authority against the Company. It must be remembered that the
objection taken here is not that there is not, in a proper regulation,
an enforceable and even actionable contract as between the Company
and the shareholder. Such a contention would be utterly unsus-
tainable. The question is whether such a contract as is relied on
in this case is one that can be made by a regulation of this Company.
If made in the ordinary way by means of a real contract, then,
unless it were struck by the first ground of objection, the appellant
would, of course, be bound, because he had actually contracted.
But in that case, his contract would be as much as " individual " and
"outsider " as a like contract of one of the " others " mentioned in
the memorandum. The quotation from Bisgood's Case (1) draws the
distinction, not between (1) contract of company with member and
(2) no contract of company with member, but between (1) contract
of company with member as member and (2) contract of company with
member as outsider. Hickman's Case (2) was concerned only with
the issue of contract or no contract between company and member.
No question was involved in the argument on the decision as to
whether, conceding a contract, it went beyond the ambit of member-
ship. Lord Herschell's words quoted from Welton v. Saffery (3) con-
tained this passage: "It is quite true that the articles constitute a
contract between each member and the company" &c., and for
this purpose, the passage already mentioned, in Bisgood's Case
(1) was quoted. The learned Judge, Astbury J., for himself said
(4) in his second proposition "'no right merely purporting to be
given by an article to a person, whether a member or not, ina capacity
other than that of a member, as, for instance, as solicitor, promoter,
director, can be enforced against the company." Again (5), the
learned Judge observed that the cases of the type of Eley v. Positive
Government Security Life Assurance Co. (6) " ought to be regarded
as only dealing with and applying to articles purporting, first, to
contain an agreement with the company and a third person, or,
secondly, to define the rights of a shareholder in some capacity other
than that of a member of the company." His Lordship held that an