A contract between A, a subscriber to the stock of a proposed
incorporated company, and B, another subscriber to the same, made
without the knowledge of the remaining subscribers, by which A
agrees to purchase the stock of B at the price paid for it if at a
specified time B elects to sell it, is not contrary to public
policy, and can be enforced against A if made fairly and honestly,
and if untainted with actual fraud.
This was an action of assumpsit, brought in the court below by
J. Pierpont Morgan, a citizen of the New York, against Thomas
Struthers and one Thomas S. Blair, citizens of Pennsylvania, to
recover the sum of $26,282.19, with interest, on a certain contract
in writing, more particularly described hereafter. The defendant
Blair not having been served with process, the case proceeded
against Struthers alone.
The material facts in the case were substantially as follows: in
the year 1873, Thomas Struthers, Thomas S. Blair and Morrison
Foster were the owners of certain patents for the manufacture of
iron and steel, and also of certain real estate and works erected
thereon, to be used for such manufacture, situate in Pittsburgh,
Pennsylvania. They then procured an incorporation under the laws of
the New York, in the name of the "Blair Iron and Steel Company,"
with a capital of $2,500,000, divided into 25,000 shares of $100
each, the stock being paid up in full by a transfer to the company
of the patents and the works at Pittsburgh. The entire amount of
the capital stock was issued to the incorporators on or about April
12, 1873. With a view of raising a working capital, Blair,
"New York, January 20, 1873"
"The capital stock of the Blair Iron and Steel Company is 25,000
shares, of $100 each, $2,500,000. This capital has been
Page 131 U. S. 247
paid up by the transfer of the patents for the Blair process and
the works at Glenwood, Twenty-Third Ward of Pittsburgh, Pa. to the
company, the deed for the Glenwood property to be made as soon as
an empowering act can be obtained from the Pennsylvania
Legislature, which we have bound ourselves to procure, and the
whole stock of said company issued to us in payment therefor. We
have agreed to place in the hands of General A. S. Diven, as
trustee, 9,000 shares of this stock, to be used as working capital
for the company, subject to the order of the board of trustees of
said company, except $50,000 of the proceeds thereof first to be
paid to us by said trustee. The trustees of the company have, with
our consent, ordered a sale of 6,000 of said shares for the purpose
of raising a present working capital, and paying said $50,000, the
minimum price to be $50 per share, and said trustee, with the
approbation of the board of trustees, now offers said 6,000 shares
at said minimum price of $50 per share, to be paid for as follows,
viz.: one-third part thereof as soon as the whole 6,000 shares
shall be subscribed for, and the remainder in such installments as
the board of trustees may call for the same for the purposes of the
business, the certificates to be delivered when the whole shall be
paid."
"THOMAS S. BLAIR"
"T. STRUTHERS"
"MORRISON FOSTER"
"By his attorney, T. STRUTHERS"
"We, the undersigned, hereby subscribe to the number of shares
of the above six thousand shares set opposite to our names,
respectively, to be paid for according to the terms above set
forth, but this subscription not to be binding until the whole six
thousand shares shall have been reliably subscribed."
A number of persons subscribed to this paper without any other
condition, but Morgan, the plaintiff, demanded and obtained from
the promoters of the enterprise a further stipulation or agreement,
the existence of which was not made known to others who signed the
original paper, some before and some after Morgan, and which
additional stipulation was as follows:
Page 131 U. S. 248
"Whereas, J. Pierpont Morgan has purchased four hundred shares
of the stock of the Blair Iron and Steel Company at the price of
fifty dollars per share, and sold by A. S. Diven, trustee of said
company: now we, the undersigned, in consideration of one dollar to
us in hand paid, the receipt whereof is hereby acknowledged, do
hereby agree that if at the end of one year from this date, said J.
Pierpont Morgan shall desire to sell the said shares at the price
paid for the same by him, we will purchase the same at that price,
and pay to him the amount paid by him on the same, with interest at
the rate of seven percent per annum."
