139 N.Y.S. 236 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1912
Lead Opinion
This is a representative action brought by a stockholder of the Crandall & Godley Company to compel certain of the defendants to pay back to the corporation (1) moneys fraudulently paid out to themselves and others under the guise of additional salaries; (2) money paid out as salaries illegally voted to themselves as directors, under resolution of November 14, 1906, under the guise of increased salaries; (3) the value of'
In 1871 a copartnership was formed between the late William Ziegler, Allan B. Crandall and William D. Godley under the name of Crandall & Co. to carry on in New York and elsewhere the business of dealing in grocers’, confectioners’ and bakers’ fixtures, utensils and supplies, each of said parties having a one-third interest. In 1878 Ziegler sold his one-third interest to Crandall and the business was continued as Crandall & Co. In 1887 Crandall died. Godley and Lyman F. Pettee formed a copartnership and continued the business under the name of Crandall & Godley, Pettee having purchased the interest of Crandall; Godley had a two-thirds and Pettee a one-third interest therein. Said copartnership continued until 1892, at which time they were equal partners, when they obtained the incorporation of the Crandall & Godley Company under the laws of the State of New Jersey. The capital stock was $300,000, $200,000 common and $100,000 eight per cent cumulative preferred stock. Godley and Pettee each received one-half of each issue of preferred and common stock, except forty shares held by one Isaac Karlsruher. Godley was elected president, with a salary of $5,000 per year, and Pettee vice-president and treasurer at a salary of $3,000 a year, which salary, pursuant to agreement, was equalized by Godley giving to Pettee the sum of $1,000 per annum, making the salary received by each $4,000.
The Crandall & Godley Company of New Jersey purchased the good will of Crandall & Godley, the copartnership, for the sum of $132,354.54, which amount was thereafter carried upon the books of the defendant Crandall & Godley Company as “ franchise account ” until the time of the discontinuance of its business.
In 1895 the defendant the Crandall & Godley Company was organized under the laws of New York by Godley, Pettee and Karlsruher, who subscribed for the entire capital stock, Godley 1,410 shares, Pettee 1,380 shares, and Karlsruher 40 shares. Upon its organization the new company took over the assets and good will of the Crandall & Godley Company of New
Godley became ill and incapacitated during the month of May, 1895, and the remaining members of the board of directors, Pettee and Karlsruher, on August 13, 1895, adopted a resolution discontinuing the salary of Godley as president, and voting the same to Pettee, who was then the vice-president, thereby increasing his salary as such for so long as he performed the duties of the president. At a stockholders’ meeting held on the 2d of March,. 1896, Pettee, Karlsruher and Eugene Cookingham were elected directors.
During fhe existence of the New Jersey corporation Godley and Pettee entered into an agreement with certain of the company’s employees whereby they each sold an equal amount, 255 shares, of their common stock, agreeing that the purchasers pay for the same out of the dividends alone which might be declared upon the same, together with six per cent interest upon .the unpaid balance of the purchase price until said stock was fully paid.for; while the purchase price remained unpaid Godley and Pettee respectively continued to hold the same as collateral security with the power to vote the same.
Upon the organization of the New York company, the said' purchasers received an equal number of shares in said company, which shares were held by said Godley and, Pettee under the same form of agreement. Godley died in December, 1897, leaving the plaintiff, his widow, and a last will and testament making her his sole legatee and executrix and she is now the owner of all his stock, 615 shares of the common and 430 shares of preferred stock.
The directors of the New Jersey corporation declared a dividend of fifteen per cent on the common stock for the year 1892; also a dividend of five per cent for the year 1893, but the holders of the common stock each received an amount which in the aggregate was equal to the sum of fifteen per cent upon the common capital stock. They did not declare a dividend
On the 8th of July, 1896, the board of directors of the New York company, consisting of Pettee, Karlsruher and Cooking-ham, adopted the following resolution: “In order to show due appreciation to some of our best and trusted employees, be it Resolved, that we make to those an increase in salary for the year 1895, an amount that we can agree upon to those we deem worthy according to their ability and service to this company, as has been the custom heretofore. ” The said directors declared <¡ a dividend of six per cent for the year 1895 and, claiming as their authority the above resolution, an additional amount equal to nine per cent per annum to themselves and all other-holders of the common -stock save and except Godley. The court found specifically: “That the action of the board of directors under the resolution of July 8, 1896, was the first in either the New Jersey or New York companies where the holders of the common stock did not all share' equally in the annual distribution made to them by the directors of the company.”
On the 1st of March, 1897, the said directors adopted the following resolution: “Be it Resolved, that in order to show due appreciation to some of our best and trusted employees, we make to those an annual increase in salary to continue until revoked by the Board of Directors.” Claiming authority under said resolution, the directors, at the direction or under control of Pettee, from the year 1895 to the year 1905, inclusive, paid to themselves and all holders of common stock,
The defendant Lyman F. Pettee planned and schemed and declared his purpose to and did exclude William D. Godley and this plaintiff from all participation in the profits in excess of six per cent dividends on the common stock except in the year 1907, when sevén per cent thereon was paid.
