121 Misc. 138 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1923
The defendant corporation has been dissolved and the individual defendants are the trustees in dissolution. Plaintiff has brought this action by virtue of its right to sue created by subdivision 3 of section 221 of the General Corporation Law, which provides that the corporation shall continue in existence until its business and affairs are fully adjusted and wound up by its trustees in liquidation. It provides that during this period the corporation may be sued for the purpose of enforcing its debts and obligations. Plaintiff’s ultimate purpose is to charge the individual defendants with such part of the defendant company’s assets as is necessary to pay proportionately plaintiff’s damages alleged to have been caused by defendant company’s breach of two contracts to accept and pay for certain merchandise manufactured and sold to the defendant corporation by the plaintiff. The complaint alleges that on or about November 15, 1920, the defendant corporation was dissolved under section 221 of the General Corporation Law and that thereupon the individual defendants, as directors, became possessed of all the property and assets of the defendant corporation in trust for the benefit of the creditors of the corporation, and that thereafter, as such directors and trustees, they transferred and distributed all of the property and assets of the corporation to the creditors of the corporation other than and without the knowledge and consent of the plaintiff. Each of the two causes of action contains a statement of the contract between the plaintiff and the defendant corporation, its breach by the defendant corporation and the amount of damages caused by the breach. The rule of damages relied upon by the plaintiff is the difference between the contract price of the goods and their market price when the goods should have been accepted, and the court is asked to render a judgment in favor of plaintiff for damages for the breach of the two contracts of manufacture and sale of goods and for an accounting by the defendants for the property of the defendant corporation and then to adjudge that the plaintiff have a lien thereon for the amount of its indebtedness herein found to be due, or that the same be sold to satisfy plaintiff’s claim as adjudged, or that the plaintiff have judgment against the defendants for the amount claimed. I fail to find in section 221 of the General Corporation Law any authority for suing the individual defendants and holding them personally liable to account for a wrong distribution of the corporation assets. Such a right, however, is created under sections 90 and 91 of the General Corporation Law, and so far as creditors are concerned only in favor of judgment creditors of the corporation. In the case of Cunningham v. Glauber, 133 App. Div. 10, 12, the court said: “* * * i In the casé of
Judgment accordingly.