"THOS, S. BLAIR"
"T. STRUTHERS"
"New York, April 4, 1873."
At the end of the year, the agreement of purchase was renewed
for another year, and at the expiration of that year it was again
renewed, the following agreement being entered into:
"NEW YORK, March 22, 1875"
"In consideration of the waiver by J. Pierpont Morgan of the
right of election to sell to us the four hundred shares of stock in
the Blair Iron and Steel Company (subscribed and paid for by him),
as he was entitled to do by agreement with us in 1873, renewed and
extended, by agreement of 1874, to April 4, 1875, we do hereby
agree that his right to do so shall be extended for another year,
viz., to April 4, 1876. If he shall at that time elect to sell to
us the four hundred shares so subscribed and held by him, we will
receive and pay for the same the amount paid by him therefor, with
interest at the rate of seven percent per year from the date of the
payment by him of the respective installments thereon; and, as
collateral security for the performance by us of this, our
agreement, we have placed in the hands of Joseph W. Drexel, Esq.,
four hundred shares of the stock of the said Blair Iron and Steel
Company, to be held by him in trust for that purpose."
"T. STRUTHERS"
"T. S. BLAIR"
Page 131 U. S. 249
On the 20th of March, 1876, Morgan notified Blair and Struthers
that he desired to avail himself of the terms of the agreement
entered into between them, and on the 4th of April of that year
tendered them the stock referred to in the agreement. The
defendants having failed and refused to comply with the terms of
the contract of repurchase, Morgan, on the 1st of March, 1882,
brought this action, averring in his declaration the foregoing
facts. The defendant in his answer admitted the making of the
contract declared upon, and all the facts alleged by the plaintiff
in support of his claim, but set up by way of defense two
propositions, either of which he claimed was sufficient to defeat
the plaintiff's case, viz.: first, the contract sued on was invalid
and against public policy because made secretly with one of a
number of persons who had subscribed together, upon the same
express terms and conditions, for stock in a manufacturing
corporation, whereby the plaintiff had sought to procure to himself
an advantage withheld from the other subscribers, and, second, the
defendant is not precluded from setting up the invalidity of such
contract because he was a party to it. The case was tried by a
jury, which, under instructions from the court, found in favor of
the defendant, and judgment was rendered accordingly. To reverse
that judgment this writ of error is prosecuted.
Page 131 U. S. 250
MR. JUSTICE LAMAR, after stating the case as above reported,
delivered the opinion of the Court.
Several exceptions were taken during the progress of the trial
to the rulings of the court in excluding evidence offered by the
plaintiff, to its refusal to give instructions requested by the
plaintiff, and to its general charge to the jury, which are
embodied in twelve assignments of error. It is not necessary to
discuss them
seriatim, as the main contention relates to
the correctness of the instructions given by the circuit court to
the jury. In order to determine the principle on which the
instructions rest, it will be useful to ascertain the points
incidentally connected with the case about which there is no
dispute.
First. It is conceded, and the court so charged the jury,
correctly, as we think, that the contract made by Morgan with
Struthers touching the repurchase of the stock, standing by itself,
was a perfectly fair and honest one, in which there was no vice
inherent that would relieve the person making it from its
obligation. If, therefore, its validity or binding force is
impaired, it must be because of its extrinsic effect by reason of
the relations of the parties to the other stockholders in the
corporation. It is also conceded that, as to these stockholders, no
actual
Page 131 U. S. 251
fraud or deceit was practiced in the making of the contracts
sued upon. This is virtually the ground upon which the court
refused to admit evidence offered by the plaintiff for the avowed
purpose of showing the good faith of the transaction as to the
other subscribers. It said:
"It is not necessary for the defendants, to sustain their
defense, to show actual fraud. If the tendency of such things is to
operate as a fraud upon others, that is the basis of the rule."
