73 N.J. Eq. 262 | New York Court of Chancery | 1907
The bill is filed by complainants as stockholders of the Passaic Steel Company to compel defendants to restore to that corporation certain secret profits alleged to have been fraudulently res ceiyed by defendants as its promoters. The demurrers filed b$ defendants assert that any right of action based upon the fraud alleged in the bill is purely personal to complainants and not a right which may be asserted by complainants in behalf of the corporation. This contention on the part of demurrants is based on the claim that under the averments of the bill complainants cannot be treated as original non-assenting stockholders of the Passaic Steel Company, but that, on the contrary, the stock now
The bill alleges that the defendants, while holding an option for the purchase of the entire capital stock of the Passaic Rolling Mill Company (hereinafter referred to as the old company) for $1,400,000, became the promoters of a corporation to be formed to be known as the Passaic Steel Company (hereinafter referred to as the new company), to 'acquire the assets of the old company. The money with which the stock of the old company was to be acquired by the new company was to be raised by the means of complainants and others becoming members of a “syndicate,” and each member of the syndicate paying cash for syndicate shares at a price which would realize an aggregate fund of $1,900,000. This latter amount of cash defendants falsely represented to complainants and the other contributing syndicate members as the amount for which the stockholders of the old corporation had agreed to sell its entire capital stock. The new company was incorporated and organized by defendants and its capital stock was issued (except as to thirty shares subscribed for by defendants in the certificate of incorporation) through the medium of a merger agreement between the old and new companies. Prior to the date of the merger agreement all or nearly all of the stock of the old company had been acquired or controlled by defendants with the money paid in by complainants and the other syndicate members. By the merger agreement the old company became merged in the new and the stockholders of the old company became entitled to the stock of the new to the amount named in the merger agreement, and the stockholders of the new company retained the stock then held by them, which latter stock was, as stated, merely the thirty shares subscribed for by defendants in the certificate of incorporation. While the bill does not specifically state whether all of the stock which under the terms of the merger agreement went to the stockholders of the old company, was, in fact, so issued, and a portion of it afterwards transferred to complainants and other syndicate members, or whether a part of it was issued directly to the syndicate members, the fair inference may be said to be that the
There appears to be no dissent to the general proposition that a corporation cannot complain of a transaction to which all of its stockholders assent with full knowledge of the facts, and if the corporation cannot complain it necessarily follows that a shareholder cannot on behalf of the corporation. It also appears to be1 well settled that a subsequent transferee of shares, who is deceived by false representations touching the capitalization of a company, sustains injury purely personal to himself; such an injury is not to the collective rights of the stockholders. Morcuwetz Priv. Gorp. §§ 290, 291, 292. But the principle that a corporation cannot complain of a transaction to which all of its stockholders assent necessarily embodies the idea that the assent is upon the part of the real parties in interest. One who, in fact, though not in form, occupies the position of a non-assenting stockholder should not .on any theory of unanimous consent be barred the assertion of his rights as such. The real relation of complainants to the new corporation at the time of the merger is, in my judgment, dependent upon an accurate conception of the syndicate agreement already briefly referred to. If that agreement was, in effect, a mere engagement upon the part of defendants to sell to the syndicate members certain stock of a proposed corporation to be capitalized in a defined manner, any injuries sustained by the syndicate members by reason of misrepresentations upon the part of defendants touching the cost or value of the assets which the proposed corporation was to own might well be urged as injuries purely personal to the persons to whom the false representations were made, as distinguished from injuries to the collective rights of stockholders, and that such
Demurrants also urge that complainants come into court without clean hands and cannot in consequence ask the affirmative aid of this court. This claim necessitates an examination of other details of the syndicate agreement. By the syndicate agreement there were to be two thousand syndicate shares of the par value’ of $10,000 each, making a total of $2,000,000. Each syndicate share was to be exchangeable for $10,000 of the mortgage bonds of the proposed new company (the mortgage to be for $2,500,000) and for $10,000 of stock of the proposed new company (total stock to be $5,000,000). The bill avers that of the $10,000 in mortgage bonds alid $10,000 in stock which each $10,000 syndicate share was to receive, the stock was regarded as a “bonus.” These syndicate shares of $10,000 each were to be taken by the members of the syndicate for $9,500 in cash, which made the total cash to be paid in by the syndicate members $1,900,000, that being the amount represented by defendants as the amount to be paid to the owners of the stock of the old com
The failure of complainants to make the Citizens’ Trust Company a defendant is also urged by demurrants as fatal to the bill. The bill does not aver that the Citizens’ Trust Company was a party to the fraud. But even regarding that company as a co-conspirator and participator in the results, the non-joinder cannot be made a ground of demurrer. Stockton, Receiver, v. Anderson, 40 N. J. Eq. (13 Stew.) 486.
Another ground of demurrer is that complainants in the introductory part of the bill describe themselves as stockholders
The other grounds of demurrer were not urged at the hearing and will not be considered.
I will advise a decree overruling the demurrers.