122 N.Y.S. 100 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1910
Michaelis and Arnold Kaiser were partners in a mercantile business. Desiring, as they say, that their real estate transactions should be dissociated from their mercantile business, they, with their attorney, organized a corporation under the name of Kaiser Bros. Company for the handling of real estate, with an authorized capital stock of $10,000. Ten shares of this stock were subscribed, nine by the
Plaintiff is admittedly the only creditor of the Kaiser Bros. Company. The individual defendants assert that the purchase money for the Brook avenue property was advanced by them under an agreement that they should collect the rents, which should be applied on the debt, until the property should be sold by the corporation, at which time any balance due them should be paid out of the proceeds of the sale, and that in the meantime they should have a lien on the property; that after the contract was made to exchange the Brook avenue property for the Amsterdam avenue property they consulted their attorney, the third director in the corporation, as to the disposition of the debt which the corporation owed them; and that it was then agreed that they, instead of the corporation, should receive the title to the Amsterdam avenue property, which was to be in full satisfaction of their claim. They now insist that this suit must fail because the taking of the title to the Amsterdam avenue property was but the carrying out of the previous agreements between them and the corporation; that under the conveyance of the Brook avenue property to the corporation they were the equitable owners; and that they, as directors, had a right to advance to the corporation and to take security therefor.
These contentions involve propositions of law which are sound as applied to the facts in various cases in which they have been expounded ; but they cannot be successfully invoked on the facts of this case. It is manifest that the defendant corporation and the individual .defendants were a unit, except as the naked form of incorporation
True, the defendant directors say that the corporation is still in existence; but it is admitted that they have abandoned it and the purposes of its- organization, and that it is entirely without assets. Directors may in good faith advance money to a corporation and take security therefor. Converse v. Sharpe, 161 N. Y. 571, 56 N. E. 69, and other cases cited by defendants’ counsel support the rule, and apply it with respect to particular facts as against contentions of illegal preferences. Ordinarily in such transactions the corporation and its creditors and stockholders are representéd. That is not the case here. On the other hand, an officer cannot agree with himself, acting on the one part individually and on the other part in his fiduciary capacity. Judge Thompson, in 10 Cyc. 790, says that “a director cannot with propriety vote in the board of directors upon a matter affecting his own private interests any more than a judge can .sit in his own case” (quoted with approval in Jacobson v. Brooklyn Lumber Co., 184 N. Y. 162, 76 N. E. 1075). The same rule is recognized in Butts v. Wood, 37 N. Y. 317; and these authorities show that action by a board of directors, which required the vote of an interested director, is not binding upon the corporation. In the cases cited relief was granted at the suit of stockholders; but in the case at bar the stockholders are the directors, and there is no other stockholder save the attorney, who holds but one share of stock. In all the alleged agreement upon which the defendant directors rely to establish their right to appropriate the corporate assets they were in effect the sole parties. They agreed with themselves, advanced to themselves, reimbursed themselves; for they, with their attorney, were the only stockholders, and except in so far as they composed the corporation it was not represented.
The individual defendants say that, as their money paid for the Brook avenue property, a trust arose in their favor. The real property law (Laws-1896, c. 547, § 74; Consol. Laws 1909, c. 50, § 94) provides that a grant of real property to one person, the consideration being paid by another, is presumed fraudulent against the creditors at that
Reference to one or two of these cases will be sufficiently illustrative. In Western Union Tel. Co. v. Shepard, 169 N. Y. 170, 62 N. E. 154, 58 L. R. A. 115, the trust was implied where in equity and good conscience as between the parties it would have been unconscionable to permit one of them to retain something which neither intended he should purchase; and it was said: “It is only where the existence of a trust is dependent upon the mere will of the parties that it must be created by express language” under the statute. And in Quinn v. Quinn, supra, it was held that the provision of the real property law as to such trusts must be considered in connection with another section of that law which permits the specific performance of a contract between the parties which has been partiálly performed, and a contract by which two brothers purchased property and took the title in the name of one of them was enforced after performance by both of them, in order to prevent a fraud.
On the other hand, however, the corporation here cannot be said to have had any real part in placing the legal title to the Amsterdam avenue property in the Kaisers. They took that title under the arrangement which has already been referred to, and they hold it in trust for the corporation and subject to the plaintiff’s demand, under Code Civ. Proc. § 1781, subd. 2 (General Corporation Law [Consol. Laws 1909, c. 23] § 90).
Plaintiff is entitled to a personal judgment against Michaelis Kaiser and Arnold Kaiser, requiring them to pay to the plaintiff the amount of his judgment against the Kaiser Bros. Company, with interest from the date of its entry, together with the costs and disbursements herein, declaring the Amsterdam avenue property to be held by the individual defendants in trust for the corporation, and requiring the former to convey the legal title to said property to the corporation, to be subjected to the satisfaction of plaintiff’s judgment herein-, by proper process, unless the individual defendants pay said judgment within 10 days from service of a copy of this decree upon their attorneys.
This decree or judgment may be amended at the foot thereof in such manner as to give full effect to its provisions.