It is also a fact, undenied and undeniable, that the plaintiff
strictly complied with all the terms and stipulations expressed in
the prospectus and in the contract of subscription by paying into
the treasury of the corporation the entire amount of his
subscription. It should also be considered as conceded -- for there
is nothing in the pleadings, nor in the evidence, nor in any of the
rulings of the court, nor in the argument of counsel, to the
contrary -- that he did not enter into any secret agreement with
the corporation or any other person that he should not be required
to pay the amount he had subscribed; and, finally, the court more
than once gives strong intimation that there is no reason in
equity, justice, or fair dealing why the defendant should not be
made to comply with his obligation. On the other hand, it is
conceded that the contract sued on was a collateral, optional
contract, made at the time of plaintiff's subscription, which
constituted the inducement to it, and was not made known to all the
other subscribers to stock.
The only question, then, presented for our consideration is
whether the collateral contract, perfectly fair and honest in
itself and untainted with any actual fraud upon any person, entered
into by a subscriber of stock with other subscribers, to the effect
that they will purchase the same, and pay to him the amount paid by
him, if at a time specified he chooses to sell the same, is
contrary to public policy, and cannot be enforced against the party
to it. Upon this question the view of the court below is stated
very explicitly. It says:
"If others of the subscribers to the stock were not informed of
the fact that plaintiff had obtained said agreement as a
condition
Page 131 U. S. 252
or part of his agreement to subscribe for the said stock, and
that the existence of such accompanying agreement was not made
known to others of said common subscribers, this said agreement was
in the eye of the law a fraud upon the other subscribers who did
not receive and were not informed of the existence of such
agreement, and was contrary to the policy of the law, and the
plaintiff cannot recover."
Again, in his general charge he repeats:
"Whatever may be our own views as to the honesty of such an
attempt to defeat the enforcement of an honest contract, that is a
consideration which you or I have nothing to do with. If you find
that the beneficial arrangement set up and sought to be enforced in
this suit was not made known to all the subscribers to that stock,
and they were not afforded an opportunity to avail themselves of
like security, that arrangement was void, and cannot be
enforced."
We cannot concur in this conclusion. We are not prepared to
affirm that there is a public policy which operates such a
restraint upon the transfer of stock in a corporation as to render
the contract in question, conceded to be valid and fair in itself,
fraudulent as to the co-subscribers with the plaintiff for the
6,000 shares sold by the company, and to render it in valid against
the party to it, who, it is admitted, has no equity or justice in
his favor. Nor do we assent to the proposition upon which this
conclusion rests. That proposition is that when a man purchases or
subscribes to shares of stock in an incorporated joint-stock
company, there is upon him, in addition to the express terms of the
subscription contract, an implied obligation, incident to the
common enterprise, which restrains him from making any engagement
with other individuals to secure his own stock against risk unless
the other subscribers are informed of it and put upon an equal
footing as to such security.
One essential feature of an incorporated joint-stock company is
the right of each stockholder, without restraint, to sell or
transfer his shares at pleasure. Thompson, Liability of
Stockholders § 210, and cases there cited. So well established
is this right that a bylaw of a bank putting restrictions upon
Page 131 U. S. 253
the transferability of stock in the hands of its members has
been held void as being in restraint of trade.
Moore v.
Bank, 52 Mo. 377. Even where the charter gives the corporation
the power to regulate transfer of stocks, it has been held that
this power does not include the authority to restrain transfers.
Chouteau Spring Co. v. Harris, 20 Mo. 382, citing 10 Mass.
476 and numerous other authorities.
Counsel for defendant urges that notwithstanding this right to
make an absolute sale of his stock belongs to each subscriber, the
policy of the law forbids one of them, whose act of subscription
may be held out as an inducement for others to subscribe, from
making a contract of future sale with a view to secure his
investment, and renders such a contract void because many
co-stockholders
"may have been chiefly induced to subscribe by a knowledge that
so prominent and successful an operator was willing to risk his
money in such an adventure, and who, had they been told that he had
exacted a private security or guaranty which availed to give him
the benefit of both the experiment in business and of getting back
his money with interest if he did not succeed, would assuredly
either have refused to subscribe or have demanded a similar
guaranty. Moreover, they had a right to suppose that the new firm
was to have the countenance of Mr. Morgan, and probably his
assistance in the future."
