111 A.D. 209 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1906
The following is the opinion of the referee:
The plaintiff sues as receiver of the Mercantile Credit (Guarantee Company of New York. • The defendants were directors of that company, and in the complaint they are charged with having, on or about the 27th "of October, 1896, misapplied and wasted .$30,000 of the funds of the company in the purchase of 300 shares of the worthless stock of a corporation known as the Beserve Company, to the damage of the first-named company, its stockholders and creditors. In some respects the case is a peculiar one, and a statement, of the facts at some length is necessary to an understand
The Mercantile Credit Guarantee Company w;as a Mew, York corporation, organized in December, 1892, as a credit insurance company, or (as the president puts it) “a protection to a merchant against excessive an'd unlooked-for losses.”. It had a capital of $250,000, all of which was paid in in cash within two years from its. creation. It did business in other States than Mew York, and at the close of the year 1894 it had risks outstanding amounting to $5,134,084, the premiums on $hich had amounted to $165,450.64. vBy the authorities of Ohio the company was ranked as an insurance company, and was, therefore, required, as a condition of doing busi-ness in that State, to comply with • the requirements of the Ohio Insurance Law and maintain a .stii-plus or “ reserve ”' equal to fifty per cent of the premiums.for insurance in force at the end of each year when itrmade its annual report. Substantially the-same demand was made by the authorities of other States, The Mercantile Company was not able to exhibit the required surplus, at the close, of -1894. The year had been a disastrous one. The company had paid losses amounting to upwards of $1.66,000,. and its surplus, as reported to the directors on January 10, 1895, was .only $10,834.07. Tlie situation was a serious one, and the stockholders were called together on December 5, 1894, “to consider such matters as will be presented for their action,” including a proposed reduction óf the capital stock ■ and a proposed increase bf the compahyis surplus. At that meeting a plan was approved and adopted which provided for the following : First. The formation of a company to be called the “ Deserve Company,” with a cash capital óf $100*000, through or by means of' which the surplus of the Mercantile Company should be increased" by that amount." Second. The exchange by stockholders of the Mercantile Company of 500 shares, par value- $50,000, of its stock for 500 shares* par value $50,000, of the stock of the Deserve Comr pany. • Thwd. The reduction of the capital stock of the Mercantile Company by 500 shares, the $5.0,000 represented by said shares to “ constitute a surplus applicable to the liabilities ” of the company. Fourth. The acquisition by the Mercantile Company, through a contract .with the Deserve Company, or 'other "party., of the 500 shares of Mercantile Company’s stock received by the Deserve Com
' Following this stockholders’ meeting, and on the twenty-eighth of December, the “ Beserve- Company ” was created, with a share capital of $100,000, for the single purpose of furnishing the Mercantile Company with a reserve or surplus. It was organized by the Mercantile Company and was entirely under its control. On the 31st of December, 1894, an agreement was made between the Mercantile Company and William Bro Smith by which Smith agreed to pay to the company $50,000 of its full paid stock (such stock to be canceled on delivery) and the sum of $50,000 in cash in instalments on March first, July first and October first. In consideration of these payments the company agreed to pay to Smith or his assigns “ the sum of one dollar for each one thousand dollars of insurance in force on the books of the said The Mercantile Credit .Guarantee Company at its home office in New York on the first day of January, One thousand eight hundred and ninety-five, and on each succeeding first day of January during the continuance of this contract, such payments to be made in equal monthly instalments on the first day of each month in the year next succeeding the first day of January on which they are figured.” Among other
The Mercantile Compapy was not yet, in'a condition to report a reserve sufficient to satisfy the requirements of Ohio , and other States. The time to get together such a reserve was extended by Ohio and Illinois to July tenth. The Smith agreement provided
Satisfactory reporté, showing the required reserve, having been made in Ohio and other States, action was taken by the directors of the Mercantile Company to relieve the five parties named above from the liability incurred by them in the purchase of the said 300 shares. On the 1st of August, 1895, at a directors’ meeting at which Deen, Male, Herzig, Smith, Berry and Fitzgerald were present, a resolution was adopted authorizing and directing the officers of the company to purchase at a price not above par $5,000 ■ of the stock of the Reserve Company “ in accordance with the authority and instructions given by the stockholders at their m'eeting of December 5th, 1894.” At a meeting held on September fifth, at which Deen, Male, Bach, Smith, Fitzgerald and Berry were present, a similar resolution was adopted authorizing the purchase of $10,000 of the said stock. At a meeting held on October third, at which Deen, Male, Herzig, Smith, Fitzgerald and Berry were present, a similar resolution was adopted authorizing the purchase of $15,000 of the said stock. Purchases of Reserve Company stock were made pursuant to the said resolutions, and the stock purchased was the 300 shares subscribed for by Deen and his four associates.
