On the facts in this case as stated in the opinion of the Court,
held that the jury would not have been warranted in
drawing the conclusion of fact from the evidence that there was
such an agreement as that sued on; that the relation of the parties
was not such as, in contemplation of law, to give rise to such
liability, and that there was no error in the instruction of the
court below to find a verdict for defendant.
This was an action at law commenced by plaintiff in error as
plaintiff to recover the par value of 250 shares in the capital
Page 119 U. S. 514
stock of the defendant in error. Judgment below for defendant.
The plaintiff sued out this writ of error. The case is stated in
the opinion of the Court.
MR. JUSTICE MATTHEWS delivered the opinion of the Court.
The plaintiff in error, who was plaintiff below, being a citizen
of the State of New York, brought his action at law in the Circuit
Court of the United States for the Eastern District of Missouri
against the Bell Telephone Company of Missouri, a corporation of
that state, to recover $25,000, the price and value of 250 shares
of the capital stock of the defendant corporation, of the par value
of $100 per share, the personal property of the plaintiff,
advanced, furnished, and delivered to the defendant at its special
instance and request, to be by the defendant accounted for to the
plaintiff. The defendant filed an answer containing a general
denial of the allegations of the petition. The case came on for
trial before a jury; evidence on both sides was heard which is
fully set out in a bill of exceptions, and the judge instructed the
jury to find a verdict for the defendant, which was done. The
judgment rendered thereon is sought to be reversed by the present
writ of error.
The question presented is whether there was sufficient evidence
in support of the plaintiff's cause of action to require its
submission to the jury. It is conceded that there was no express
agreement between the parties under which the defendant was bound
to pay for the shares in question. The plaintiff's claim to recover
was based entirely upon the supposition of a contract to be
inferred from the acts of the parties. The undisputed facts on
which this claim is founded are as follows:
In October, 1879, the plaintiff, Eldred, had some correspondence
with the National Bell Telephone Company of Boston with reference
to acquiring the right to operate telephonic exchanges in Kansas
City and St. Louis. The arrangement
Page 119 U. S. 515
which resulted from that correspondence required the
organization of a corporation under the laws of Missouri, and the
acquisition by it of certain outstanding contracts between the
National Bell Telephone Company and the Kansas City Telephonic
Exchange, and also of a contract between the former and the
American District Telegraph Company of St. Louis. Accordingly, the
plaintiff, on December 3, 1879, organized, under the laws of that
state, the Bell Telephone Company of Missouri, the nominal capital
stock of the corporation being fixed at $400,000, in shares of $100
each. This stock was to be issued as full paid to the plaintiff and
others named by him as associates, in consideration of the transfer
to said corporation of the rights expected to be acquired by him
from the National Bell Telephone Company upon the conditions
required by it. The plaintiff associated with himself four personal
friends, Messrs. Kent and Storke, of New York, and Durant and
Smith, of St. Louis; it being necessary, under the laws of
Missouri, to have five stockholders as incorporators, agreeing to
give them certain proportions of his interest in the rights to be
acquired by him and transferred to the corporation. The proportions
were to be as follows: Storke, 750 shares; Kent, 250 shares; Smith,
20 shares, and Durant, 750 shares, out of 4,000; Eldred himself
retaining the remaining 2,230 shares. No money was paid or to be
paid by any of these incorporators for their interests. In the
organization of the company, the capital stock was subscribed for
and taken up in the manner and proportions just stated, and
certificates of stock for these amounts, respectively, were made
out, with the intention of delivering them to the subscribers.
Before any such delivery was made, however, on the 19th day of
December, 1879, the transaction took place by which the rights of
the American District Telegraph Company were secured to the Bell
Telephone Company of Missouri. To accomplish that, it became
necessary to make a consolidation, under the laws of Missouri, of
the Bell Telephone Company of Missouri, as already organized, with
the American District Telegraph Company. The latter was a
corporation of Missouri, with a capital stock consisting of 500
shares of $50 each, 263 of which
Page 119 U. S. 516
the plaintiff, Eldred, owned and controlled. According to the
plan of consolidation agreed on, it was necessary to issue to the
owners of the capital stock of the American District Telegraph
Company 250 shares of the stock in the Bell Telephone Company of
Missouri.
