42 N.Y.S. 781 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1896
1. Contention is made by appellants’ counsel that, the mortgage in suit never having been personally delivered by Mr. Robertson, the president, and the bonds not having been negotiated by him, they never became binding obligations upon the mortgagor company; that the bonds never had a valid inception until they were negotiated in the manner provided by the resolution authorizing their execution; that the resolution required, as condition precedent to the creation of any liability, that the president should negotiate the bonds upon the best possible terms; that the president must have been named for a purpose,—i. e. the protection of the corporation,—so that the future as well as the present stockholders should ■derive some consideration or benefit therefrom; that the president was, therefore, prevented from negotiating the bonds “upon the best terms possible,” or upon any terms, and the bonds were never put into circulation through the agency of the corporation, but were practically stolen by the secretary, Stranahan, who received the manual possession thereof from the trust company, after it had certified the same; that Stranahan was not authorized to negotiate the bonds at all, but Robertson alone was authorized. This contention is clearly untenable. Stranahan was practically the owner of the entire capital stock of the company; and, if we are to believe the testimony of Curry, the superintendent, the other two directors took no .active part in the management or control of its business affairs
2. It is argued with some show of reason that Stranahan never negotiated nor pledged the bonds for or on behalf of the company, but rather on his individual behalf and credit, and for his own individual purposes; that the moneys were advanced to and received by him, not while acting for the company, but while acting in his individual capacity, and for the accomplishment of his own private objects; and it is insisted that this contention is strengthened by the circumstance that there is no evidence that' any of these moneys so received were ever used for, or applied to, the purpose of defraying the existing indebtedness of the company, or “for its other lawful purposes,” or that the company ever received any advantage or benefit therefrom; but it is claimed that the evidence indicates the contrary. The referee truly says that the trust company acted in a dual capacity. As trustee for the bondholders, it had certain duties to perform; and as a banking corporation, it had the right to loan money upon securities; and it made no practical difference whether it was named as trustee in the security, except so far as it was chargeable with notice of any diversion of such securities. If the plaintiff had never parted with these bonds, could it maintain this action in its own behalf, as a bona fide purchaser or pledgee of the bonds? The referee says not; and the reasons given for his conclusions are that when the bonds and the mortgage were presented to plaintiff it was apparent that they had never been negotiated by the president, as required by the resolution recited in the mortgage; that the plaintiff had not at that time accepted the trust, and the resolution itself required that the bonds should be certified by the plaintiff; that the instruments were, therefore, both incomplete when presented, and the plaintiff was chargeable with knowledge that they had never been negotiated in accordance with the terms of the-resolution; and there was no presumption and no evidence before-plaintiff’s officer that Stranahan had any authority to pledge them for his own individual debt; that the plaintiff, therefore, in its capacity of a banking corporation, was not a bona fide purchaser of the bonds, nor did it take any title to the same as against the mortgagor, for the transaction constituted a diversion of the bonds from the purposes for which they had been issued. The answer to this reasoning is that Stranahan did, in fact, possess authority from his co-directors and stockholders—who, with himself, constituted the corporation, and owned all its assets—to negotiate the bonds; consequently, the matter must be judged as though the secretary, instead
The case, then, is simply this: An officer of a corporation, with full power to raise money upon its negotiable bonds, presents them to a bank, and asks for a loan of money upon the strength of them. The bank complies, and also takes from him his individual note and other collateral; and the question is whether the moneys were advanced to him in his individual character or as a representative of the corporation. Because of the acceptance of his personal promissory note and other collateral, must the transaction necessarily be characterized as an individual loan? That the advances were made to some extent, and, it would seem, to a great extent, on the strength of the bonds and mortgage, is a very reasonable presumption. The taking of individual security cannot impair the legal effect or consequence of that transaction. See Long Island Loan & Trust Co. v. Columbus, C. & I. C. Ry. Co., 65 Fed. 455. Presumably, the taking of the note and the other collateral may have been induced by the consideration that the president was the person authorized by the resolution to negotiate the bonds; and the plaintiff may have entertained some doubts in respect to the validity of the transaction with the secretary, although being aware, no doubt, that he was the principal stockholder. Now, since the advances were made upon the faith and strength of the bonds and mortgage, and that Stranahan was authorized to receive the money for the company, payment to him was payment to the corporation itself. The corporation was then present at the time of the transaction, and received the moneys through its representative, and by means of the statement in its corporate obligations that the funds were desired for corporate purposes. ' In contemplation of law, therefore, the funds came into possession of the company; and, that being the case, the plaintiff was under no obligation to see to it that the moneys were applied to the purposes for which the obligations were issued, and, consequently, it is not responsible for their misapplication; and it is immaterial, therefore, what Stranahan did with the moneys, of which he was virtually the individual owner. Clearly, the referee’s conclusion that the transaction amounted .to a diversion of the securities is founded in error. “It was not sufficient to allege that the books of
