A corporation remains unchanged and unaffected in its identity
by changes in its members, nor does it change its identity by
increasing its capital stock, and its legal action is equally
binding on itself after such an increase as it was prior
thereto.
A corporation should not be allowed to disregard its assent
previously given in order to charge a single member with the whole
results of a transaction to which the greater part -- in this case,
thirteen-fifteenths -- of its stock were parties for the benefit of
the guilty and innocent alike.
148 F. 1020 affirmed.
The facts are stated in the opinion.
Page 210 U. S. 209
MR. JUSTICE Holmes delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is a bill in equity brought by the petitioner to rescind a
sale to it of certain mining rights and land by the defendants'
testator, or, in the alternative, to recover damages for the sale.
The bill was demurred to and the demurrer was sustained. 136 F.
915. Then the bill was amended and again demurred to, and again the
demurrer was sustained, and the bill was dismissed. This decree was
affirmed by the circuit court of appeals. 148 F. 1020. The ground
of the petitioner's case is that Lewisohn, the deceased, and one
Bigelow, as promoters, formed the petitioner that they might sell
certain properties to it at a profit; that they made their sale
while they owned all the stock issued, but in contemplation of a
large further issue to the public without disclosure of their
profit, and that such an issue in fact was made. The Supreme
Judicial Court of Massachusetts has held the plaintiff entitled to
recover from Bigelow upon a substantially similar bill. 188 Mass.
315.
The facts alleged are as follows: the property embraced in the
plan was the mining property of the Old Dominion Copper Company of
Baltimore, and also the mining rights and land
Page 210 U. S. 210
now in question, the latter being held by one Keyser, for the
benefit of himself and of the executors of one Simpson, who, with
Keyser, owned the stock of the Baltimore company. Bigelow and
Lewisohn, in May and June, 1895, obtained options from Simpson's
executors and Keyser for the purchase of the stock and the property
now in question. They also formed a syndicate to carry out their
plan, with the agreement that the money subscribed by the members
should be used for the purchase and the sale to a new corporation
at a large advance, and that the members, in the proportion of
their subscriptions, should receive in cash or in stock of the new
corporation the profit made by the sale. On May 28, 1895, Bigelow
paid Simpson's executors for their stock on behalf of the
syndicate, in cash and notes of himself and Lewisohn, and in June
Keyser was paid in the same way.
On July 8, 1895, Bigelow and Lewisohn started the plaintiff
corporation, the seven members being their nominees and tools. The
next day the stock of the company was increased to 150,000 shares
of $25 each, officers were elected, and the corporation became duly
organized. July 11, pursuant to instructions, some of the officers
resigned, and Bigelow and Lewisohn and three other absent members
of the syndicate came in. Thereupon an offer was received from the
Baltimore company, the stock of which had been bought, as stated,
by Bigelow and Lewisohn, to sell substantially all its property for
100,000 shares of the plaintiff company. The offer was accepted,
and then Lewisohn offered to sell the real estate now in question,
obtained from Keyser, for 30,000 shares, to be issued to Bigelow
and himself. This also was accepted, and possession of all the
mining property was delivered the next day. The sales "were
consummated" by delivery of deeds, and afterwards, on July 18, to
raise working capital, it was voted to officer the remaining 20,000
shares to the public at par, and they were taken by subscribers who
did not know of the profit made by Bigelow and Lewisohn and the
syndicate. On September 18, the 100,000 and 30,000
Page 210 U. S. 211
shares were issued, and it was voted to issue the 20,000 when
paid for. The bill alleges that the property of the Baltimore
company was not worth more than $1,000,000, the sum paid for its
stock, and the property here concerned not over $5,000, as Bigelow
and Lewisohn knew. The market value of the petitioner's stock was
not less than par, so that the price paid was $2,500,000, it is
said, for the Baltimore company's property, and $750,000 for that
here concerned. Whether this view of the price paid is correct it
is unnecessary to decide.
Of the stock in the petitioner received by Bigelow and Lewisohn
or their Baltimore corporation, 40,000 shares went to the syndicate
as profit, and the members had their choice of receiving a like
additional number of shares or the repayment of their original
subscription. As pretty nearly all took the stock, the syndicate
received about 80,000 shares. The remaining 20,000 of the stock
paid to the Baltimore company Bigelow and Lewisohn divided, the
plaintiff believes, without the knowledge of the syndicate. The
30,000 shares received for the property now in question they also
divided. Thus, the plans of Bigelow and Lewisohn were carried
out.
The argument for the petitioner is that all would admit that the
promoters (assuming the English phrase to be well applied) stood in
a fiduciary relation to it if, when the transaction took place,
there were members who were not informed of the profits made and
who did not acquiesce, and that the same obligation of good faith
extends down to the time of the later subscriptions, which it was
the promoters' plan to obtain. It is an argument that has commanded
the assent of at least one court, and is stated at length in the
decision. But the courts do not agree. There is no authority
binding upon us and in point. The general observations in
Dickerman v. Northern Trust Co., 176 U.