The plaintiff, in his examination in chief, in answer to a
question as to what steps were taken to effect this consolidation,
made the following statement:
"We met several times, and I remember that at that time there
seemed to be some difficulty about the consolidation of the two
companies in consequence of the statute of the state having been
changed. There were several meetings held, and I believe the
attorneys who had charge of the matter finally made the
consolidation under both of the statutes, which necessitated
considerable delay. On coming together, we had issued 4,000 shares
of stock, and we wished to consolidate with the American District
Telegraph Company, of which I was then president. I was president
of both companies. Therefore it became necessary to provide for
some shares to take up the stock of the American District Telegraph
Company. These gentlemen, with whom I had been already associated,
four in number at that time were all personal friends of mine, and
I gave them this stock. All the business was like a family
operation. Two of the parties were in New York, Mr. Kent and Mr.
Storke, and Durant, Smith, and myself were here. Previous to my
coming to St. Louis, I had obtained proxies for the purpose of
voting the stock of Mr. Storke and Mr. Kent, they not being
present; and, as I had agreed with them in regard to the proportion
of stock which I was to give them, I did not feel authorized to act
for them without authority, and therefore I said that I would
advance the 250 shares necessary to take up the capital stock of
the American District Telegraph Company out of the proportion which
was to be issued to me. I think that was the way it was done. We
had some trouble about the minutes under the existing statute, and
I think they were fixed up by the attorneys afterwards, after I
left the city, or about that time."
A consultation was held between Eldred, the plaintiff, and
Page 119 U. S. 517
Durant and Smith, two of his associates, on December 19, 1879 at
the office of the Bell Telephone Company is St. Louis, as to how
the arrangement should be consummated. The plaintiff's own
statement, on cross-examination as a witness in the case, of this
conference, is as follows:
"All that I remember about that particular portion of it is that
it was at no meeting of the board; so far as my recollection goes,
Mr. Durant was the only person present, and we found, by figuring
up the stock, that we hadn't enough shares to take in the American
District Telegraph Company of St. Louis. These gentlemen in
interest were all personal friends of mine. Some of them were in
New York, and I had no authority to make any concessions for them,
and I therefore agreed with Mr. Durant, who was vice-president and
general manager of the company, to advance 250 shares of the stock
of the Bell Telephone Company of Missouri, so that we might take up
the entire capital stock of the American District Telegraph
Company."
In answer to the question, "You say that you agreed; what did
Durant say?" he said: "Mr. Durant didn't have much to say about it.
I was the owner of the property, and he acquiesced generally in all
I did."
On the same day, a meeting of the stockholders of the Bell
Telephone Company of Missouri was held at its office at which the
three persons named, Durant, Eldred, and Smith, were present.
Eldred was chairman of the meeting, and a preamble and resolution
offered by Durant were unanimously adopted, and are as follows:
"Whereas the National Bell Telephone Company (a corporation duly
organized under the laws of the State of Massachusetts) has, by
agreement with H. H. Eldred, granted the said Eldred certain
valuable rights, concessions, and franchises under what are known
as the 'Bell Telephone Patents,' and other patents owned and
controlled by the said company, said agreement being contained in a
written proposition duly accepted by the said Eldred, and to be
fully set forth in contracts to be duly executed by the said
National Bell Telephone Company, pursuant to said agreements, and
whereas the said rights, concessions, and franchises, so acquired
by said Eldred, were
Page 119 U. S. 518
by him transferred to the parties hereinafter named, with
interests in the proportion hereinafter set forth, as follows: H.
