(b) to establish or /and carry on depots, sheds, agencies or markets
in Tasmania or elsewhere for the packing, handling, drying, evaporat- ing, selling or otherwise for dealing with fruitgrowers products including cool stores and freezing works (c) the transport and sale of fruitgrowers' products in Tasmanian, inter-State, and oversea markets; (d) to do anything and everything which may be or be
CIATION LTD. considered desirable to enable shareholders in the Association to
obtain the best prices for their products. (2) To secure, buy and sell, export and otherwise dispose of or deal with the product of the orchardists and fruitgrowers and to make all necessary arrangements for those purposes."
The registered articles of association of the Company contained the usual provisions for the regulation of the Company's affairs and also some special articles which raise the controversy in the present action. The latter are as follows:-The judgment set forth arts. 7, 8, 9, 10, 13, 20, 39, and 41, and continued :-]
The Companies Act, sec. 16, provides that, when registered, the articles of association shall bind the Company and the members thereof to the same extent as if each member had subscribed his name and affixed his seal thereto, and there were in such articles contained a covenant on the part of himself, his heirs and adminis- trators to conform to all the regulations contained in such articles, subject to the provisions of the Act.
The defendant, who was an orchardist residing in Tasmania, became the proprietor of five shares of one pound each in the Com- pany about April 1919, and he paid five shillings per share on appli- cation and five shillings per share on allotment. The balance was called up in January 1921. The defendant soon afterwards gave notice of a desire to sell and transfer his shares pursuant to art. 42 and a transfer to one Woolley, for a consideration of one shilling, was registered shortly after the institution of the proceedings now about to be stated.
In March 1921 the Company commenced an action against the defendant in the Supreme Court of Tasmania, alleging that the defendant during the year 1920 grew in his orchard and had for sale 750 cases of marketable fruit belonging to him, but that he failed to send the same to the Company for sale and disposal as required by