65 N.Y.S. 28 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1900
This is a motion for an injunction pendente lite. The defendants are sued as officers of the Wagner Palace Car Company, a voluntary unincorporated association, of which the plaintiff is a stockholder, holding 100 shares of the par value of $100 each. The object of the action is to prevent the dissolution of the association and the consummation of a sale of the business and asséts of the association to the Pullman Palace Car Company, which the defendants propose to effect as liquidators of its affairs. It is claimed that the directors of the Wagner Palace Car Company have no power to dissolve the company, and an attempt is made to bring the case within the law in that regard applicable to corporations. The answer to this is that associations such as this are not corporations. The latest review of the subject by the Court of Appeals is found in People ex rel. Winchester v. Coleman, 133 N. Y. 279, Avhere Judge Finch, after an elaborate discussion of the question, states the difference between a joint-stock association and a corporation in the following words (p. 287): “ The one derives its existence from the contract of individuals, the other from the sovereignty of the State. The two are alike, but not the same. More or less they crowd upon and overlap each other, but without losing their identity; and so, while we cannot say that the joint-stock company is a corporation, we can say, as we did say in Van Aernam v. Bleistein, 102 N. Y. 360, that á joint-stock company is a partnership with some of the powers of a corporation. Beyond that we do not think it our duty to go.” See also same case, Gen. Term, Supreme Court, 37 N. Y. St. Repr. 120; also, Special Term, Supreme Court, 24 id. 970. The Joint-Stock Association Law (chap. 235, Laws of 1894) also clearly shows this. The association is the-creature of contract, and not of the State, and Avhatever the contract contains which is not of itself unlawful constitutes a part of the law of its being. Section 5 of the above-mentioned law declares that “ A joint-stock association shall not be dissolved except in pursuance of its articles of association, or by consent of all its-stockholders, or by judgment of a court for fraud in its management, or for good cause shoAvn.” The right, then, of the associates.
Motion denied, with ten dollars costs.