This is a palpable misconception of the nature of the
transaction. There was nothing in the prospectus, or in the
subscription contract, or in the nature of the enterprise, to
justify such a presumption or expectation on the part of the other
stock subscribers. It is just in this respect, especially, that an
incorporated joint-stock company differs from an ordinary
co-partnership. In the latter, the individual members of the firm
are presumed to, and in general actually do, contribute to the
common enterprise not only their several shares of partnership
capital, but also their individual experience, skill, or credit, no
member having the right to sell out his interest or to retire from
the firm without the consent of the co-partners, and, if he does
either, the act amounts to a dissolution of the partnership.
Parsons on Partnership § 171. The very reverse, as we have
Page 131 U. S. 254
said, is the case of a joint-stock corporation, in which each
stockholder, whether by purchase or original subscription, has the
right, unless restrained by the charter or articles of association,
to sell and transfer his shares, and, by transferring them,
introduce others in their stead.
It is also urged that "the other subscribers had a right to
presume that Mr. Morgan went into the common enterprise upon the
same terms with themselves." This proposition is true so far as
those terms are prescribed in the charter, the prospectus, and the
contract of subscription, but it is also true that each of those
stockholders had the equal right to sell, or agree to sell, that
stock whenever and to whomsoever he chose, such stock being
personal property, and subject to any disposal he might choose to
make of it, and that this right belonged nonetheless to Morgan on
account of his prominence and known skill as an operator than it
did to any other member of the corporation. We have read with care
all the authorities cited by counsel for defendant in error to
support the claim that the contract in question is, in the eye of
the law, fraudulent and void. Those which relate to contracts
connected with subscriptions of stock are simply illustrative, in
different forms, of a doctrine settled in a great number and
variety of decisions that a corporation has no legal capacity to
release an original subscriber to its capital stock from payment of
it, in whole or in any part, and that any arrangement with him by
which the company, its creditors or stockholders, shall lose any
part of that subscription, is
ultra vires, and a fraud
upon creditors and the co-subscribers.
Burke v.
Smith, 16 Wall. 390,
83 U. S. 395;
Bedford Railroad Co. v. Bowser, 48 Penn.St. 29; Green's
Brice,
Ultra Vires. This doctrine rests upon the principle
that the stock subscribed, both paid and unpaid, is the capital of
the company, and its means of carrying out the object for which it
was chartered and organized. All these cases fall within this
principle. In each of them, the agreement declared void, had it
been carried out, would have diminished the common fund, which is a
trust fund for the benefit of the general creditors of the
corporation, the stockholders, and all others having an
Page 131 U. S. 255
interest therein, and would have been violative of the terms
upon which the subscriptions had been expressly made, and under
which the trust originated. The corporation would have been damaged
in its capital by the loss of the subscriptions, and the
co-subscribers would have been damaged by the lessening of their
common trust fund. As we have seen, no feature of damage to the
corporation, actual fraud, or violation of contract exists in this
case. The contract sued on, if specifically carried out, would have
simply resulted in what all agree lay within the power of each
subscriber at the time of making his subscription -- a transfer of
his stock, and the introduction of other stockholders in his
stead.
Counsel for defendant has cited cases of composition between an
insolvent debtor and his creditors, where one creditor has secured,
by a secret arrangement, either with the insolvent or some other
person, terms more favorable to himself than the composition
agreement provided for all of the other creditors joining therein.
In the English cases, the doctrine is carried to the fullest
extent, that such secret arrangements are utterly void, even as
against the party with whom the arrangement was made. The American
decisions, while perhaps not going to the extent of the English
decisions, clearly assert the illegality of such arrangement. 1
Story Eq.Jur. §§ 378, 379;
White v. Kuntz, 107
N.Y. 518. But we think that the analogy between the cases of
composition agreements and those of stock subscriptions is remote,
and that the decisions as to the former are not applicable to this
case.
