DocketNumber: 3080
Citation Numbers: 48 P.2d 881, 56 Nev. 260
Judges: <italic>Per Curiam:</italic>
Filed Date: 9/5/1935
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *Page 262
At the time of the incorporation of the bank and the acceptance by defendant of the benefits of a stockholder, section 12 of the 1911 banking act (section 661 N.C.L.) provided an individual liability on the part of the stockholders in favor of the creditors of the bank. This section, at all times from the date of its enactment until its repeal in 1933, and at the time of the acceptance of the said benefits by the defendant, was presumed to be constitutional, under the well-recognized rule that "a statute is presumed to be constitutional until construed by the courts to the contrary." This general rule has been held the law of Nevada. State v. Jon,
It is a well-settled rule of law that where a person voluntarily takes advantage of and accepts the beneficial portions of an act, he thereby waives any right he may have otherwise had to contest the validity or constitutionality of the burdensome or onerous portions thereof, and, as to such party, the doctrine of estoppel in pais applies with full force and effect. Hurley v. Commission of Fisheries of Virginia, 264 Fed. 116,
The constitutional provision, sec. 3, art. VIII, refers only to "corporators," i.e., parties incorporating a company, and not to persons subsequently becoming stockholders. 14A C.J. 1424; 1 Fletcher Corp. 148, sec. 103; Chase v. Lord,
The various provisions of proposed constitutions in territorial days, as well as statutory enactments, clearly show the lawmaking of that period carefully differentiated between "corporators" and "stockholders." At the time of the adoption of the constitution of 1864, the general and accepted meaning of the word "corporators" was synonymous with "stockholders and members." It was a broader word than stockholder, and was inclusive of stockholders, members and the constituents of the corporation. The constitution of the State of New York as of this period uses the word "corporators," and this was construed to mean stockholders and members. McKinney's Consolidated Laws of New York, annotated, book 2, p. 488.
Unquestionably, in using the word "corporator" the framers of the constitution were using it in the generally accepted meaning of the term. The term "corporator" is used synonymously with "stockholder," and that is said to be the ordinary sense of the term. *Page 264
Thompson on Corporations, vol. 4 (2d ed.), p. 1298; In re Lady Bryan Mining Co., 14 Fed. Cases, 926; In re Atlantic Mutual Life Ins. Co., 2 Fed. Cases, 628; Gulliver v. Roelle,
There is here no question of estoppel. The articles of incorporation do not provide for a double liability of the stockholders. In order to constitute an estoppel there must be acts of conduct which amount to a representation and a reliance thereon which influences the opposite party to do an act or take a position which he would not have otherwise taken. Ford v. Brown,
All of the corporation cases cited by counsel deal with the estoppel of a corporation to attack the validity of a statute under which it was organized or is entitled to do business. There is a clear distinction between this class of cases and those which deal with a stockholder and his liability, which is contractual in character. The stockholder contracts with the corporation, and this contract is for the benefit of the corporation and its creditors. Schramm v. Done,
The fact that the bank incorporated under an act which contained an unconstitutional provision cannot render that provision enforceable, nor confer any power on a court to enforce it. Morse v. Metropolitan S.S. Co., 102 A. 524; Hanover Fire Insurance Co. v. Carr,
The supreme court of this state has recognized that the word "corporator" is synonymous with stockholders and members of the company, and has expressly declared that there can be no liability of stockholders under the constitution. Thompson v. Lake,
We urge upon the court that the constitution was a part of a contract, and that an invalid statutory provision can be no part of the shareholder's contract. *Page 265
Thompson on Corporations (2d ed.), vol. 4, sec. 4761; Willis v. St. Paul, etc. Co., 50 N.W. 1110, 16 L.R.A. 221, and note at p. 282; St. Paul v. People, 17 N.E. 447; Meagher v. Storey Co., 5, 6,
The rule is well settled that legislative and executive construction which has been adopted and acted on with the acquiescence of the people for many years should, in the absence of an imperative reason to the contrary, be accepted as a correct interpretation of a constitutional provision.
The total indebtedness of the said bank on the 12th day of December, 1932, was $1,745,287.60, and the total value of its assets on that date was the sum of $1,571,574.60, leaving a net difference between the amount of liabilities and the value of assets of $173,713.
It is alleged that respondent is liable under said provision, notwithstanding the provisions of article 8, sec. 3, of the constitution of Nevada, which provides as follows: "Dues from corporations shall be secured by such means as may be prescribed by law; provided, that corporators in corporations formed under the laws of this state shall not be individually liable for the debts or liabilities of such corporation."
