105 Misc. 704 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1919
This action is brought to procure the judgment of this court declaring certain certificates of stock in the plaintiff corporation heretofore issued to the defendants Greenleaf S. VanGorder, Mary E. VanGorder, Eva E. VanGorder, and now severally held by them, to be null and void, and directing the cancellation of the same, upon the claim alleged that such shares were issued unlawfully and without authority of the plaintiff.
The properties of the corporation situated in North Carolina were sold about the year 1917; dissolution of the corporation was contemplated; the directors authorized a partial distribution of the proceeds of the sale among the stockholders, amounting to $29.50 per ■share of $100, and directed the commencement of this action, withholding the pro rata share of the defendants in such distribution pending the determination of this action. The defendants in addition to putting in issue the facts upon which the .plaintiff’s alleged cause of action rests, have severally counterclaimed for the amounts of their said pro rata shares respec-. tively so withheld. A demurrer to the counterclaim has been overruled. The following pertinent facts are established, vrz.:
While these shares were issued directly to the above named persons, the shares to Parkhurst, Arnold and Snyder were in fact turned over to Johnson to be by him thereafter delivered, and were in fact thereafter delivered by him to them. Between this date and December 12, 1904, Holt received five shares more for ■services, and Johnson 265 shares more, making a total of 1,375 shares. All of these were in fact issued on Johnson’s account, and on that date Johnson gave the following receipt therefor, viz.:
“ December 12, 1904.
“ Received of East Lake Lumber Co. by the hand of G. S. VanGorder, Secretary and Treasurer, $137,500 in various payments heretofore made to me to apply on purchase price of Dare Co. land as per contract of October 14, 1904. R. E. Johnson.”
On October 14, 1904, the contract, or option, so held in Johnson’s name, was assigned to the corporation,
At a directors’ meeting held January 2, 1905, the action of VanGorder in making the purchase for $358,-500 and the giving of the mortgage for $120,000 were ratified by resolution. On September 20, 1905, there were issued to Johnson 1,135 shares. On November 20, 1905, the directors held a meeting at which the following bills were presented, viz.: Johnson for $116,-500 for services and disbursements; VanGorder for $50,000 for services and disbursements; Holt for $1,000 for services and disbursements; C. A. Craine for $100 for services; D. M. Stringfield, $200 for services.
These bills' were each allowed payable in stock, except $50,000 received on sale of certain properties which was to be retained by Johnson as part payment. Certificates of shares were issued to Holt, Craine and Stringfield in the amount of their bills as allowed.
There were issued to VanGorder on November twentieth and twenty-second, 800 shares; to Eva E. VanGorder, 50 shares; to Mary E. VanGorder, 50 shares. There were issued to Johnson on November twenty-second, 1,350 shares.
• Of this amount two certificates aggregating 200 shares were...-surrendered and cancelled, and one of
Certain other shares were subsequently issued in small amounts to other parties for services and property purchased. At a meeting of the directors on September 11, 1906, a resolution was passed authorizing the issuance of “ 217 shares being the unissued stock ” to. Johnson. This stock was issued as follows on that date, viz.: To Johnson, 180 shares; to Eva E. VanGorder account of Johnson, 37 shares.
The following is a summary of the shares of stock issued to the VanGorders, viz.: October 14,1904, to G. S. VanGorder, 325 shares; November 22,1905, to G. S. VanGorder, 800 shares; November 22, 1905, to Eva E. VanGorder, 50 shares; November 22, 1905, to Mary E. VanGorder, 50 shares; September 11, 1906, to Eva E. VanGorder, 37 shares. Total, 1,262 shares.
This number, however, is not all chargeable to VanGorder for the following reasons: 50 of said shares (consisting of two certificates of 25 each) although issued in form to VanGorder, were in fact on Johnson’s account, and were at Johnson’s request turned over to Eva Johnson and Euphemia Moon, sisters of Johnson. Seventy-five shares issued to VanGorder were on account of the purchase price of the lands and were by him delivered to the vendors, and the 37 shares issued to Eva E. VanGorder on September 11, 1906, were on Johnson’s account. The 325 shares issued October 14, 1905, were in fact receipted for by Johnson and were on his account. The following deductions should therefore be made from the 1,262 shares, viz.: To Eva E. VanGorder, 37 shares; shares of Eva Johnson and Euphemia Moon, 50; account of purchase price, 75 shares; shares to VanGorder October 14, 1904, 325. Total, 487 shares. Balance chargeable to VanGorder, 775 shares.
The only formal resolutions passed authorizing the issue of stock were those of November 20, 1905, and September 11, 1906. The several shares were in fact issued, however, in pursuance of the original plan and purpose communicated at the first meeting, and with the full knowledge and acquiescence of all the stockholders, and the holdings of VanGorder, and the considerations for the issuance of stock to both him and Johnson were well known to the other stockholders, including Johnson, who signed all of the certificates as president, and were fully acquiesced in by all of them. Many of the shares of stock ultimately passed into other hands. Of the shares issued to the VanGorders, a portion thereof was disposed of by them for a valuable consideration to bona fide purchasers, but 856 of such shares are still owned by the VanGorders as follows: G. S. VanGorder, 225 shares; Eva E. VanGorder, 397 shares;. Mary E. VanGorder, 234 shares.