If it' were a matter of any importance to determine whether the company received, directly or indirectly, any benefit from the moneys loaned, the question would arise, “Upon whom is the burden of proof?” The answer would be, “Upon the defendants.” And that obligation they have not performed, by reason of their not calling a person who must be able to give material information on the subject. If there is information which might have been, but is not, forthcoming, and which might have been very material, who ought to have produced it upon this trial? The burden of producing it lies upon the parties who have to make out their case, and those parties, in this instance, are the defendants. The plaintiff has the legal title, and is entitled to keep it, unless it can be shown that there .are equitable grounds upon which it should be deprived of it. In whatever position we might have been if better evidence could not have been produced, we must decline to draw inferences as to matters upon which evidence might have beeen brought before us. Bentinck v. Bank [1893] 2 Ch. 120, 136, 137. The testimony of Curry, the superintendent of the company, falls short of proving that the company could have received no benefit from the moneys. No excuse is shown why the directors or officers, and especially Stranahan, were not produced as witnesses. “All evidence is to be weighed according to the proof which it was in the power of one side to have produced and in the other side to have contradicted.” See Kirby v. Tallmadge, 160 U. S. 379, 16 Sup. Ct. 349; McGuire v. Insurance Co., 7 App. Div. 575, 589, 591, 40 N. Y. Supp. 300. The finding of the referee that there is no evidence that any of the moneys advanced to Stranahan were ever applied to corporate purposes, is based on the erroneous assumption that he had no power to negotiate the bonds and receive the moneys on behalf of the company; that the transaction was a personal one, and the pledge amounted to a wrongful diversion of the bonds; and that, therefore, the burden was imposed upon the plaintiff to call Stranahan, and establish, if it could, the application of the moneys to the benefit of the company. The position taken by appellants appears to be that the company could not have received any benefit from the funds, because, forsooth, the superintendent of the company says they did not need them. And it is argued that in September, 1886, the company’s plant was entirely paid for; that it was entirely out of debt, and was in receipt of an income from its customers which was entirely
In view of the fact that Stranahan was practically the owner of the entire capital stock, and the corporation was virtually his private property, and in the light of all the circumstances disclosed in respect to his transactions, the court must not carry too far the legal conception that a corporation is to be regarded as a legal entity, existing separate and apart from the natural persons composing it. “The statement that a corporation is an artificial person or entity, apart from its members, is merely a description in figurative language of a corporation viewed as a collective body. A corporation is really an association of persons, and no judicial dictum or legislative enactment can alter this fact.” Mor. Priv. Corp. § 227. S» that the idea that a corporation may be a separate entity, in the sense that it can act independently of the natural persons composing it, or abstain from acting where it is their will that it shall, has no foundation in reason or authority, and is contrary to the fact. State v. Standard Oil Co., 49 Ohio St. 137, 177, 30 N. E. 279; 1 Beach, Priv. Corp. § 1.
The further contention is made by appellants that, this action being prosecuted on behalf of the German-American Bank, the legal owner of the bonds, the further question for determination is whether the bank has acquired the title of a bona fide purchaser, though the trust company may not have stood in that position. We do not regard the question of the good faith of the holders of these bonds as of any account, so long as it appears that they took them for value, and paid for them in cash. The bonds in question were issued with the consent of all the stockholders at the time they were issued. Therefore neither the stockholders nor the corporation are in a position to contest their validity. This doctrine is held in Kent v. Mining Co., 78 N. Y. 159, and in Skinner v. Smith, 134 N. Y. 240, 31 N. E. 911, in respect to manufacturing corporations,—corporations which do not possess, the right of eminent domain,—which have no duty to perform to the public. The corporation in this case is one of that kind. There is no evidence that the issue of these $10,000 of bonds would impair the power of this company to discharge its duty to the public. There is no member of the public who maltes any objection, or seeks to have these bonds set aside, and no stockholder or creditor seeks to have them set aside, and as against everybody else the plaintiff has the absolute right to recover.
Further discussion of the questions presented here is unneces
Judgment modified by deducting therefrom $1,293.04, and, as so modified, affirmed, without costs to either party in this court. All -concur.