Liability in this respect is put upon the ground that Wingfield waived any benefit intended to be conferred by said constitutional provision and is estopped from claiming immunity thereunder by becoming an incorporator of the bank, a stockholder thereof, and by receiving dividends, and for the additional reason that he contracted with the creditors of the bank and such persons as might become creditors to accept the provisions of said banking act approved March 22, 1911 (Comp. Laws 1929, sec. 650 et seq.), including the liability to such creditors provided for in said section.
In due time respondent filed an answer setting up the unconstitutionality of said section 12. The answer was attacked by a motion to strike and demurrer. These were overruled by the court, and judgment in favor of Wingfield was rendered on the pleadings. Hence this appeal.
1-3. Appellant contends that the word "corporators," as used in section 3, article 8, of the constitution, must be held to mean only the original incorporators or organizers; that is, those associates who are the getters-up of the corporation, and, if so construed, said provision of the constitution is not unconstitutional. On the other hand, respondent is opposed to such a restricted *Page 267 construction. The inferences favorable to their construction of the word "corporators," which opposing counsel have drawn from the constitutional debates, territorial legislation, and constitution making prior to the adoption of the state constitution, are of equivocal value. We have found it unprofitable to indulge in similar speculation. We think the word "corporators" appearing in the constitution must be taken in its general or usual sense to mean a member of the corporation, one of the stockholders or constituents of the body corporate. That such is the general or usual meaning attributed to the word is borne out by the statements of courts, text-writers and lexicographers. In Re Atlantic Mut. Life Ins. Co., 2 Fed. Cas., page 168, at page 169, No. 628, it is said: "A corporator is one who is a member of the corporation, one of the stockholders or constituents of the body corporate."
Sawyer, Circuit Judge, in Re Lady Bryan Min. Co., Fed. Cas. No. 7978, a case arising in Nevada, speaking for the court, said: "A ``corporator,' as understood both in the law respecting corporations, and in common speech, is ``one who is a member of a corporation.' (Bouv. Law Dict. and Webst. Dict.) That is to say, one of the constituents, or stockholders, of the corporation. I do not know that the word has even been used in any other sense."
The dictionaries referred to define the word as stated.
In the State of Illinois at the time of the decision in Gulliver v. Roelle,
A section of the constitution provided: "Dues from corporations, not possessing banking powers or privileges, shall be secured by such individual liabilities of *Page 268 the corporators, or other means, as may be prescribed by law." Const. 1848, art. 10, sec. 2.
Construing the word "corporators" as used in the statute and constitution, the Illinois court said: "It can scarcely admit of a doubt that the general and popular meaning of the word ``corporator' concurs with the highest lexicographical authority, — that it means a member of a corporation. * * * And there can be no doubt that such is the sense in which the term is used in the 2d section of article 10 of the constitution of 1848." See, also, Shufeldt v. Carver,
"A corporator is one who is a member of a corporation; one of the stockholders or constituents of the body corporate." 2 Words and Phrases, First Series, p. 1623.
In the ordinary sense of the term, "corporator" is used synonymously with "stockholder." Thompson on Corporations, vol. 4 (2d ed.), p. 1298. See Zabriskie v. Cleve., Col., Cinn. R. Co. et al., 23 How (U.S.) 381,
The case of Chase v. Lord et al.,
In view of the commonly accepted meaning of the word "corporator," we are led to believe that the framers of the constitution, among which were some very able lawyers, were familiar with that meaning. It would seem, too, to be quite unlikely that they intended *Page 269 to ignore that sense of the word and employ it in a restricted sense. To so construe it would be most technical, and constitutions are not to receive a technical construction. Constitutions do not deal in particulars, and the makers would hardly be unduly solicitous for the protection of a class so relatively few and unimportant as the getters — up of a corporation. If the framers of the state constitution intended to impose a double liability on stockholders, they probably would have expressed that intention in the clearest language, especially when such liability is in derogation of the common law.
It is worthy to note as bearing on the probabilities of the case that, at the first meeting after the adoption of the constitution, no provision was made for the individual liability of a stockholder in the corporation law then enacted. This omission is more significant when it is remembered that at the first, as well as at other, sessions of the legislature, there were many members who were prominent members of the constitutional convention. State v. Glenn,
"Where a doubt may exist as to the proper construction to be placed on a constitutional or statutory provision, courts will give weight to the construction placed thereon by other coordinate branches of government and by officers whose duty it is to execute its provisions." State v. Brodigan,
An unqualified expression of the view we take is found in Thompson v. Reno Sav. Bank,
This expression, on a point not necessarily arising in the case, is not binding on us, it is true. However, it is of persuasive force. It coincides with the general opinion as to the meaning of the word "corporator," and besides, is the opinion of a former member of this court, apparently concurred in by his associates, as to the meaning of the word "corporators" as used in our constitution. The supreme court of that period recognized the meaning to be synonymous with stockholders or members of a corporation. Our conclusion renders section 12 of the banking act null and void.
