84 N.J. Eq. 557 | New York Court of Chancery | 1908
On November 9th, 1899, the receiver of the insolvent corporation applied to the court for an assessment against the original subscribers to the capital stock of the corporation, to pay in so much of their respective unpaid subscriptions as might be necessary to pay the corporate debts, with expenses of administration. The application was by petition filed in the cause against four of the five original subscribers, William S. Ketcham, Jr. (one hundred shares), George W. Ketcham (five shares), Frank D. Holloway (one hundred shares) and Edward E. Campfield (one hundred shares), and against said George W. Ketcham, as administrator of his father, William S. Ketcham, deceased, the remaining original subscriber, for one hundred shares. In the petition stock was alleged to have been actually issued to William S. Ketcham for forty shares, William S. Ketcham, Jr., forty shares, and George W. Ketcham, two shares, eighty-two shares in all. No further shares were issued to any of the stockholders, and the subscribers Holloway and Campfield were alleged to be insolvent. The respondents, William S. Ketcham and George W. Ketcham, individually, and as administrator of William S. Ketcham, Sr., filed a joint answer to the petition denying (among other things) the existence of the. corporation, or any subscription for the stock. A previous assessment against the same stockholders had been reversed on their appeal, because there did not appear on the record to have been any judicial inquiry, ascertaining the proportion of unpaid subscriptions needed to meet the
On this hearing no claim was made by or on behalf of William S. Ketcham, Sr., that by reason of the transfer of this property to the company, he was entitled to credit for all of this amount upon his own subscription. No payment on account of any of the eighty-two shares - of stock issued was shown otherwise than by the transfer of the Holloway property to the company, and in the absence of other proof the contemporaneous issue of the stock to the three Ketchams as paid-up stock would seem to conclude all of them from asserting against the company or the receiver any other appropriation or division of the payment. The substantial defence made by all of the Ketchams jointly on this hearing was, that there was no actual incorporation, that the stock had never been actually issued or delivered, and that no property had been transferred to the company. And they abo proved that the intestate had afterwards taken the entire tangible property conveyed by the bill of sale and converted it to his own use on account of Holloway’s indebtedness to him-elf, and had
A suit was also brought by the receiver against George W. Ketcham to recover the assessment made against him pursuant to the decree of June 9th, 1903, and a judgment in favor of the receiver was affirmed on writ of error. The effect of the reservation in the order was considered by the appellate court in this second action (McCarter v. Ketcham (August 8th, 1907), 74 N. J. Law 825), and it was declared that this reservation was not intended to nullify the previous determination of the court of chancery with respect to essential matters, 'but only to reserve defences that were not concluded by the decree. The third suit brought against the administrator to recover an assessment of $3,095, made at the same time on the intestate’s stock, under the order of June 9th, 1903, was brought in November, 1904, and in this suit the administrator, defended by the same counsel, in addition to the defences set up in the two previous suits, set up a plea of payment of the subscription of William S. Ketcham by the transfer of Holloway of the goods and chattels worth $10,000, and accepted by the company in payment of the intestate’s subscription. By this offer the whole value of the goods was apparently to be appropriated to the pay
Application is now made by the administrator to open the original decree of June 9th, 1903, and to allow him to put in the defence of payment of the intestate’s entire subscription by the transfer of Holloway to the company. The general ground upon which the application is based, is the erroneous view of petitioner’s counsel, at the time of the hearing, as to the legal scope and effect of the proceedings for assessment on this question of payment, and as to the conclusiveness of any order or decree which might be made in such proceedings. And it is further claimed that the view then taken by counsel was the view taken by the court itself, and expressed in the reservation. An examination of the whole record, evidence and conclusions on this hearing shows, I think, that so far as the particular defence of payment of the subscription was concerned, there was no substantial question made on behalf of any of the respondents, that if the transfer by Holloway was in fact accepted by the company as a consideration for the issue of paid-up stock, it was issued in payment of the eighty-two shares of stock issued to the three Ketchams for $8,300. There was no claim at the hearing that so far as the issue of stock was concerned, more than this amount was to be then issued as full paid, or that the intestate was to have the full benefit of the transfer as payment. The order allowing the payment of forty per cent, to all the Ketchams
Another change in the status of the petitioner since the making of the order has an important bearing on the equity of the application to open or modify the decree. On the hearing which resulted in the making of the order, not only did the administrator, in common with William S. Ketcham, Jr., and George W. Ketcham, insist that the issue of the eighty-two shares of stock to the Ketchams was not a completed transaction as between.
My present view is that each of these objections is well taken, but I prefer to place tire decision on the substantial merits of the application, and as the. order was originally made, talcing into consideration special equities in relation to the alleged payment of forty per cent, proved to exist between the several stockholders, including Holloway, as well as the three Ketchams, and the order has since been accepted and acted on by the receiver and the other stockholders, I conclude that the petitioner has no standing to destroy these equities then settled, and after this lapse of time have a rehearing and reassessment on new and contradictory evidence and defences.