150 N.Y. 200 | NY | 1896
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This appeal presents the question as to the sufficiency of the complaint in an action against the trustee or director of a business corporation to hold him for the debt of the corporation, when there was neglect or omission to file the annual report of the condition of the corporation. There was a demurrer to the complaint, which has been overruled by the courts below, and the question of law has been certified to this court by the Appellate Division. In a broader sense the case involves the inquiry whether there was any law in force under which the defendant could be held liable for the debt of the corporation of which he was a trustee. The action is upon a note made by the corporation for $1,129.61, dated December 31, 1892, payable four months after date, which was discounted by the plaintiff. This debt, therefore, matured about May 1, 1893, and was not paid. During the year 1892 the defendant was one of the directors of the corporation, and it is conceded that it filed no report for that year. The learned counsel for the defendant admits, for the purposes of all the questions in this case, at least, that his client violated the law by neglecting to file the report or procure it to be filed in the month of January, 1892, but he contends that the law which was thus disregarded, and the only law in force at the time the duty should have been performed, was repealed before the debt was contracted, and hence his client cannot be held. If the premises upon which this argument has been constructed are correct the legal conclusion *205
would necessarily follow. (Nash v. White's Bank of Buffalo,
It is entirely clear that § 30 of ch. 564 of the Laws of 1890, which went into effect on May 1, 1891, required the corporation to file the report, and in case of failure, made the directors liable for all the debts of the corporation then existing, and for all contracted before filing the same. This statute was a part of the general revision of the statutes, known as the Stock Corporation Law, and was intended when passed to be a permanent provision of law on this subject. It cannot be denied that it imposed liability upon the defendant for the payment of the debt described in the complaint, unless the report was filed within twenty days from January 1, 1892, as it was not. So far the case is clear. But this statute was amended by ch. 2 of the Laws of 1892, which went into effect January 14, 1892, "so as to read as follows." The amendment then gives the whole month of January within which to file the report, changes the form of the report, and the officers by whom it could be verified, drops out words contained in the original law and adds or substitutes new ones.
This enabled the corporation to file the report on any day during the month of January, 1892, but it did not. This amendment was itself repealed in express terms by ch. 687, § 34, Laws of 1892, which went into effect May 18, 1892, and by ch. 688, § 30, Laws of 1892, which went into effect on the same day. The original § 30 of the Stock Corporation Law, providing for filing the report and for liability of directors in case of neglect, was amended and enacted in the form in which it now appears in the revision of the statutes.
From all this confused and complicated legislation the learned counsel for the defendant has constructed an able and ingenious argument, the whole point and purpose of which is to show that the original law was repealed by the amendment of January 14, 1892, and that in turn was expressly repealed by the act of May 18, 1892, and that repeal carried with it the original law, and thus that all laws which imposed a liability *206 or penalty upon the defendant for failure of the corporation of which he was a director to file a report in the month of January, 1892, were completely swept away before the debt in suit was created, and, of course, before the commencement of this action.
This argument has been answered in the very able opinion of the court below (
In the Prime case the law is thus stated: When a statute amends a former statute "so as to read as follows" it operates as a repeal by implication of inconsistent provisions in the former law and of provisions therein omitted in the latter. When the amendatory act re-enacts provisions of the former law eitheripsissimis verbis or by the use of equivalent though different words, the law will be regarded as having been continuous, and the new enactment, as to such parts, will not operate as a repeal, so as to affect a duty accrued under a prior law, although, as to all new transactions, the later law will be referred to as the ground of the obligation. The effect upon a prior statute of a subsequent amendment "so as to read as follows" is not to be determined in all cases by any fixed and absolute rule, but frequently becomes a question *207
of legislative intent to be determined from the nature and language of the amendment, from other acts passed at or about the same time and from all the circumstances of the case. The duty of the courts is to give effect to the legislative intent rather than the literal terms of the act. (In re Rochester WaterCommissioners, supra; Smith v. People,
The defendant's counsel argues that in the opinion below the legislative intent, apparent at the passage of the repealing and other acts which went into effect on May 18, 1892, is made to govern another act passed on January 14 previously. Acts passed at the same legislative session and by the same body of legislators, on the same subject, should certainly be considered when it becomes important to ascertain the intention of an amendment or an express repeal.
When the legislature of 1892 met, the Stock Corporation Law, which was a careful revision of all previous laws on that subject, made by a commission acting under the direction of the legislature, had been in force but a few months when ch. 2 of the Laws of 1892 was passed, amending the general law. It is scarcely possible to conceive that the legislature actually intended by the amendment to displace section thirty of the original law from its place as part of the revised system of statute law and to substitute the amendment in its place. That conclusion must be reached, if at all, not from the circumstances or inherent probabilities of the case, but by the application of some arbitrary rule as to the legal effect of amendments in that form. That rule is not so absolute and unqualified as not to be made to yield to a contrary intention when it is to be found in the nature of the case, in the language employed and in the course of contemporaneous legislation on the same subject. We conclude, therefore, that there was no intention to repeal section thirty of the Stock Corporation Law or to merge its unchanged provisions in the amendment of January 14, 1892, but that it was continued in the sense that it was still capable of further amendment. There was no intention to absorb it in the amendment, but simply to *208 amend and change it in the particulars indicated. This view is reinforced by the circumstance that when, four months afterward, the same legislature repealed the amendment it amended the original law, thus recognizing its continued existence, and at the same moment and in the same breath, declared by section thirty-one (Ch. 677, Laws 1892) that the repeal of any provision of a statute which amends a provision of a prior statute, leaves such prior provision in force, unless the amendatory statute be a substantial re-enactment of the statute amended, which ch. 2 of the Laws of 1892 was not. The duty to file the report under § 30 of the Stock Corporation Law of 1890, and the liability for failing to file it, were never for a moment suspended by repeal or otherwise abrogated, but were continued through all the changes, and existed when the default occurred. The corporation, of which the defendant was a director, was bound to file it during the month of January, 1892, before the 14th day of that month, under the original law, or if not then filed, during the remainder of the month, under the same law as amended. When the debt described in the complaint was contracted, and when this action was commenced, that law still existed, though in another form, its identity and validity having been saved from destruction by the intention of the legislature, manifested through the various acts referred to.
When the amendatory act (Ch. 2, Laws of 1892) was passed, § 72 of ch. 564, Laws of 1890, was in force, and that declared the legislative policy in regard to the various laws embraced in the revision which was called the Stock Corporation Law. It provided that so far as its provisions were substantially the same as the laws existing before it took effect, they should be construed as a continuation of such laws, modified or amended according to the language employed and not as new enactments. Therefore, section thirty of the act was not itself to be regarded as a new enactment but a continuation of prior laws. It can, we think, be said with good reason, that this general rule or policy expressed in the form of a statute, followed the section through all subsequent amendments, continuing *209 the law with its modifications as the old law and not as a new enactment, so that there was no period of time when it could be said that the old law had ceased to exist.
The learned counsel for the plaintiff insists that the appeal should be dismissed because irregularly made, since it is from the judgment or order and not from the question certified to us for decision. To adopt this view would involve difficulties and anomalies in practice which we need not now point out. It is sufficient to say that we have not been informed by the argument of any procedure in this state that will enable us to review a question passed upon in the court below, in an action pending there, otherwise than upon an appeal from the judgment or order which decided the question.
The order appealed from should be affirmed, with costs, the question answered in the affirmative, with leave to the defendant to answer within twenty days upon payment of costs.
All concur.
Ordered accordingly.