4. There is no merit in appellant's contention that, assuming that the constitution intended to exempt stockholders from double liability, it meant to do so only for the entire debt of the corporation and not for the stockholders' proportionate share of the indebtedness. Such intention does not appear by express provision or just implication.
5. It is contended by appellant that the contractual liability of the stockholders of the United Nevada bank was established when the bank incorporated under the *Page 271 banking act of 1911, and that respondent, as a stockholder, thereby waived any exemption under the constitution and entered into a contract with the depositors and creditors of the bank, defined by the terms of the statute.
It is true that the contractual liability of respondent was fixed at that time. Such liability was fixed by the bank's articles of incorporation, the constitution, and laws of the State of Nevada then in force. Schramm v. Done,
6. The nature of such a contract is well stated in Haberlach v. Tillamook County Bank,
"It is settled law that, when a person subscribes for shares of stock in a corporation and his subscription is accepted by the corporation, the constitution of the state and all valid laws then in force which limit the liability of a stockholder become a part of the subscription contract and are incorporated in it. [Citing cases.]
"In such case, the stockholder agrees that, in consideration of the benefits he expects to derive from the stock ownership, he will perform all obligations that the law, at the time he enters into the contract, imposes upon a stockholder, and the corporation agrees that, in consideration of his purchase of the stock, it will not enforce as against him any obligation not imposed by law or promised at the time the subscription contract was made."
7, 8. The law under which the bank was incorporated is an essential element of respondent's contract with the corporation as one of its stockholders, but section 12 of that law, being in conflict with the constitution, can in no wise form a part of such contract. It is only a valid law touching a stockholder's liability that becomes incorporated in his contract. Where the state *Page 272
constitution declares what the liability of a stockholder for the debts of a corporation shall be, the legislature may not impose an additional liability. Wood v. Hamaguchi,
9. We come now to the contention of waiver and estoppel. It must be borne in mind, as stated in Ireland v. Palestine, etc. Turnpike Co.,
This distinction is quite generally recognized, and differentiates many cases cited by appellant in which corporations have been held estopped to question an unconstitutional law. We have examined with care most of the large number of cases which counsel for appellant, by prodigious industry have collected in their briefs, particularly those holding to the effect that one who invokes the provisions of a law may be denied the right to question its constitutionality. Typical of the latter are the federal cases of Hurley v. Commission of Fisheries,
In Hurley v. Commission, supra, it was held that one cannot in the same proceeding, both assail a statute and rely upon it. That is certainly not this case. Moreover, there is nothing to indicate that defendant ever relied on section 12 of the 1911 banking act. In Wight v. Davidson, supra, the question of estoppel was not determined by the court, although it was strongly intimated that appellees, who had obtained a decree of the court of appeals of the District of Columbia (
In Shepard v. Barron, supra, it was held that an objection that the frontage rule of assessment for a public improvement, prescribed by 87 Ohio Laws, p. 113, *Page 274 operated as a denial of due process of law, cannot be urged to defeat the collection of the assessments, by abutting owners who petitioned for the improvements under the act, actively participated in carrying out the work, recognized the justice of the assessments from time to time during its progress, and signed a statement for the purpose of inducing the issuance and purchase of county improvement bonds practically to the effect that the work had been properly done, and that there was no defense to the bonds.
In Pierre Oil Corp. v. Phoenix Ref. Co., and St. Louis Malleable Casting Co. v. George C. Prendergast Constr. Co., cited above, it was held that a corporation which avails itself of the benefits conferred by a statute cannot deny its validity.
