In the distribution of the moneys remaining in the treasury of
the Centennial Board of Finance at the close of that corporation,
as provided for in sec. 10 of the Act of Congress of June 1, 1872,
17 Stat. 203, the appropriation of $1,500,000, made by the Act of
Feb. 16, 1876, 19
id. 3, must be paid into the Treasury of
the United States before any division of assets is made among the
stockholders in satisfaction and discharge of the capital
stock.
The facts are stated in the opinion of the Court.
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE WAITE delivered the opinion of the Court.
This case presents the single question whether, in the
distribution of the moneys remaining in the treasury of the
Centennial Board of Finance at the close of the affairs of that
corporation, as provided for in sec. 10 of the Act of June 1, 1872,
the appropriation of $1,500,000 made by Congress in the Act of Feb.
16, 1876, must be paid into the Treasury of the United States
before any division of assets is made among the stockholders in
satisfaction and discharge of the capital stock.
It is very apparent that the object of Congress, in all its
legislation with reference to the Centennial Exhibition, was to
enable the people of the United States to commemorate "the
completion of the first century of their national existence" by an
exhibition "in which the people of the whole country should
participate," and which should have the sanction of the government.
In that sense, the object was national; but it is equally clear
that until the act of 1876, it was expected that the entire expense
would be borne by the people without assistance from Congress.
Certainly no pecuniary liability whatever was assumed by Congress.
That is declared in the most positive terms.
The acts of 1871 and 1872 did nothing more than provide the
necessary organizations through which the people might
Page 94 U. S. 501
operate under the auspices of the government. That of 1871
authorized the appointment of the board of commissioners, which was
afterwards, by the act of 1872, incorporated as the "United States
Centennial Commission." The duty of this board was to prepare and
superintend the execution of a plan for holding the exhibition.
That of 1872 was specially intended to provide a way by which the
people could procure the necessary funds. It was so expressly
declared in the preamble, and for that purpose the Centennial Board
of Finance was incorporated, with apt provisions for subscription
to and sale of its capital stock and for the control and management
of its affairs. The proceeds of the stock, together with the
receipts from all other sources, were to be used by this
corporation for the erection of buildings with their appurtenances
and for all other expenditures required in carrying out the objects
of the act of 1871. Then, by sec. 10, it was provided
"That as soon as practicable after the said exhibition shall
have been closed, it shall be the duty of said corporation to
convert its property into cash, and, after the payment of its
liabilities, to divide its remaining assets among its stockholders
pro rata, in full satisfaction and discharge of its
capital stock."
Afterward came the act of 1876, which made the appropriation now
under consideration "to complete the . . . buildings and other
preparations," and directed its payment to the president and
treasurer of the Centennial Board of Finance for that purpose, but
which contained a proviso,
"That in the distribution of any moneys that may remain in the
treasury of the Centennial Board of Finance after the payment of
its debts, as provided for by the tenth section of the Act of
Congress approved June 1, 1872, incorporating the Centennial Board
of Finance, the appropriation hereinbefore made shall be paid in
full into the Treasury of the United States before any dividend or
percentage of profits shall be paid to the holders of said
stock,"
and
"That the government of the United States shall not under any
circumstances be liable for any debt or obligation of the United
States Centennial Commission or the Centennial Board of Finance, or
any payment in addition to the foregoing sum."
The whole controversy arises upon this proviso. On the one
Page 94 U. S. 502
hand it is contended that it requires the repayment to the
United States of the full amount of their appropriation before any
distribution can be made to the stockholders, and on the other that
the stockholders must be reimbursed for their stock subscriptions
before any payment is made to the United States. It becomes
necessary, therefore, to ascertain the intention of Congress in
this particular, and for that purpose the acts of 1871, 1872, and
1876, being
in pari materia, are to be examined and
construed together.
There is no doubt but that the act of 1876 appropriated public
moneys for the completion of the centennial buildings and other
preparations. Neither is there any doubt that under certain
circumstances, the Centennial Board of Finance was required to pay
back to the Treasury of the United States the full amount of the
appropriation. The corporation assumed such an obligation by taking
the money upon the conditions imposed. If this did not create a
debt, technically so called, it certainly did create a liability.
The act of 1872 provided for a division of the assets of the
corporation among the stockholders only after the payment of all
liabilities, and unless the contract entered into otherwise
directs, it would seem so be clear that so far as that act is
concerned, the United States must be paid in full before the
stockholders can claim any distribution among themselves.
In the act of 1876, the language is somewhat different. By that,
the United States are to be paid out of the moneys that remain in
the treasury of the company after the payment of the debts. If this
were all, the intention would be manifest. The liability of a
corporation to its stockholders on account of their stock is not a
debt. The shares of a stockholder represent his proportion of the
property of a corporation, and upon the winding up of its affairs,
the assets remaining after all liabilities are discharged are for
division among the stockholders according to their respective
interests. The payment to stockholders upon such a division is for
a dividend of the property divided, not for a debt owing by the
corporation. The United States, then, even under this act, are
entitled to a preference over the stockholders unless the words
"before any dividend or percentage of profits shall be paid to the
holders of such
Page 94 U. S. 503
stock" change the condition of the parties. This will depend
much upon the signification of the term "profits" as here used.
In construing statutes, some effect should, if possible, be
given to every word employed to express the legislative will.
