Citation Numbers: 192 Wis. 242
Judges: Eschweiler
Filed Date: 3/8/1927
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 9/9/2022
The plaintiff association was unable to produce on the trial many of the earlier records and files presumably kept by the then officers of the association, and but meager oral testimony could be produced as to the proceedings prior to March 28, 1918. There is ample warrant for the several findings of fact by the trial court and above recited.
The plaintiff was organized under a special statute, sec 93.11 (sec. 1460), providing for the organization, officers,
Sec. 93.12 (sec. 1461) provides that every such society shall have power to fix a valuation to the aggregate of its property and divide such valuation into equal shares and issue to its members certificates of stock specifying the number of shares of its property owned by the respective members to whom issued. No provisions are made for the issuing of any other kind of stock.
Sec. 93.13 (sec. 1461a) provides that every such society “which shall have fixed a valuation to the aggregate of its property, divided such valuation into shares and issued certificates to its members under the provisions of the preceding section may, whenever its cash funds are insufficient to pay its debts and obligations', make an assessment upon all its members sufficient to pay sfich debts and obligations in the manner herein provided.” It further provides that this shall be done at an annual meeting by a recorded resolution determining and assessing the sum to be paid by all the members thereof and that every member shall be notified by letter; that for neglect or refusal to pay such assessment the stock of such member may be sold by the executive committee at public auction, after thirty days’ notice of such sale, by posting notices thereof in three places in the county; that each member shall remain liable to the society for any deficiency resulting after such sale; the purchaser at such sale becoming entitled to all the rights of a member to the extent of the shares so bought.
There was, as appears from the record presented and as found by the trial court, a failure by the plaintiff to prove a compliance with .several important statutory requisites for a valid claim against either of the defendants.
That some members may -have paid $10 per share for stock issued to them, or, as claimed by defendant Shanks, gave such sum as a donation, cannot be treated as a compliance with or a substitute for such express and particular provision as to the basis for such assessable stock. In the ordinary form of corporation, a stockholder having once paid to the corporation the par value of his stock .is relieved from further obligation to the corporation as such on said stock or for any additional amount over such par value, except under special statutory provisions for certain classes of stock or of creditors. In this form of corporation it is evidently intended to attach the unusual and apparently unlimited assessment liability upon those only to whom shares of stock had been issued based upon a proper valuation of all its then existing property and a proportionate sharing in such entire valuation, rather than, as in ordinary cases, the issuing of stock upon the payment of its fixed par value. The plaintiff, therefore, failed to show as to either of these defendants that any so-called stock such defendants may have' held was assessable stock.
The determination on this point alone would be sufficient to uphold the judgment. Other questions were presented, however, which, in view of the other cases now pending and also involving the affairs of the plaintiff, make it proper to now dispose of some such.
It is conceded that none of the alleged amendments increasing the capital stock or changing the time of the annual meeting were recorded in the office of the register of deeds. The
The posted notices for the proposed sale of the stock on September 29th specified no hour of such day for the proposed sale. This was clearly a defective and insufficient notice for that reason.
The attempted assessment of $14 was made against each member irrespective of the number of shares he might have held. Such an assessment, therefore, if otherwise properly made, would have required the holder of two shares of tire stock to pay no more than the holder of one share. Respondents contend that such method of assessment as so adopted by the attempted action is the only one permitted by the language of the statutes above quoted on the subject of the power to assess, and further, that'when so construed it would be invalid because plainly a violation of constitutional guaranties as to uniformity and equality before the law.
We hold, however, that the statute in question should be construed to mean that an assessment, when properly levied,
By the Court. — Judgments affirmed.