The relations of composition creditors, either to the
insolvent's estate or to each other, are widely different from
those which stock subscribers bear to the corporation and their
co-subscribers. Upon the failure or insolvency of a debtor, his
creditors stand together in a common relation of claims,
proportionate to their amount and grade, upon an interest in his
(the insolvent's) estate. "The purport," says Mr. Justice Story
"of a composition or trust deed in cases of insolvency usually
is that the property of the debtor shall be assigned to trustees,
and shall be collected and distributed by them among the creditors
according to the order and
Page 131 U. S. 256
terms prescribed in the deed itself, and, in consideration of
the assignment, the creditors, who become parties, generally agree
to release all their debts beyond what the funds will satisfy."
1 Story Eq.Jur. § 378. It is clear that any secret bargain
by which one of these creditors obtains more than he composition
deed gives, and more than he agrees under it to take, violates the
equality which is the basis of the deed of settlement, and operates
a gross fraud upon the creditors -- a fraud which the law, in its
policy of precaution, rather than by mere remedial justice,
suppresses by depriving the parties of the fruit of their
clandestine arrangements.
It is not necessary to restate the widely different basis of the
relation of stock subscribers to a joint-stock corporation and to
each other, where each subscriber acts for himself, in the act of
subscription, with the unrestricted right, in the exercise of
vigilance and foresight, to make any arrangement for the security
of his shares, provided he does not lessen the amount of his
subscription, which constitutes part of the trust fund in which all
the subscribers have an equal interest.
We think this case perfectly clear on principle. We cite,
however, as persuasive authority in support of our conclusion the
decision in
Meyer v. Blair, 109 N.Y. 600, in which a
contract identical in every material particular with the one we are
considering, made between Blair and Struthers and Meyer, a
subscriber to the 6,000 shares of stock, was considered by the
Court of Appeals of the State of New York and held valid and
binding upon the parties to it. In that case, the court says:
"The present case is not, we think, within the principle of the
stock subscription cases or the cases of composition, to which
reference has been made. The main object of the company in offering
the stock for sale was to secure 'working capital,' as is shown by
the prospectus. This object was known to the subscribers. If the
subscription of the plaintiff was a pretense merely, or if the
subscription had been accompanied by a secret agreement between the
plaintiff and the company that he should be relieved from the
subscription, or by which the terms of the purchase were materially
changed to the disadvantage
Page 131 U. S. 257
of the company, and for the advantage of the plaintiff, there
might be ground for applying the rule declared in the subscription
cases and declaring the transaction to be a fraud on the other
subscribers. . . . But there was no agreement between the company
and the plaintiff, secret or otherwise, direct or indirect, except
the agreement contained on the face of his subscription. The
plaintiff, by his subscription, became bound to the company to take
the shares subscribed for, and this agreement has never been
discharged or in any way impaired. The plaintiff remained bound by
his subscription, notwithstanding the agreement with the
defendants, as fully and completely as though the agreement with
the defendants had never been made. Nothing has occurred to change,
qualify, or limit his obligation to the company. The company sold
the shares to secure 'working capital.' . . . The defendants were
interested in setting the company afoot. They were the principal
holders of its stock. . . . They sought out the plaintiff. On his
declining at first to subscribe to the stock of the company, they
offered him the inducement that they would take the stock off his
hands within a year at cost price, if he desired it. It appears
that the same inducement was offered to other subscribers, but not
to all. We think there was nothing illegal in the arrangement."
The conclusions to which we have come on the questions discussed
dispense with any consideration of the other point presented by the
plaintiff in error,
viz., that the defendant should be
estopped from setting up the invalidity of the contract sued on
because he is a party to it, for, as we have found the contract
valid and legal, the question of estoppel does not arise.
For the foregoing reasons,
The judgment of the court below is reversed, and the cause
remanded, with instructions to grant a new trial, and to take such
further proceedings as shall be consistent with this
opinion.