15 N.Y. 533 | NY | 1875
The plaintiff claims to recover of the defendant, as trustee of a manufacturing company, for a failure of
The statute in question was, no doubt, intended to include all ordinary debts which might be contracted in the prosecution of the legitimate business of the company, but does not, I think, embrace such as might be imposed upon the company by fraud or improper practices of the creditor. It evidently meant that the honest creditor, who had trusted the company in good faith in connection with its business transactions, should be entitled to prosecute any of the trustees for the failure of its officers to perform the duty required by the section cited. I think that the evidence in this case does not show the existence of a debt within the statute which authorizes the enforcement of a penalty against the defendant as a trustee. The facts upon which the plaintiff’s claim is founded are somewhat peculiar in their character. The alleged debt consisted of money credited to plaintiff on the company’s books, which it was claimed had been borrowed by the plaintiff’s husband for the benefit of the corporation. The circumstances attending the transaction are suspicious, strange and remarkable, and the existence of any such obligation was only known to Adams, the plaintiff’s husband, who was a trustee and secretary of the company, and Brown, the treasurer, who was also a trasteé. These parties had charge of the books, and obviously acted together to create an impression that the business of the company was prosperous, and by false statements deceived the defendant and the other trustees, causing too large dividends to be declared when there were no means of paying the same, and by these means procured large loans from the defendant and his co-trustee, Cochran, ostensibly for the benefit of the company. The' evidence also shows a fraudulent concealment of the alleged borrowing of the plaintiff’s money, and that the transaction
Some other points are urged in reference to the culpable omissions of the plaintiffs husband, and among them, his neglect to prepare, file and' publish the report as he was instructed, and as it was his duty to do, having been furnished with a copy of the general manufacturing law, and his attention specially directed to the importance of complying with the twelfth section. But these considerations are not essential to uphold the judgment, for even if he had only in view the payment to his wife of a large and unusual rate of interest, it is enough, with the other circumstances presented, to sustain the defence.
There was no error in the admission or rejection of evidence, and the other points urged by the plaintiff’s counsel it is not important to consider if the views expressed are correct.
The judgment was right and should be affirmed, with costs.
All concur; Rapallo, J., not voting.
Judgment affirmed.