On February 5, 1896., a meeting of the, directors was held, .at which Deen, Bach, Herzig, Berry and Smith were present, and a resolution was presented authorizing the officers of the company to ■ purchase at a price not above par $30,000 of "the stock of the Reserve Company, “ in accordance with the authority and instructions given by the stockholders at their-meeting of December 5'th, 1894.” The record does not show wha-t action, if any, was taken by the board, but all parties have assumed that the resolution was duly adopted, ■ What was done in-execution of it is the reason for " this action. ' . ■
It is alleged in the complaint that'the 300 shares were purchased by or for the Mercantile Company oh the twenty-seventh- of Octo- ■ her. My conclusion is, after a careful study of the confu'sed, contradictory and .impossible testimony relating to the ■ transaction that the purchase was in fact made about the third of March. On that day, according to the books of the Mercantile Company, the com
From the foregoing it^plainly appears that the only parties benefited by the alleged loan were the parties who authorized it and who owned the stock which the money was “ loaned ” to purchase.
In the journal of the Mercantile Company, un'der date of October 27, 1896, appears the following entry: “ Suspense Acct.— To Loan Acct.: For 300 shares Reserve Co. stock collateral to O. F. Berry’s loan dated March 3, 1896. Purchased from him at par, $100 per share, in accordance with resolution of the Board of Directors adopted at meeting held Wednesday, February 5,1896 — $30,000.”. There is no evidence showing nor, as I understand it, is it pretended by any party, that any purchase of this stock by the company from Berry was ever in fact made or was ever the subject of agreement o», negotiation or consideration in any form between Berry and the company, or that Berry was in any manner informed that the company had assumed to take over the stock in satisfaction of his note. ’ His testimony is that he had nothing todo with negotiating the loan; that he didn’t know who paid it oil; that he don’t know how it was paid off; that he don’t know when it was paid off he presumes it was paid because he “never heard anything from it.” This goes to confirm what has been before said in substance — that Berry was a mere convenience, lending himself at the request of bis brother-in-law;, the president of the Mercantile Company, and'
The directors of the Mercantile Company met on the 5th of November, 1896. All of the defendants except Fitzgerald were present. “ The president reported that in pursuance to a resolution of the board of directors of > Feby. 5th, 1896, under authority given by the stockholders at their meeting of Dec. 5th, 1894, he had "purchased 300 shares of the Reserve Company’s stock at par. On motion, the action of the president in the purchase of this stock was and the same is hereby ratified and approved.” The annual meeting of the stockholders of the company was held on February 4, 1897. Thirteen hundred and sixty-two of the 2,000, shares of stock were represented. The minutes show as follows: “ It was moved, seconded and carried—Resolved, that all acts of the Board of Directors and its Executive Committee for the past year be approved and confirmed.”' In March or April, 1897, the Mercantile Company sold its business to the Ocean Accident and Guaranty Company, an English corporation, and went into liquidation. In August of the same year judgment dissolving the company and appointing the plaintiff receiver of its assets was entered in an' action in this court brought by the People of the State. '
It is urged by one of the learned counsel for the defendants that if, in March or October, 1896, these 300 shares of Reserve Company stock were worth $30,000 on the market, or were worth $30,000 to the Mercantile Company no matter what their market value may have been, or if the defendants, exercising a reasonable judgment, had reason to believe and did in good faith believe that the stock was in fact worth that sum, in either case the defendants cannot be charged with official wrongdoing and there can be no recovery in this action. The first suggestion is easily disposed of. The testimony of one of the defendants is that at no time had the stock any special market value, and there is nothing in the case tending to show the contrary.
