissolving a corporation and annulling its charter is not unconstitutional. Where this reservation bas been made, a corporation may be dissolved by an act of tbe Legislature repealing its • charter. Where tbe Legislature bas reserved to itself tbe power to repeal, and exercises it, tbe courts will not presume that tbe power bas been improperly or unconscionably exercised.” It is provided in tbe Revisal that a corporation may be dissolved voluntarily by proceedings taken as set forth in section 1195, and, under section 1196, dissolution may further take place under judgment of a court having jurisdiction in a civil action brought by a stockholder or a creditor, or by authority of the Attorney-General in tbe name of tbe State for tbe causes therein enumerated, and, among them, “if tbe corporation shall become insolvent, or shall suspend its ordinary business for want of funds to carry on tbe same, or be in imminent danger of insolvency, or bas forfeited its corporate rights.” But, as already shown, tbe Legislature bad tbe power to declare tbe charter of a corporation to be forfeited, and thereby to dissolve it.

We need not discuss tbe question whether tbe law of 1913 can be made to operate retrospectively, as we are of tbe opinion that tbe adjudication of bankruptcy bad tbe same effect substantially and pro tempore as a dissolution of tbe corporation. It may be conceded that bankruptcy does not, of itself, work a dissolution of tbe corporation, as in tbe sententious language of Judge Bleckley in Bolland v. Heyman, 60 Ga., 181: “It is not tbe purpose of tbe bankrupt law to dissolve corporations. Tbe assets are seized, but tbe franchise' is spared. ‘Your money/ not,‘your life/ is tbe demand made by tbe bankruptcy act.” But tbe company for tbe period of its bankruptcy bas ceased to do business, and as completely lost its capacity to earn dividends as if its corporate life bad become extinct. Where there is tbe same reason there must be tbe same law.

While it is not essential to a disposition of this appeal that we should commit ourselves to any special view regarding tbe power of tbe Legislature to pass tbe retroactive clause of tbe law of 1913, and we will not do so, it may be well to reproduce here tbe clear exposition of tbe law by Justice Harlan in respect to tbe scope and effect of tbe reservation in constitutions or statutes to amend or repeal charters granted to corporations, which we find in Hamilton G. & G. Co. v. City of Hamilton, 146 U. S., 258 (L. Ed., 963), as follows: “This reservation of power to alter or revoke a grant' of special privileges necessarily became a part of tbe charter of every corporation formed *603under the general statute providing for the formation of corporations. A legislative grant to a corporation of special privileges, if not forbidden by the Constitution, may be a contract; but where one of the conditions of the grant is that the Legislature may alter or revoke it, a law altering or revoking, or which hais the effect to alter or revoke, the exclusive character of such privileges, cannot be regarded as one impairing the obligation of the contract, whatever may be the motive of the Legislature, or however harshly such legislation may operate, in the particular case, upon the corporation or parties affected by it. The corporation, by accepting the grant subject to the legislative power so reserved by the Constitution, must be held to have assented to such reservation. These views are supported by the decisions of this Court. In Greenwood v. Union Freight R. Co., 105 U. S., 13, 17 (26: 961, 963), the question was as to the scope and effect of a clause in a general statute of Massachusetts providing that every act of incorporation passed after a named day ‘shall be subject to amendment, alteration, or repeal at the pleasure of the Legislature.’ This Court, referring to that clause, said: ‘Such an act may be amended; that is, it may be changed by additions to its terms or by qualifications of the same. It may be altered by the same power, and it may be repealed. "What is it may be repealed ? It is the act of incorporation. It is this organic law on which the corporate existence of the company depends which may be repealed, so that it shall cease to be a law; or the Legislature may adopt the milder course of amending the law in matters which need amendment, or altering it when it needs .substantial change. All this may be done at the pleasure of the Legislature. That body need give no reason for its action in the matter. The validity of such action does not depend on the necessity for it or on the soundness of the reasons which prompted it. The words ‘at the pleasure of the Legislature’ are not in the clauses of the Constitution of Ohio or in the statutes to which we have referred. But the general reservation of the power to alter, revoke, or repeal a grant of special privileges necessarily implies that the power may be exerted at the pleasure of the Legislature.”

The plaintiff contends that a clause has been inserted in the guaranty which specially fixes its duration and provides that it shall continue during the life of the defendant company; but this was also true in the ease of Lorillard v. Clyde, supra, as the time there was seven years from the date of the guaranty, and the corporation was dissolved within that period. The clause in the guaranty upon which plaintiff relied does not prevent the application of the principle we have discussed. It merely limits the extreme duration of the guaranty. It was held in the able and exhaustive opinion of Justice Andrews, speaking for a unanimous Court in Lorillard v. Clyde, supra, that this did not *604prevent tbe full application of the principle; that the contract of guaranty was made with strict reference to the continuance of the defendant’s corporate life and its capacity to earn dividends, this being the indispensable condition upon which the guaranty should continue to be effective, and the very basis upon which it rested. The bankruptcy, while it did not destroy the life of the defendant company, suspended its corporate capacity and the exercise of its corporate functions, and it ceased altogether to be a going concern, capable of earning dividends. It was dormant, if not dead, for all practical purposes. Our view is greatly strengthened by the position taken by the plaintiff, that the guaranty is not one conditioned upon the payment of a dividend by the warehouse company, whether earned or not, but only upon the payment of the dividend “called for by the certificate,” which i.s an earned dividend, and the promise is to pay any deficiency therein which may occur in any one of “the consecutive years” succeeding the date of the guaranty. The parties contemplated that there should, at least, be a chance for the company to make profits and pay dividends.

The case of Kernochan v. Murray, 2 L. R. A. (N. Y.), 183, is not in point, as there the guarantor, who was an individual, and not a corporation, died. This, of course, did not affect the guaranty. In orn-ease, the warehouse company is not the guarantor, nor is it even a party to the contract, but an outsider, with reference to whose continued life, as a corporation, the contract was made, which presents a case very different from Kernochan v. Murray, supra. Nor is Cownie v. Dodd, 149 N. W., 904, any more applicable, for there the provision was that the guaranty should continue “until said stock has been retired”; and this -event never happened. As stated by .plaintiff in his brief, “the court held that the time limit of the guaranty, was not the life of the corporation, but until the stock had been retired” The company had ceased to do business, but this-did not “retire” its stock, and, therefore, the “time limit” had not been reached. The Court, in that case, stated that the principle we have applied to this case had been recognized and established in .several decisions. -It is to be noticed that Kernochan v. Murray is a New York case, and the Court of Appeals of that State, as we have seen, sustains -our view; but neither of the two cases cited by the plaintiff conflicts with anything we have said, but both are in entire harmony therewith.

As the warehouse company was a bankrupt when this action was commenced, and its business was suspended, so that it could not earn dividends, our conclusion is that the plaintiff had no cause of action on the guaranty at that time. Whether the guaranty has ceased for all time to be operative because it has reached the limit of its duration by the dissolution of the corporation, we are not required to declare.

We have not, for the reasons already stated, considered the reason*605ableness of the contract of guaranty, if it bears the construction which the plaintiff insists that it should have, nor the other objections to its validity which the defendant has discussed in its brief.

There was error in the judgment of the court. It will be reversed and the demurrer sustained.

Reversed.