S. 181, were
obiter, and do not dispose of the
case. Without spending time upon the many dicta that were quoted to
us, we shall endeavor to weigh the considerations on one side and
the other afresh.
The difficulty that meets the petitioner at the outset is
that
Page 210 U. S. 212
it has assented to the transaction with the full knowledge of
the facts. It is said, to be sure, that on September 18, when the
shares were issued to the sellers, there were already subscribers
to the 20,000 shares that the public took. But this does not appear
from the bill unless it should be inferred from the ambiguous
statement that, on that day, it was voted to issue those shares "to
persons who had subscribed therefor," upon receiving payment, and
that the shares "were thereafter duly issued to said persons," etc.
The words "had subscribed" may refer to the time of issue and be
equivalent to "should have subscribed," or may refer to an already
past event. But that hardly matters. The contract had been made and
the property delivered on July 11 and 12, when Bigelow, Lewisohn,
and some other members of the syndicate held all the outstanding
stock, and it is alleged in terms that the sales were consummated
before the vote of July 18, to offer stock to the public, had been
passed.
At the time of the sale to the plaintiff, then, there was no
wrong done to anyone. Bigelow, Lewisohn, and their syndicate were
on both sides of the bargain, and they might issue to themselves as
much stock in their corporation as they liked in exchange for their
conveyance of their land.
Salomon v. A. Salomon & Co.
[1897], A.C. 22;
Blum v. Whitney, 185 N.Y. 232;
Tompkins v. Sperry, 96 Md. 560. If there was a wrong, it
was when the innocent public subscribed. But what one would expect
to find, if a wrong happened then, would not be that the sale
became a breach of duty to the corporation
nunc pro tunc,
but that the invitation to the public without disclosure, when
acted upon, became a fraud upon the subscribers from an equitable
point of view, accompanied by what they might treat as damage. For
it is only by virtue of the innocent subscribers' position and the
promoter's invitation that the corporation has any pretense for a
standing in court. If the promoters, after starting their scheme,
had sold their stock before any subscriptions were taken, and then
the purchasers of their stock, with notice, had invited the public
to
Page 210 U. S. 213
come in, and it did, we do not see how the company could
maintain this suit. If it could not then, we do not see how it can
now.
But it is said that, from a business point of view, the
agreement was not made merely to bind the corporation as it then
was, with only forty shares issued, but to bind the corporation
when it should have a capital of $3,750,000, and the implication is
that practically this was a new and different corporation. Of
course, legally speaking, a corporation does not change its
identity by adding a cubit to its stature. The nominal capital of
the corporation was the same when the contract was made and after
the public had subscribed. Therefore, what must be meant is, as we
have said, that the corporation got a new right from the fact that
new men, who did not know what it had done, had put in their money
and had become members. It is assumed in argument that the new
members had no ground for a suit in their own names, but it is
assumed also that their position changed that of the corporation,
and thus that the indirect effect of their acts was greater than
the direct; that facts that gave them no claim gave one to the
corporation because of them, notwithstanding its assent. We shall
not consider whether the new members had a personal claim of any
kind, and therefore we deal with the case without prejudice to that
question, and without taking advantage of what we understand the
petitioner to concede.
But, if we are to leave technical law on one side, and approach
the case from what is supposed to be a business point of view,
there are new matters to be taken into account. If the corporation
recovers, all the stockholders, guilty as well as innocent, get the
benefit. It is answered that the corporation is not precluded from
recovering for a fraud upon it, because the party committing the
fraud is a stockholder.
Old Dominion Copper Mining and Smelting
Co. v. Bigelow, 188 Mass. 315, 327. If there had been innocent
members at the time of the sale, the fact that there were also
guilty ones would not prevent a recovery, and even might not be a
sufficient
Page 210 U. S. 214
reason for requiring all the guilty members to be joined as
defendants in order to avoid a manifest injustice.
Stockton v.
Anderson, 40 N.J.Eq. 486. The same principle is thought to
apply when innocent members are brought in later under a scheme.
But it is obvious that this answer falls back upon the technical
diversity between the corporation and its members, which the
business point of view is supposed to transcend, as it must, in
order to avoid the objection that the corporation has assented to
the sale with full notice of the facts. It is mainly on this
diversity that the answer to the objection of injustice is based in
New Sombrero Phosphate Co. v. Erlanger, 5 Ch.Div. 73, 114,
122.
Let us look at the business aspect alone. The syndicate was a
party to the scheme to make a profit out of the corporation.