Nothing should be rejected if it can be avoided, and nothing can be
added except by implication from what is expressed. As in the act
of 1872 stockholders are not to be paid anything until all
liabilities are discharged, and in that of 1876 the United States
are to be reimbursed before any profits can be divided, and no
provision is made for the redemption of capital stock except upon a
division of the profits, it is apparent that if such a redemption
is to be made before the liability of the United States is
satisfied, something must be supplied in the statute, by
implication, that has been apparently omitted. The presumption is,
however, that everything has been expressed which was intended, and
if an effect can properly be given to the word "profits" that will
harmonize the two statutes without a resort to implication, it
should be done.
The capital stock of this corporation was not employed in, but
to prepare for, the business of the contemplated exhibition, and
the receipts of the exhibition over and above its current expenses
are the profits of the business. These were the only profits
anticipated. They are in fact the net receipts, which, according to
the common understanding, ordinarily represent the profits of a
business. The public, when referring to the profits of the business
of a merchant, rarely ever take into account the depreciation of
the buildings in which the business is carried on, notwithstanding
they may have been erected out of the capital invested. Popularly
speaking, the net receipts of a business are its profits. So here,
as the business to be carried on was that of an exhibition, and its
profits were to be derived only from its receipts, to the popular
mind the net receipts would represent the net profits.
Giving that signification to the word in this case, we encounter
no difficulties. The statutes are complete, and there is nothing to
supply. Everything is in harmony, and no strained construction is
required. All accounts are easily adjusted without resort to
unusual proceedings.
When a corporation is to be wound up, there is not
ordinarily
Page 94 U. S. 504
a necessity for an account of profits. After the liabilities are
paid, the remaining assets belong to the stockholders, and all that
need be done is to make the proper division. For that purpose, it
is quite immaterial whether what remains is profit or capital. In
either case, it belongs to the stockholders and is to be
distributed among them
pro rata. Such a division produces
a dividend -- that is to say, a part or share of the thing divided.
If the division is of profits, then the dividend is of profits; if
of capital, then of capital. The dividends declared by a
corporation in business usually are, and, except under special
circumstances, always should be, from profits. Hence the word
frequently carries with it the idea of a division of profits; but
that is not necessarily its only meaning. Its special signification
in any particular case is always dependant upon the character of
the thing divided.
By the act of 1872, the assets were to be reduced to cash,
liabilities paid, and the remainder divided among stockholders. The
words "in satisfaction and discharge of its capital stock" add
nothing to and take nothing from what precedes, and the whole of
that part of sec. 10, taken together, provides for nothing more
than what would have been done without it. If there had not been a
word upon the subject, the law would have disposed of the property
in precisely the same way, and the stockholders could have
compelled a settlement upon that basis.
The act of 1876 requires the payment of debts, and then the
reimbursement of the United States before a distribution of profits
to stockholders. Not a word is said about restoring capital; in
fact, there is no mention of capital at all. The act of 1872 is not
repealed. On the contrary, it is left in full force in every
particular, save that the new liability incurred to the United
States is made payable after those contemplated by the act of 1872
are satisfied in full. In this the United States made a concession
to creditors, but not to the stockholders. Neither was anything
taken from stockholders; they retain all the rights which the act
of 1872 gave them. If there had been no appropriation by Congress,
the corporation would have been driven to the necessity of raising
the required means by borrowing or a further sale of stock. If by
borrowing, the
Page 94 U. S. 505
debt so created would have to be paid with the others, before
there could be any dividend to stockholders. If by sale of stock,
the new stockholders would come in
pro rata with the old
upon the final division of the assets.
Congress might have advanced the money by loan as well as upon
the conditions it did impose. It might also have subscribed to the
stock. If a loan had been made and there had been no waiver of the
legal rights of the government as a creditor, this debt would have
preference over all others in the order of payment. If stock had
been taken, the government would have participated in the final
distribution like any other stockholder. It seemed best, however,
not to adopt either of these plans, and another was devised by
which creditors were given a preference and the United States
remitted for their indemnity to the fund which might remain after
all the debts were paid. To this the corporation assented, and the
stockholders cannot now complain. Creditors were protected and
stockholders not injured.
We think therefore that Congress did not intend, by the act of
1876, to change the order of distribution as provided by that of
1872 except by giving a preference to other liabilities over that
to the United States, and that the word "profits" was used in 1876
to represent the net receipts of the business of the exhibition to
be had in the buildings erected and upon the grounds prepared for
its accommodation by means of the capital of the Centennial Board
of Finance. In this way "profits" in the act of 1876 and "remaining
assets" in that of 1872 have substantially the same meaning, and
the two statutes are relieved from all discrepancies without doing
violence to the language of either.
If the impaired capital is made good out of the profits, it will
be for the purposes of distribution only. Indirectly, therefore, a
division of the capital unimpaired would operate as a dividend of
profits, because before the stockholders could be paid in full, the
receipts of the business must be applied to supply the deficiency
arising from depreciation. Such a dividend is prohibited.
The decree of the circuit court must be reversed and the cause
remanded, with instructions to enter a decree directing
Page 94 U. S. 506
the payment of the sum of $1,500.000 into the Treasury of the
United States by the Centennial Board of Finance before any
division of the remaining assets of that corporation is made among
the stockholders, and it is
So ordered.
MR. JUSTICE STRONG dissented.