THE CENTRAL CITY SAVINGS BANK, Appellant, v. THOMAS R. WALKER et al., Respondents.
Court of Appeals of the State of New York
June 21, 1876
66 N.Y. 424
Argued June 7, 1876
To establish a liability against a party as a partner for the acts of others, it must be made to appear that a copartnership was formed by express agreement, or that there was an authorization in advance and a consent to be bound by such acts as a partner, or a ratification of the acts after performance with full knowledge of all the circumstances, or some act by which an equitable estoppel has been created.
After the charter of a manufacturing corporation had expired by statutory limitation, its general agent appointed during the existence of the corporation continued to carry on the business and to contract debts; and for such a debt he gave a promissory note in the name of the corporation. In an action against the stockholders seeking to charge them as makers of the note, on the ground that there was an implied contract of copartnership between them, it appeared that defendants, six months after the expiration of the charter, received dividends as from the earnings of the corporation, but without notice that it was not so paid, and without knowledge of the expiration of the charter; also, that credit was not given to them as partners or individuals, but to the supposed corporation. Held, that upon the expiration of the charter, the title to the corporate property vested in the trustees then in office, in trust for the creditors and stockholders (
Also, held, that there was no legal distinction in respect to liability between a trustee and a simple stockholder where neither contracted the debt or authorized another to represent him in the transaction.
National Bank v. London (45 N. Y., 410) distinguished.
(Argued June 7, 1876; decided June 21, 1876.)
APPEAL from judgment of the General Term of the Supreme Court in the fourth judicial department in favor of defendants, entered upon an order nonsuiting plaintiff on trial at Circuit.
This action was brought against defendants, all of whom were stockholders and a portion trustees of the Utica Steam Woolen Company, to recover the amount of a promissory
Two of the defendants, Walker and McQuade, appeared and answered.
The Utica Steam Woolen Company was a corporation organized February 27, 1846, under the manufacturing act of 1811 (
J. R. Swan, Jr., for the appellant. The defendants were copartners. (Pars. on Part. [m. p.], 9; Davis v. Grove, 2 Robt., 134; Bostwick v. Champion, 11 Wend., 571; Cumspton v. McNair, 1 id., 457; Reynolds v. Cleveland, 4 Cow., 282;
Francis Kernan for the respondents. Defendants, after February 27, 1866, were not copartners or liable as such. (Story on Part., §§ 64, 2, 3, 5, 32; Irwin v. Conklin, 36 Barb., 64; Baldwin v. Burrows, 47 N. Y., 199, 206; Livingston v. Lynch, 4 J. Ch., 573, 591-599; 3 Kent, 27 [m. p.]; Hazard v. Hazard, 1 Story, 371; Chase v. Barrett, 4 Paige, 148; Porter v. McClure, 15 Wend., 187; Nat. Bk. v. Landon, 45 N. Y., 410; City of Utica v. Churchill, 33 id., 237-239; Queen v. Arnaud, 9 Ad. & El. [N. S.], 806; Mickles v. Roch. City Bk., 11 Paige, 119, 128;
ALLEN, J. The defendants are sought to be charged as makers of a promissory note, under the name of “The Utica Steam Woolen Company,” a corporation whose charter had expired by its own limitation, and of which the defendants were stockholders. The corporation became such by filing a certificate pursuant to the act of 1811 relative to incorporations for manufacturing purposes, and the acts amendatory thereof, by the terms of which the corporate existence was limited to twenty years from the day of filing the certificate. (
The defendants did not hold themselves out as copartners, neither did they by word or act assent to the making of the note in suit, or to the transaction of any business in the name of the corporation in their behalf or with knowledge that its legal existence had terminated. Some six months after the expiration of the charter a dividend was paid to the defendants, as from the earnings of the corporation, by the check of the treasurer, as annual dividends had been paid in former years, but without notice to them that it was not paid from the earnings of the corporation, or that the corporation had ceased to exist; and there was no proof that it was paid from the earnings of the business transacted in the name of the company after the lapse of the twenty years from its organization. The claim to recover is based solely on the fact that the agent of the corporation, without any authority other than that conferred by resolution of the trustees and under an appointment by them during the existence of the corporation, continued to carry on the business and contract debts, includ
The contention is that there was “an implied contract of copartnership” between the stockholders, by which they became liable as copartners to third persons. The property and property rights of the corporation were not owned by the individual stockholders, either during the existence of the corporation or after its dissolution. During the life of the corporation the body corporate was the legal owner, and upon the expiration of the charter the legal title vested in the trustees in office, at the time, in trust, for the creditors and stockholders. (
There was an entire absence of any intent of the parties to subject themselves to the risks and to the powers which are vested in each member of a partnership. By the Law Merchant, if the individual shareholders have received any part of the earnings of the business carried on by the trustees after the corporation ceased to exist, or have shared in the property of the corporation, they may, perhaps, be held to account in equity, to the extent they have profited; but this does not make them liable in an action at law upon the contracts of the trustees or of the corporation. (Clavering v. Westley, 3 P. Wms., 402.) Neither is there any evidence that the defendants ever constituted Clogher their agent to contract in their name or incur obligations in their behalf, or that they ever received the benefit of his acts so as to charge them with his obligations within the maxim, qui sentit commodum sentire debet et onus. The only act that is relied upon as an adoption of his acts is the receipt of the dividend in August, 1866. But this wants the essential fact that it was paid or received as the profits of a partnership business, as well as the element of knowledge of the acts now claimed to have been ratified, or that the dividend was not, in fact, from the earnings of the corporation, for and as which it was paid and received. A ratification can only be implied after knowledge of all the material facts is brought home to the party. A receipt of money as a part of the earnings of a corporation is no ratification of acts of business carried on outside of the corporation without knowledge of him who is sought to be charged with them that the moneys came from such business. (Baldwin v. Burrows, 47 N. Y., 199; Dounce v. Myrick, 45 id., 180; Rowan v. Hyatt, id., 138.) The case of The National Bank of Watertown v. Landon (45 N. Y., 410), is distinguishable from this by the fact that in the case quoted there was a special agreement between the stockholders under which the business was continued after the legal expiration of the charter, by which they made themselves partners in fact as well as
To constitute a partnership there must be the assent of the individuals to the creation of that relation between them; and in the cases relied upon by the counsel for the plaintiff there has been a partnership by express agreement, or an authorization in advance and a consent to be bound by the acts of others as partners, or by the particular act in question, or a ratification of the acts after they were performed with full knowledge of all the circumstances necessary to an intelligent avowal or disavowal of them, or some acts by which an equitable estoppel has been created ---- none of which circumstances exist in this case. (Thicknesse v. Bromilow, 2 C. & J., 425; Anthony v. Butler, 13 Peters, 423; Eastman v. Clark, 53 N. H., 276; Vassar v. Camp, 14 Barb., 341.)
The plaintiff failed to make a case against the defendants, and the questions of evidence made upon the trial are, therefore, immaterial. The liability of the two defendants served with process depends upon the same evidence; and there is no evidence against McQuade to distinguish his case from that of his codefendant; and it was not claimed upon the trial that either was liable if both were not.
The judgment must be affirmed.
All concur; ANDREWS, J., not sitting.
Judgment affirmed.
Upon decision of a subsequent motion for reargument, the following opinion was delivered :
The motion must be denied, with ten dollars cost.
All concur.
Motion denied.