It is not difficult to see that the situation in the above citations does not resemble the case here. They might be more nearly parallel if the banking corporation was contesting the validity of the 1911 banking act to which it owed its existence and capacity to do business and receive benefits as such, or to some part thereof essential to those ends. But they are not at all to the point made that a stockholder of a corporation may be estopped to contest the constitutionality of a statute imposing on him a personal liability for the debts of a corporation in violation of an essential element of his contract, namely, the constitution which expressly inhibits such liability, nor has such a case been noted in the vast list in appellant's briefs. In Booth Fisheries Co. v. Industrial Commission,
10. Over against the cases of this type relied on by appellant may be noted cases of the class of Hanover Fire Insurance Co. v. Carr,
Quaker City Cab Co. v. Pennsylvania,
11. It is conceded that the articles of incorporation do not provide for a double liability of stockholders, and we find nothing in the banking act of 1911 providing or implying that incorporation under it should be deemed a waiver of constitutional immunity. The mere fact of incorporation and organization under the law are not enough from which to infer an intention on the part of the getters-up of the corporation to waive the constitutional inhibition. Section 12 (section 661 Comp. Laws 1929) in its nature is distinctively independent of every other section of the act, and is declared so in the act. Section 73 (section 722) declares: "Each section in this act, and every part of each section is hereby declared to be independent of every other section and part of section, and the holding of a section or part of section to be void or ineffectual for any cause shall not be deemed to affect any other section or part of section."
In regard to respondent being affected by section 12, the reasoning of the court in the case of Philadelphia, etc., St. Ry. Co.'s Petition,
12. It is urged by appellant that depositors and creditors were misled to their prejudice by relying for security upon said section 12, which they had a right to do because the section was presumed to be constitutional. The argument is without force. Respondent is answerable only to the obligation of his contract, and a person will be presumed to have entered into a contract with reference to the valid laws of the state. Morse v. Metropolitan S.S. Co., supra.
13, 14. Respondent, as one of the getters-up of the banking corporation, had a right to effect that purpose under the 1911 act without reference to section 12 of the act. This he could do, and, in so doing, his act or omission cannot be said to form the basis of an estoppel. To hold otherwise would be to say that one must heed an unconstitutional law; that, if he does not, his conduct may mislead others to their prejudice. Neither the corporation nor respondent asserted any right or performed any act under section 12. It was not needful to bring the corporation into existence or to cause it to function as an entity, being as section 12 was a distinct and independent provision pertaining only to a stockholder's liability. Moreover, by force of the constitution, it was a dead limb on the legislative tree. An unconstitutional law is tantamount to no law at all. As said in Meagher v. Storey County,
It was forcibly put in Norton v. Shelby County,
Nothing whatever having been done under it or required to be done in the formation or organization of the corporation or in carrying on its business and being a dead section, how can it be said to give rise to the estoppel claimed by appellant? We are unable to give our sanction to the claim.
The judgment is affirmed.
Fidelity & Deposit Co. of Md. v. Tafoya , 46 S. Ct. 331 ( 1926 )
Booth Fisheries Co. v. Industrial Comm'n of Wis. , 46 S. Ct. 491 ( 1926 )
Norton v. Shelby County , 6 S. Ct. 1121 ( 1886 )
Terral v. Burke Construction Co. , 42 S. Ct. 188 ( 1922 )
St. Louis Malleable Casting Co. v. George C. Prendergast ... , 43 S. Ct. 178 ( 1923 )
Haberlach v. Tillamook County Bank , 134 Or. 279 ( 1930 )
Wilson v. Randolph , 50 Nev. 371 ( 1927 )
Wight v. Davidson , 21 S. Ct. 616 ( 1901 )
Philadelphia, Morton & Swarthmore Street RailwayCo.'s ... , 203 Pa. 354 ( 1902 )
Frost & Frost Trucking Co. v. Railroad Comm'n of Cal. , 46 S. Ct. 605 ( 1926 )
Hurley v. Commission of Fisheries of Va. , 42 S. Ct. 83 ( 1921 )
Hanover Fire Insurance v. Harding , 47 S. Ct. 179 ( 1926 )
Schramm v. Done , 135 Or. 16 ( 1930 )
Shepard v. Barron , 24 S. Ct. 737 ( 1904 )
Pierce Oil Corp. v. Phoenix Refining Co. , 42 S. Ct. 440 ( 1922 )
New York Life Insurance v. Breen , 227 Iowa 738 ( 1939 )
Board of School Trustees of Las Vegas Union School District ... , 60 Nev. 345 ( 1941 )
Berman v. Riverside Casino Corporation , 247 F. Supp. 243 ( 1964 )
State Ex Rel. Clover Valley Lumber Co. v. Sixth Judicial ... , 58 Nev. 456 ( 1938 )
Amalgamated Ass'n of Street, Electric Railway & Motor Coach ... , 202 F. Supp. 726 ( 1962 )
Matter of Twin Lakes Village, Inc. , 1980 Bankr. LEXIS 5673 ( 1980 )