69 N.Y.S. 758 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1901
This cause was tried by the court without a jury, and resulted in a judgment for the plaintiff, from which an appeal is taken: The
action was brought to enforce the liability of a trustee under the provisions of section 30 of the Stock Corporation Law (Laws of 1892, chap, 688), for failure to file án annual report of the Schmalz Cigar Machine Company, of which corporation it is alleged the defendant was a trustee or director. It appeared that the defendant did not file either a report of the company or the statement required by the section referred to to relieve him from liability. The facts of the case are complicated, and many propositions are urged by the defendant in his effort to defeat the plaintiff’s cause- of action. To some of those propositions no reference is necessary. I shall refer only to those which seem to require serious consideration.
It is alleged in the complaint that the indebtedness of the corporation upon which the action is founded arises upon a promissory note, dated March 31, 1890, made by the Schmalz Cigar Machine Company,, payable on or before the 27th day of May, 1894, to the
We are thus brought to the objection that there was no allegation of any original indebtedness of the company either to Schmalz or the plaintiff; that the allegation that the Schmalz Cigar Machine Company became and still is indebted to the plaintiff is but a conclusion of law; that the defendant, if liable, is only liable for the debts of the company, not for its note. I do not think we are
I do not find that any specific objection was taken to the admission of this evidence, but only an objection to the allowance of the note in evidence, and that objection was taken and passed upon before the evidence of the consideration came into the case and was not broad enough to cover the proof of the consideration for which the note was given. Therefore, it must be held that if the allegations of the complaint were insufficient, the defect was fully supplied by proof of the original consideration of the note, namely, money borrowed for and used by the Schmalz Cigar Machine Company.
It is further claimed by the defendant that the complaint was insufficient because it failed to set up that a judgment had been obtained against the corporation and an execution returned unsatisfied thereon. But this objection is unavailing. (Rose v. Chadwick,
It is further urged that the defendant is not liable as a director because the indebtedness of the company was not to be paid within one year from the time at which it was contracted. There is nothing in the statute which gives force to such an objection. ' The corporation was organized under chapter 40 of' the Laws of 1848, and .the liability of the trustees for failure to file the annual report was fixed by section 12. In that section nothing is said about the time the debt should run before maturity or otherwise, but the trustees are made liable for all debts of the company existing at the time of the failure to file a report and for all contracted before the filing of a report. Section 24, which creates a liability on the part of stockholders generally for debts of the company, does contain a provision limiting the time to one year, but it has no application to such a case as this. The law of 1848 was repealed by the codification of the corporation laws in 1890 and 1892. Section 30 of chapter 688, Laws of 1892 (Stock Corporation Law), fixes the liability of directors for failure to file an annual report, and contains no provision, as to time, except that the liability is for all debts of the corporation then existing, and for all contracted before such report is made ■— substantially the same provision as that contained in the act of 1848. It contains, however, the superadded provision that a director may • exonerate himself from liability by filing a certificate in the form and manner therein provided.
It is further objected that the complaint did not allege directly that the corporation was a stock corporation other than a moneyed • corporation, and does not allege in terms that the company was a. stock corporation. There is no force in this objection. The complaint alleges that the company was organized under the General Manufacturing Act of 1848, and sets forth the object for which it was incorporated as stated in its certificate of incorporation. That, is sufficient. ( Union Bank v. Keim, 52 App. Div. 135.) But in addition to this, the defendant shows in his answer that the company is in effect a stock corporation when he alleges that he is the owner of twenty-six shares of the capital stock of the said Schmalz Cigar Machine Company. This is an admission of the fact that the company is a stock corporation.
It was claimed that the company was out of existence at the time the note became due, which was not proved, but if that be true, it vyould not relieve the defendant from liability. The existence of the company at the time the note became due is immaterial. If the company was in existence at the time when the statute required a statement to be filed, and default occurred by a failure to file an annual report for the next year after the creation of the indebtedness, the liability of all the directors then in office _ became fixed. (Lee v. Jacob, 38 App. Div. 531.) Here the indebtedness was created in March, 1890. It appears that not only was no report, filed in January, 1891, but no report was ever filed by the company,, nor did the defendant ever make and file a certificate which would exonerate him from liability. That latter fact is admitted by the answer. It appears by the undisputed evidence that the company was in existence in January, 1891, for the plaintiff testifies that a meeting was held on January twelfth. It does not appear in the record by any direct testimony that the company had ceased to exist when the note became due. Evidence of such fact was excluded on the ground that no such defense was pleaded. A motion was then made to amend the answer by inserting an allegation to the effect that the organization of the company was abandoned at the end of the year 1890, and that the company had exercised no acts, of ownership over property and had done no business from the end of the year 1890. The evidence was properly excluded and the motion to amend the answer was properly denied, the plaintiff’s attorney swearing that he had prepared the case for trial on the answer as served and was not prepared to meet any proof which .such an amendment at this time would or might permit the defendant to offer.
It is also contended by the appellant that the plaintiff being á director of the company could not enforce the statutory liability
There was introduced in evidence on the trial of this cause a judgment roll in an action brought' by this defendant and one Hencke relating to the $20,000 trust fund, of which the plaintiff is the trustee, and by that judgment it was determined that the plaintiff must account to the defendant and others for that trust fund. It was.- an interlocutory judgment in and by which a referee Was appointed to take the account of the plaintiff as trustee, and proof of the amount of shares of stock now held by the defendant and another person, and directing that the plaintiff pay to the defendant or his assigns his proportionate share of the money upon certain conditions. The contention of the defendant seems to be that he should not be required to pay to the plaintiff the amount due upon the note or instrument the basis of the plaintiff’s claim, for the reason that he would be at once entitled to receive back the amount paid after an accounting in his action against the plaintiff, or that he should be allowed to set off or counterclaim against the plaintiff’s demand the amount of his unascertained interest in the trust fund.' But as said before, the judgment in that action is only an interlocutory one, and from all that appears no accounting has been had under it, and there is no proof that the defendant’s share of the trust fund is greater than or was as great as the amount now sought to be collected from him. There is no determination in thatv judgment of the amount of his share in that fund, and if there were it would not result that the defendant should be allowed to set off his share against this -claim, the condition and amount of the fund in the hands of the plaintiff not being known, and it not appearing what other persons are entitled to receive parts of that fund.. The defendant’s contention that he has an offset or counterclaim cannot prevail. (Fera v. Wickham, 135 N. Y. 223.)
Van Brunt, P. J., and Rumsey, J., concurred; McLaughlin, J., dissented.
Judgment affirmed, with costs.