The argument made in support of the second suggestion is, in substance, that by acquiring the stock the Mercantile Company relieved itself from the payment on it of a dividend of five per
What has been said answers in part the third suggestion, which is, that the defendants had reason to believe and did in good faith believe that the 300 shares were worth the amount paid for them by the Mercantile Company. By what facts in the case can such a belief be explained or defended ? The defendants knew the exact condition of things. They knew how and for what purpose the Reserve Company had been organized; and what its capital stock represented; and that outside of the 500 shares which were exchanged for shares of the Mercantile Company and the 300 shares in question, only one share of its stock had been subscribed for or disposed of; and that the business of the Mercantile Company was on the. decline; and that the real value of the Reserve stock was necessarily declining with it; and that at the very time the purchase of the 300 shares was authorized and made, negotiations were pending for the sale of the business of the Mercantile Company to another corporation. They, or some of them, testify that they expected that the Mercantile Company would continue in business, and that, with an increased capital and surplus, its business would be extended, whereby the Reserve Company stock would be made more productive; but such expectations are not to be taken into serious account in estiinating the present value of a stock in respect to which they are indulged. They also testify that in March, 1896, their opinion was and they believed that the stock of the Reserve Company was worth par. My judgment is that the facts in evidence do not. furnish any good or reasonable grounds for such a belief — and in calculating the weight to be given to such an opinion it must be remembered that the parties who testify, with two or three exceptions, are the parties who had the stock for sale, and whose action in selling it to a corporation bf which they were trustees is a subject of inquiry in this case. ’
It is further strenuously insisted on the part of the defense that the $30,000 which the defendants are charged with having wasted never, in any true sense, formed part of the assets of the Mercantile Company, and that even if it did become part of the company’s assets on the 30th of December, 1895, its disbursement on March 3, 1896, was not a waste, as the sale of the 300 shares by the company
Counsel, however, claims that each of the purchases by the five
. Much weight is given by counsel, to the fact that the $30,000 paid-for the 300 shares'in December.- was not deposited in bank to the general credit of the company, but specially, and that a certificate of deposit was issued therefor payable to the- order of the
It is further insisted that the plaintiff, as receiver, can enforce only such r right of action as the corporation had against these defendants and to which he has succeeded, which may be admitted (Higgins v. Tefft, 4 App. Div. 62); and that no right of action against the defendants or any of them for waste or other misconduct existed in favor of the Mercantile Company, for the reason that the purchase of the Reserve Cdmpany stock was not only expressly authorized by the stockholders at their special meeting on December 4, 1894, but was also approved by them at their annual meeting on February % 1897. The stockholders’ resolution of December 4, 1894, was in these words: “ Resolved, that the Board of Directors be and they are hereby authorized and instructed at their pleasure, and whenever they deem it to be to the interest of the company'to do so, to purchase or buy from any source obtainable stock of the Reserve Company of -Hew York, at a price not above the par value of said stock, and the money used in the purchase of said stock shall be deducted from the reserve or surplus of this company over and above its capital, * * * and the stock so pur
I am also of the opinion that the liability incurred by the defend-, ants, or some of them, by the purchase of the Reserve .Company stock Was not released nor in any respect affected, by the resolution adopted at the stockholders’ meeting on February 4, 189'íí. In. determining the effect of that resolution due regard must be had tq
It is not denied that a transaction falling within the condemnation of this rule may be accepted and ratified by the party entitled to avoid it, but the intention of the party to ratify the particular transaction must be clearly manifested. “Full knowledge of the act assented to, and an 'intention to adopt the act as the act of the corporation are, therefore, essential. A corporation can never be charged with an unauthorized act of its agents, on the sole ground that the act has been ratified by the shareholders, unless the shareholders had full knowledge of the act.” (2 Morawetz Corp. [2d ed.] § 628.) It appears that of the total capital stock of the Mercantile Company, 1,362 out of 2,000 shares were represented at the stockholders’ meeting on February 4,1897. Of these 1,362 shares a majority, or 787 shares, were held by the defendants in this action. Of the remaining-575 shares 509 were represented by proxies, nearly all of which were held and voted by Mr. Deen. It will be seen, therefore, that the meeting was entirely in the hands of the parties[whose official acts are said to have been presented for approval and approved. The resolution adopted was as follows-: “ It was moved, seconded and carried — Resolved, that all acts of the Board of Directors and its Executive Oommittee for the past year be approved and confirmed.” If the purchase of the Reserve Company stock was a wrongful use and a waste of the funds of the Mercantile Company, as in my opinion it was, then the parties, who, as
My conclusion is that the plaintiff is entitled to judgment against some of the defendants. Not against Fitzgerald, for",he did not
The remaining question is that of damage. The Mercantile Company paid $30,000 in cash for the 300 shares of stock. The character and quality of the stock and the property or assets of the Reserve Company represented by it have already been described. The stock was not available to the Mercantile Company as an asset. It could not be sold, as there was no market for it. The actual loss sustained by the Mercantile Company through the action of the defendants was $30,000,less the sum of $1,241.67 which it received,, or retained, rather, as dividends on the stock. The fact that two or three dividends were declared during 1896 on account of insurance written during 1895 does not, under the facts disclosed by the evidence, go far in the direction of showing that the stock itself had any real or substantial value at the time of the sale. The proofs convince me that it had no such value.
The plaintiff, if so advised, may amend his -complaint so as to conform it to the proofs relating to the date of the purchase of the stock.
Sic.