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Page 894
15 F.2d 894
THEUNISSEN
v.
CONTINENTAL TRUST CO.
No. 4446.
Court of Appeals of District of
Columbia.
Submitted October 13, 1926.
Decided November 1, 1926.
In Error to the Municipal Court
of the District of Columbia.
Suit by the Continental Trust
Company against L. Theunissen. Judgment for
plaintiff, and defendant brings error.
Affirmed.
W. J. Lambert, R. H. Yeatman, and
A. M. Schwartz, all of Washington, D. C.,
for plaintiff in error.
C. A. Douglas and E. D. Campbell,
both of Washington, D. C., for defendant in
error.
Before MARTIN, Chief Justice, and
ROBB and VAN ORSDEL, Associate Justices.
MARTIN, Chief Justice.
The Continental Trust Company
sued L. Theunissen in the lower court upon a
promissory note signed by him, payable in
the sum of $1,000 to the Guaranty Savings
Bank, and by it assigned to the plaintiff.
The note was payable upon demand, and
dishonor was duly alleged. The defendant
filed a plea, to which the plaintiff
demurred. The court sustained the demurrer,
and entered judgment upon the note for the
plaintiff. The case is here for review upon
the facts admitted by the demurrer, together
with others stipulated into the record by
counsel.
It appears that defendant
subscribed for certain shares of corporate
stock of the United Theatres Corporation, a
corporation organized under the laws of the
state of Delaware; that under the
Constitution and laws of Delaware no
corporation shall issue stock, except for
money paid, labor done, or personal property
or real estate or leases thereof actually
acquired by such corporation; that
nevertheless the defendant, in alleged
violation of this provision, was permitted
to pay for the shares issued to him by the
delivery of his own promissory notes,
payable to the corporation; that one of
these notes was made payable to the
corporation in the sum of $2,000, and this
note was assigned and transferred by the
corporation to the Guaranty Savings Bank,
for value, and before maturity; that the
bank had full knowledge of the purpose for
which the note was given, but represented to
the defendant that it was a bona fide holder
thereof, in good faith and for value; that
defendant, relying upon these
representations, curtailed the note by
payments to the bank, and afterwards
delivered to the bank his promissory note
for the balance then due upon it, to wit,
the sum of $1,000; that this latter note was
afterwards assigned by the bank to the
plaintiff for value, and is the note now
sued upon in this case. It appears, also,
that the shares of stock issued to defendant
by the United Theatres Corporation are
worthless, and the corporation is not doing
business, and that defendant, therefore,
cannot return the shares to it, although
willing to do so.
Upon these facts we think the
judgment of the lower court against the
defendant was right. If it be conceded that
the United Theatres Corporation violated the
laws of Delaware when it issued the shares
of stock to defendant for his promissory
note, nevertheless the note would be
enforceable against the maker at the suit of
the corporation, for the provision in
question is intended for the protection of
the corporation, its creditors, and other
stockholders, and not for the relief of the
offending stockholder. It was accordingly
said by the
Chancellor in Cahall, Receiver, v. Lofland,
12 Del. Ch. 299, 114 A. 224: "A
promissory note given for stock is not void
as against the corporation, and it may
enforce
Page 895
payment of the note." Moreover, after the
transfer of this note to the Guaranty
Savings Bank by the United Theatres
Corporation, the defendant curtailed the
same, and renewed the residue by delivering
the present negotiable note to the bank, and
this note was afterwards indorsed by the
bank to the plaintiff for value, and there
is no charge of fraud or actual knowledge of
any infirmity made against the plaintiff.
The note, therefore, was clearly
enforceable.
Ramsay v. Crevlin, 254 F. 813, 166 C. C. A.
259; Continental National Bank v.
Greene, 200 Iowa, 568, 203 N. W. 9;
German Mercantile Co. v. Wanner, 25 N. D.
479, 142 N. W. 463, 52 L. R. A. (N. S.)
453;
Furlong v. Johnston, 239 N. Y. 141, 145 N.
E. 910.
The judgment of the municipal
court is accordingly affirmed, with costs.
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