109 N.E. 875 | NY | 1915
The defendant has demurred to the complaint; and the question whether its allegations make *60 out a cause of action has been certified to this court. The plaintiff is a New Jersey corporation. In July, 1903, it received a certificate under sections 15 and 16 of the General Corporation Law authorizing it to do business in this state. Since then it has maintained in New York its main business office; has held in New York the regular and most of the special meetings of its directors; and in New York has "generally," to follow the words of the complaint, "managed, directed and conducted its business." During successive years the directors, of whom the defendant is one, "as part of their administration of the business of the company in the State of New York," declared and distributed dividends. These dividends were paid out of capital, and not out of surplus or profits. That fact was well known, the complaint charges, to the directors, including the defendant. The loss to the company from the payment of unearned dividends is stated to be $239,016.75. For that amount with interest, judgment is demanded.
The statutes of New Jersey regulating the declaration of dividends are pleaded in the complaint. They are similar to our own statutes in prohibiting the making of dividends except from the surplus of the corporation or the net profits arising from its business (General Corporation Law of New Jersey, section 30). They are unlike our statutes, in that they give the right of action to the stockholders, severally and respectively, to the full amount of any loss sustained. Only in the event of insolvency does the cause of action belong to the corporation or its receiver. There is no claim that this corporation is insolvent. Under the New Jersey statute, therefore, the right of action is in the stockholders. The question to be determined here is whether the action may be maintained by the corporation itself. The answer depends upon the application to foreign corporations of the statutes of New York. *61
The Stock Corporation Law of this state (Cons. Laws, ch. 59, section 28) gives to a corporation or its creditors the right to recover the full amount of the loss sustained through the payment of dividends except from surplus profits. That section, if it stood alone, would be confined in its application to domestic corporations (Vanderpoel v. Gorman,
We think the statute is broader both in purpose and in effect. At the outset, we put aside considerations of the legislature's power in respect of foreign corporations. We shall advert to those considerations later. For the moment, we are concerned solely with the legislature's meaning. Viewing the problem solely as one of statutory construction, we think the answer is not doubtful. The legislature meant to extend to foreign corporations transacting business in this state the prohibitions in respect of dividends that earlier sections of the same chapter had already laid on domestic corporations. It meant to ordain and establish an offense against our own laws, and not merely to declare that there should be a remedy for an offense against the home laws. "The officers, directors, and stockholders of a foreign stock corporation transacting business in this state, except moneyed and railroad corporations, shall be liable under the provisions of this chapter, in the same manner and to the same extent as the officers, directors and stockholders of a domestic corporation," for the following acts and omissions. They are not to be liable under the laws of their domicile. They are to be "liable under the provisions of this chapter." There is more than the declaration of a rule of comity in aid of foreign liabilities. There is the creation of a new duty and correspondingly of a new right.
This meaning becomes the more obvious when we note the acts and omissions from which liability is to follow. Each subdivision of section 70 extending the application of our statutes to foreign corporations relates back to a like prohibition which some earlier and corresponding section *63 has already laid upon domestic corporations. The first subdivision imposes liability for "the making of unauthorized dividends." This relates back to section 28, which prohibits the payment of dividends out of capital. The second subdivision imposes liability for "unlawful loans to stockholders." This relates back to section 29, which declares such loans illegal when made by domestic corporations. The third subdivision imposes liability for "making false certificates, reports or public notices." This relates back to section 35. The fourth subdivision imposes liability for "an illegal transfer of the stock and property of such corporation, when it is insolvent or its insolvency is imminent." This relates back to section 66. The fifth subdivision imposes liability for "the failure to file an annual report." This relates back to section 34. Each of these subdivisions was intended to impose an original liability, to be enforced in our courts, not as an offense against the laws of another state, but as an offense against our own laws. That conclusion is again confirmed when we consider sections of the Penal Law in pari materia. Section 664 makes it a misdemeanor for directors to pay dividends not earned through surplus profits. Section 667 says that it is no defense that the corporation is a foreign one if it is engaged in business or keeps an office therefor in this state. We do not attempt to determine the effect to be given to these provisions of the Penal Law. We refer to them for the light that they shed on the purpose of the lawmakers. Directors of a foreign corporation transacting business in this state and sued in this state for declaring dividends out of capital, are held, if the statute be valid, for an offense against our laws.
We come, then, to the question of power. On that question the argument has taken a wide range, yet the decision, when confined to the facts of the case at hand, is brought within a narrow compass. As long as a foreign corporation keeps away from this state, it is not for us to say what it may do or not do. But when it comes *64
into this state, and transacts its business here, it must yield obedience to our laws (Sinnott v. Hanan,
We hold, therefore, that directors of a foreign corporation transacting business in this state and subjecting itself to the conditions established by our laws, may be charged with liability if they declare dividends from capital. To whom the right to enforce that liability may *66
be given is, however, another question. We have no doubt that it may be given to creditors who have dealt with the corporation here (Thomas v. Matthiessen,
The order should be reversed, with costs in all courts, and the question certified answered in the affirmative.
WILLARD BARTLETT, Ch. J., HISCOCK, COLLIN, CUDDEBACK, HOGAN and SEABURY, JJ., concur.
Order reversed.