L. Storke, 750; George H. Kent, 250; E. A. Smith, 20; George F.
Durant, 750; H. H. Eldred, 2,230; total, 4,000, said parties being
the owners of said interests at the time of the incorporation of
this company, and being the sole incorporators of this company, and
whereas, said exclusive rights, concessions, and franchises
constitute property rights of great value to this corporation under
its charter:"
"
Resolved that in consideration of the complete
assignment to this corporation, in due form, of all the rights,
title, and interest of said parties in said exclusive rights,
concessions, and franchises, so that the same may be fully
possessed, enjoyed, and enforced as by said Eldred, this
corporation hereby allots and sets apart to said parties 4,000
full-paid shares of its capital stock, constituting the authorized
capital stock of said company, to each of said parties a
proportionate part of said 4,000 shares, according to his interest
in said rights, concessions, and franchises, and according to the
subscription of each to the capital stock of this company, and
constituting a full payment of said subscription: H.L. Storke, 750
shares; George H. Kent, 250 shares; E. A. Smith, 20 shares; George
F. Durant, 750 shares; H. H. Eldred, 2,230 shares; and, in
consideration of the agreement of H. H. Eldred to surrender to this
company 250 shares of stock so allotted to him for the purpose of
effecting a consolidation with the American District Telegraph
Company of St. Louis, a certificate of 1,980 shares shall be issued
to said Eldred, and the 250 shares so surrendered shall be retained
in the possession of this company, subject to issuance hereafter
for said purpose of consolidation, and the officers of the company
are directed to issue, in due form, certificates of stock to said
parties above named, and to do and perform all acts necessary and
proper for the full acceptance on the part of this company of the
aforesaid agreements and propositions of the National Bell
Telephone Company in the execution of contracts or otherwise."
Accordingly, the original certificate for 2,230 shares of
stock
Page 119 U. S. 519
made out to Eldred, but never delivered, was destroyed, and
another certificate prepared for 1,980 shares, which was delivered
to and received by Eldred.
It further appears from the evidence that the plaintiff advanced
to the defendant $6,000 in money for the purpose of meeting the
expenses of starting, which was afterwards repaid by it to him, and
for the rights acquired from other sources than the American
District Telegraph Company of St. Louis the Bell Telephone Company
of Missouri subsequently paid the Western Union Telegraph Company,
which was in fact their owner, the sum of $75,000.
The implied contract relied upon by the plaintiff in this case
is of that class in which the promise of the defendant is to be
inferred from the acts and conduct of the parties. The contract
assumed to be thus proven is that, in consideration of 250 shares
of its capital stock owned by the plaintiff and advanced by him to
the defendant at its instance and request, to be used for its
benefit and advantage, and accepted by the defendant and so used,
the defendant undertook and promised to pay the reasonable value
thereof. The facts and circumstances relied on to justify this
assumption do not seem to us to warrant it. It is a misconception
of the transaction, as we view it, to construe it either as a loan
of stock by the plaintiff to the defendant, to be returned either
in specie or accounted for in value, or as a sale of stock by the
plaintiff to the defendant at what the stock was reasonably worth.
In truth, the dealing supposed to result in this bargain does not
appear to have taken place between the plaintiff and the defendant,
but between the plaintiff and his associates, corporators in the
original corporation before the consolidation. It was an
arrangement having reference to the relative rights and interests
of the corporators themselves, and consisted in the readjustment of
the relative proportions,
inter sese, according to which
they should hold the capital stock of the company. There had been
an agreement by which the 4,000 shares should be allotted among
them so that the plaintiff might have 2,230. The new agreement was
that that allotment should be so changed as that the plaintiff
would have but
Page 119 U. S. 520
1,980; the 250 shares in question being surrendered out of the
original allotment for another and different use in the
reorganization of the company, so as to take in other stockholders
and other interests. The plaintiff in his testimony distinctly
states that, when it became apparent that 250 shares of the stock
were required for this purpose, he did not feel at liberty to call
upon his associates for a contribution, as he had promised them the
number of shares specifically designated. It is difficult to see
how this does not also exclude the liability he now seeks to
enforce against the corporation, which is but another mode of
compelling his associates now to make that contribution which he
says he did not feel at liberty then to exact. The benefit
conferred, assumed to be the consideration for the promise to
