126 N.Y.S. 1070 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1911
This is an action brought by a trustee in bankruptcy against the sole stockholder of the bankrupt company to recover certain dividends amounting to $17,600 paid by it between December 27, 1902, and January 8, 1907, both inclusive, upon the ground that such dividends were paid in violation of the statiite as being paid out of the capital and not out of the profits of the company. It is alleged in ^ the complaint that defendant at such times owned all the capital stock of said bankrupt company; that during such times said company had three directors, two of whom were officers of defendant company and that both they and defendant company well knew that said dividends were paid from the capital of the bankrupt company and not from its profits that the Schuylerville Paper Company, a domestic corporation, was adjudicated a bankrupt on or about July 28, 1908, and that the assets of said bankrupt are
It seems clear that the capital stock of a corporation is intended as a fund for the ultimate security and payment of all its creditors, both present and future. Thus section 28 of the present Stock Corporation Law (Consol. Laws, chap. 59 ; Laws of 1909, chap. 61) prohibits directors from declaring dividends “ except from the surplus profits arising from the business of such corporation,” and sections 62, 63 and 64 provide in detail for the reduction of the capital stock of a corporation, the provisions of all of these sections having long been the law of this State. In Williams v. Western Union Tel. Co. (93 N. Y. 162, 187, 188) Judge Eabl says': “These provisions were intended to prevent the division, distribution, withdrawal and reduction of the property of a corporation below the sum limited in its charter or articles of association for its capital, but not to prevent its increase above that sum. The purpose was to prevent the depletion of the property of the corporation thereby. endangering its solvency. , * * * All these provisions show that it was the purpose of the Legislature, by means of them, to create a property capital for the corporation, and then to keep that intact so as to secure the solvency of the corporation and its responsibility to its creditors.” The same holding . appears in Hutchinson v. Stadler (85 App. Div. 424, 432, 436):
The complaint of the appellant here was dismissed upon the opening principally upon the ground that appellant disclaimed that the dividends in question, although paid out of capital, rendered the corporation actually insolvent at such times.' But if the capital of. a corporation be regarded as a fund for - the ultimate .payment of creditors, and so to be kept intact unless diminished in the manner prescribed by statute, the mere fact that the assets still remain equal to the liabilities cannot justify dividends such as these. The statute does not allow capital'to be depleted by means of dividends Up to the very point of insolvency; on the contrary, the capital is to be kept intact and unimpaired and creditors have a right to rely upon this policy of' the law in their dealings with corporations. The argument of respondent, if admitted, would manifestly put a premium upon fraud, as then the entire net assets of a corporation, including capital paid in, over and above its actual debts and liabilities at any one time, could be secretly withdrawn by its stockholders in the form of dividends, thus forcing its creditors to bear all the risk of insolvency arising from any slight business loss or shrinkage ■ of assets. * ‘
Respondent further claims that, appellant as trustee in bankruptcy is not authorized to bring the action. But section 70, subdivision e, of the Bankruptcy Act (30 U. S. Stat. as Large, 566, as amd. by 32 id. 800, § 16) seems to allow an action such as this if any creditor could have brought the action, and this irrespective of whether the action be based expressly upon fraud or not. The
The judgment should, be reversed and a new trial granted, with costs to abide the event.
All condurred, except Houghton, J., dissenting.
Judgment and order reversed and new trial granted, with costs to appellant to abide event.