Whether or not there was a subordinate fraud committed by Bigelow
and Lewisohn on the agreement with them, as the petitioner
believes, is immaterial to the corporation. The issue of the stock
was apparent, we presume, on the books, so that it is difficult to
suppose that at least some members of the syndicate, representing
an adverse interest, did not know what was done. But all the
members were engaged in the plan of buying for less and selling to
the corporation for more, and were subject to whatever equity the
corporation has against Bigelow and the estate of Lewisohn. There
was some argument to the contrary, but this seems to us the fair
meaning of the bill. Bigelow and Lewisohn, it is true, divided the
stock received for the real estate now in question. But that was a
matter between them and the syndicate. The real estate was bought
from Keyser by the syndicate, along with his stock in the Baltimore
company, and was sold by the syndicate to the petitioner, along
with the Baltimore company's property, as part of the scheme. The
syndicate was paid for it, whoever received the stock. And this
means that 2/15 of the stock of the corporation, the 20,000 shares
sold to the public, are to be allowed to use the name of the
corporation to assert rights against Lewisohn's estate that
Page 210 U. S. 215
will inure to the benefit of 13/15 of the stock that are totally
without claim. It seems to us that the practical objection is as
strong as that arising if we adhere to the law.
Let us take the business point of view for a moment longer. To
the lay mind, it would make little or no difference whether the
20,000 shares sold to the public were sold on an original
subscription to the articles of incorporation or were issued under
the scheme to some of the syndicate and sold by them. Yet it is
admitted, in accordance with the decisions, that, in the latter
case, the innocent purchasers would have no claim against anyone.
If we are to seek what is called substantial justice, in disregard
of even peremptory rules of law, it would seem desirable to get a
rule that would cover both of the almost equally possible cases of
what is deemed a wrong. It might be said that, if the stock really
was taken as a preliminary to selling to the public, the
subscribers would show a certain confidence in the enterprise, and
give at least that security for good faith. But the syndicate
believed in the enterprise, notwithstanding all the profits that
they made it pay. They preferred to take stock at par, rather than
cash. Moreover, it would have been possible to issue the whole
stock in payment for the property purchased, with an understanding
as to 20,000 shares.
Of course, it is competent for legislators, but not, we think,
for judges, except by a
quasi-legislative declaration, to
establish that a corporation shall not be bound by its assent in a
transaction of this kind, when the parties contemplate an
invitation to the public to come in and join as original
subscribers for any portion of the shares. It may be said that the
corporation cannot be bound until the contemplated adverse interest
is represented, or it may be said that promoters cannot strip
themselves of the character of trustees until that moment. But it
seems to us a strictly legislative determination. It is difficult,
without inventing new and qualifying established doctrines, to go
behind the fact that the corporation remains one and the same after
once it really exists.
Page 210 U. S. 216
When, as here, after it really exists, it consents, we at least
shall require stronger equities than are shown by this bill to
allow it to renew its claim at a later date because its internal
constitution has changed.
To sum up: in our opinion, on the one hand, the plaintiff cannot
recover without departing from the fundamental conception embodied
in the law that created it -- the conception that a corporation
remains unchanged and unaffected in its identity by changes in its
members.
Donnell v. Herring-Hall-Marvin Safe Co.,
208 U. S. 267,
208 U. S. 273;
Salomon v. Salomon & Co. [1897], A.C. 22, 30. On the
other hand, if we should undertake to look through fiction to
facts, it appears to us that substantial justice would not be
accomplished, but rather a great injustice done, if the corporation
were allowed to disregard its previous assent in order to charge a
single member with the whole results of a transaction to which
13/15 of its stock were parties, for the benefit of the guilty, if
there was guilt in anyone, and the innocent alike. We decide only
what is necessary. We express no opinion as to whether the
defendant properly is called a promoter, or whether the plaintiff
has not been guilty of laches, or whether a remedy can be had for a
part of a single transaction in the form in which it is sought, or
whether there was any personal claim on the part of the innocent
subscribers, or as to any other question than that which we have
discussed.
The English case chiefly relied upon,
Erlanger v. New
Sombrero Phosphate Co., 3 App.Cas. 1218,
aff'g 5
Ch.Div. 73, seems to us far from establishing a different doctrine
for that jurisdiction. There, to be sure, a syndicate had made an
agreement to sell at a profit to a company to be got up by the
sellers. But the company, at the first stage, was made up mainly of
outsiders, some of them instruments of the sellers, but innocent
instruments, and, according to Lord Cairns, the contract was
provisional on the shares being taken and the company formed (p.
1239). There never was a moment when the company had assented with
knowledge of the facts.
Page 210 U. S. 217
The shares, with perhaps one exception, all were taken by
subscribers ignorant of the facts, 5 Ch.Div. 113, and the contract
seems to have reached forward to the moment when they subscribed.
As it is put in 2 Morawetz, Corp. (2d ed.) § 292, there was
really no company till the shares were issued. Here, 13/15 of the
stock had been taken by the syndicate, the corporation was in full
life, and had assented to the sale with knowledge of the facts
before an outsider joined. There, most of the syndicate were
strangers to the corporation, yet all were joined as defendants (p.
1222). Here, the members of the syndicate, although members of the
corporation, are not joined, and it is sought to throw the burden
of their act upon a single one.
Gluckstein v. Barnes
[1900], A.C. 240, certainly is no stronger for the plaintiff, and
in
Yeiser v. United States Board & Paper Co., 107 F.
340, another case that was relied upon, the transaction equally was
carried through after innocent subscribers had paid for stock.
Decree affirmed.