return or repay which is sought to be enforced, was not in fact
conferred upon the existing corporation sued as a defendant. The
only difference in its situation, resulting from the transaction,
is that the stockholders of the American District Telegraph
Company, instead of Eldred, became the owners of the 250 shares
surrendered by the plaintiff, for which they paid by a transfer of
the rights and property of the district telegraph company. The real
benefit and advantage growing out of the transaction inured
exclusively to the original corporators in the first Bell Telephone
Company of Missouri, including the plaintiff himself, as it was the
means whereby that corporation was enabled successfully to
accomplish the object of its incorporation; but against them, as
has already been shown, the plaintiff makes no claim. To enforce
his claim against the existing corporation is not only to compel
his original associates to contribute, but also the stockholders of
the district telegraph company, who became, by virtue of the
transaction, stockholders in the defendant corporation, but they
made no such bargain as that. The transaction, whatever it was, was
reduced to writing at the time and put on record as a part of the
proceedings of the stockholders of the Bell Telephone Company of
Missouri, in the recitals and resolution already set out, and is
correctly characterized in them as an agreement on the part of the
plaintiff to surrender to the company 250 shares of the
Page 119 U. S. 521
stock previously allotted to him for the purpose of effecting a
consolidation with the American District Telegraph Company of St.
Louis; the 250 shares so surrendered to be retained in the
possession of the company, subject to be issued thereafter for that
purpose. There is nothing whatever in this statement to suggest or
to warrant the conclusion that there was any sale of this stock by
the plaintiff to the company, or any loan or advance of it for its
uses, for which it was expected any return or payment should be
made.
The plan for the organization of the company, both in its
general outlines and in its details, was the plaintiff's own
scheme, of which he continued to have control until its
consummation, as he himself testifies. The original plan was that
he was to retain 2,230 shares out of 4,000 of the capital stock of
the new company; but it was an essential part of his undertaking to
acquire the property and franchises of the American District
Telegraph Company of St. Louis. He became satisfied that the best
way to accomplish that was by the consolidation of the two
companies as actually effected, and to insure this it became
necessary for him to diminish the relative quantity of his interest
in the capital of the consolidated company, and to this end, and
for this consideration, as actually and fully expressed in the
resolution adopted by the stockholders, of whom he was chief, he
agreed to surrender to the company 250 shares of the stock
previously intended for himself. He asked no one to contribute. He
certainly did not contemplate the return of the stock in kind, for
that was impossible. It is not a reasonable inference, from the
facts and circumstances, that he expected any payment. It is clear,
beyond doubt, that those with whom he was dealing had no reason to
believe the existence of any expectation of that kind on his part.
It was certainly treated and considered at the time, as a part, and
a necessary part, of the arrangement by which the plaintiff himself
performed his own engagements with the National Bell Telephone
Company for the purpose of putting into successful operation the
scheme which he had organized by the formation of the Bell
Telephone Company of Missouri.
Page 119 U. S. 522
The plaintiff, as a part of his case, read in evidence from the
minute book of the Bell Telephone Company of Missouri the act and
agreement of consolidation between it and the American District
Telegraph Company of St. Louis, in which it is recited that the
party of the first part, the Bell Telephone Company of Missouri,
"has purchased and is now owner of 250 shares of its capital
stock," and this recital is relied upon as an admission that the
transaction was one of purchase and sale, and not a voluntary
surrender of the right to unissued stock. The recital, however, has
no effect as an estoppel, the plaintiff being no party to the deed
which contains it, and acquiring no rights on the faith of it, and
it is in fact an innocent misdescription of a transaction, the real
nature of which fully and unambiguously appears from the other
record of the same company where it speaks of and records the
transaction as it occurred, and when it took place, being made,
indeed, for that very purpose.
We are therefore of opinion that the jury would not have been
warranted in drawing the conclusion of fact, from the evidence in
the case, that there was any such an agreement as that sued on, and
that the relation of the parties, as shown in the circumstances of
the transaction, was not such as, in contemplation of law, to give
rise to any such liability.
The ruling of the circuit court was therefore correct, and its
judgment is
Affirmed.