Johnson remained president until June 8, 1908, and remained a director until the time of his death, which occurred between the time of the commencement of the trial of this action in May, and its conclusion in June, 1918.
John C. Gittings and Alexander Muncaster are attorneys residing at Washington, D. C. Thomas M. Gittings is a son of John C. Gittings. These men acquired the greater part of Johnson’s stock, part thereof in their own right, and the balance of their holdings by J. C. Gittings as trustee for Johnson, and
The defendants urge at the outset that the right to maintain this action is barred by the Statute of Limitations. While it is unnecessary to the defense that this contention be sustained, yet I am of the opinion that the position is well taken. I think it quite clear that the ten-year Statute of Limitations (Code Civ. Pro. § 388) is applicable, and that the statute began to run at the time when the stock alleged to have been unlawfully issued was in fact issued, viz.: November 22, 1905. This action was not begun until November, 1917. There was clearly no actual fraud in the issuance of stock to VanGorder. It was issued with the full knowledge of all of the then stockholders and upon his open assertion that it was being issued to him by reason of a one-fourth interest in the option, and on account of services rendered and disbursements incurred by him, and therefore the provisions of subdivision 5 of section 382 of the Code of Civil Procedure, postponing the running of the statute until the discovery of the fraud, do not apply. Spallholz v. Sheldon, 158 App. Div. 367; affd., 216 N. Y. 205.
It is urged by the plaintiff that the running of the statute was suspended by reason of the trust relation said to exist between VanGorder and the corporation. The general rule no doubt is that as to a trustee of an actual express and subsisting trust, the statute does not begin to run against the beneficiary until the trustee has openly, to the knowledge of the beneficiary, renounced, disclaimed or repudiated the trust, Lammer v. Stoddard, 103 N. Y. 672; Gilmore v. Ham, 142 id. 1.
There are two answers, however, to this contention: (a) The trust relation if one existed did not exist as to the corporation, except as to the corporate
Nor do I think the running of the Statute of Limitations is suspended- by reason of the alleged analogy between this action and actions to remove a cloud upon title. The attack is upon the act of VanGorder in issuing this stock to himself. Ford v. Clendenin, 155 App. Div. 433.
VanGorder was an officer and had the custody of the records until his removal by the present directors in 1917, but the facts were known to Johnson who was president and to the other stockholders, and it must be held that the corporation as an entity had knowledge of the facts through its other officers and directors.
I think, therefore, that the action is barred by the ten-year Statute of Limitations.
On the merits I think the action should not be maintained. The first 325 shares of the 725 said to have been issued without authority to the VanGorders, were in fact issued on Johnson’s account, and were receipted for by him. All of the stock issued to VanGorder, either on his own account or on account of Johnson, was in fact issued because of his interest which he had in the option by arrangement with Johnson, and it was so understood by all of the stockholders until the entire authorized shares had been issued, and it was acquiesced in by all of the stockholders at meetings thereof at a time when neither the public
Johnson, whose stock has since passed into the hands of the parties who are now the officers instigating this action, was a party to its issuance.
The stockholders had the right at the time of its issuance to permit such value to be placed upon the property as they chose, and to permit the stock to be issued for such considerations as they chose, not in violation of law, and, if no rights of creditors or of the public were affected (and such is the situation here), the corporation could not complain. Bostwick v. Young, 118 App. Div. 490; Little v. Garabrant, 90 Hun, 404; Seymour v. Spring Forest C. Assn., 144 N. Y. 340; Blum v. Whitney, 185 id. 233; Lorillard v. Clyde, 86 id. 384.
The issuance of this stock was not only approved by the stockholders at the time, but was at all times acquiesced in by them, and became binding upon them and upon the corporation. Blum v. Whitney, 185 N. Y. 233; 10 Cyc. 1075.
The plaintiff urged at the trial and now urges very strenuously that this arrangement between Johnson and VanG-order was not binding upon the corporation. It was in fact, however, communicated to all the stockholders at the meeting, and was in fact acquiesced in by them and was a part of, and in fact was, the very plan and purpose which underlay the formation and organization of the corporation, and the stock was in fact issued as a result of corporate action. Under these circumstances no formal resolution was necessary. Seymour v. Spring Forest C. Assn., 144 N. Y. 340.
The plaintiff also urges that proof of this arrangement and of its disclosure and discussion at the cor
The complaint should be dismissed and the defendants respectively are entitled to recover upon their several counterclaims the amount of their .pro rata shares in the distribution ordered, viz.: G. S. VanGorder, 225 shares at $29.50, $6,637.50; Eva E. VanGorder, 397 shares at $29.50, $11,611.50; Mary E. VanGorder, 234 shares at $29.50, $6,903.
To these several amounts there may be added interest from June 3, 1917.
The defendants are. entitled to costs, and the judgment may so provide.
Judgment accordingly.