The board of directors, consisting of Lyman F. Pettee, Charles Finckenstadt and William Pfeiffer, at a meeting held November 14, 1906, voted to themselves increases in. salary for i the year 1906 as follows: Pettee, as president, from $5,200 to $15,000;*Pfeiffer, as vice-president, from $2,590 to$4,500; Finckenstadt, as secretary, from $2,600 to $5,000; and increased the salary of William 0. Pettee, a son of Lyman F., as treasurer, from $1,200 to $3,000;'and in and by said resolution directed that the payment of the increased salaries continue until further action of the board of directors. Pursuant thereto the directors paid to themselves and to the said William 0. Pettee said salaries as thus increased for the years 1906, 1907 and
1908, Said resolution was by its terms retroactive in so far as it voted salaries for the year 1906. After the adoption of said resolution said directors and officers discontinued the payment to themselves of the aforesaid additional and annual payments of nine per cent on their respective holdings of common stock.
Lyman F. Pettee, after the Crandall & Godley Company
On January 7, 1909, the premises of the Crandall & Godley Company were substantially destroyed by fire. At that time the board of directors consisted of Lyman F. Pettee, holding 1,348 shares, William Pfeiffer, holding 225 shares,-and Charles Finckenstadt, holding 1 share, making in all 1,574, a majority of the capital stock. The directors made no effort to continue the business, although they could have done so, and there was no good reason why they should have abandoned the old corporation. On the 31st of December, 1908, the Crandall & Godley Company had (exclusive of good will and franchise account carried on the books at $132,000) assets of $534,439.13, which
The defendants William Pfeiffer and William C. Pettee shortly after the fire, and on the 14th day of January, 1909, organized a new corporation, the Orandall-Pettee Company, for the purpose of continuing, and they did so continue, the business of the Crandall & Gfodley Company, under the name of and by the defendant Orandall-Pettee Company, and the defendant Finckenstadt joined them in the capacity of credit man. The defendants Lyman F. Pettee and Finckenstadt continued as officers and directors of the Crandall & Gfodley Company after the fire and the defendant William C. Pettee continued "as treasurer of the Crandall & Gfodley Company and at the same time as president and general manager of the Orandall-Pettee Company; Pfeiffer on the 13th of January* 1909, resigned as a director of the Crandall & Gfodley Company and became one of the incorporators of the Orandall-Pettee Company; Finckenstadt was- elected vice-president of the Crandall & Gfodley Company on the thirteenth of January upon the resignation of Pfeiffer, and upon the organization of the Orandall-Pettee Company entered its employment and continued as vice-president of the Crandall & Gfodley Company. The defendants Lyman F. Pettee and Finckenstadt, as directors of the Crandall & Gfodley Company, permitted the Crandall- . Pettee Company to take over its business and good will. Pettee and • Finckenstadt permitted the Orandall-Pettee Company to hold itself out as successor to the Crandall & Gfodley Company, and use all of its brands, trade names and trade marks, giving it full access to the books of account of the Crandall & Gfodley Company, permitting it to use its horses,
The judgment directs that the executors of Lyman F. Pet-tee pay the Crandall & Godley Company moneys paid out of the funds and treasury of said defendant during the period when he was a director and president, 1, all moneys so paid from December 31, 1895, to January 1, 1909, under the name of “ additional salaries ” to himself and certain officers and directors and employees, holding common stock, amounting to the sum of $207,821.39; 2,'all moneys paid under resolution of November 14, 1906, as salary to himself, Finckenstadt and Pfeiffer,
The basic reason of the corporate disputes which have produced the crop of representative actions, similar to the case at bar, is this: the original members of a joint enterprise or partnership engaged in trade, business or manufacturing, seeing certain real advantages in incorporation — the two most important being (1) a limitation of personal liability for the debts of the business to the amount invested, therein, and (2)
- • These payments were either extra dividends upon stock or Were additional salaries.voted and paid by directors to themselves. 1.. Considering them as'dividends, the only justification alleged for-discrimination among stockholders of the same class of stock is that the New York corporation followed the custom set by the. New Jersey corporation, and that this was a justifiable scheme of profit sharing with stock holding employees. The .court found there was fio .such custom. The basis of- recognizing faithful services is- one- thing. If the board of directors had -recognized length and faithfulness of service by increased sah ary,- no minority stockholder, -in a representative action, would have the right to complain,-for the internal management-of the -.affairs of a corporation is intrusted .to the directors arid officers. But the distribution of the common stock was not made' among
Considered as dividends there can be no justification for such discrimination. (Jones v. Terre Haute & Richmond R. R. Co., 57 N. Y. 196.) But if this be so, and these sums paid to the directors, as well as to all the other stockholders, who were employees of the. company are to be considered as improper and discriminating dividends declared and paid, I do-not think they can be recovered in this action.. It is a representative action. In such an action the plaintiff is asserting the right of the corporation; in such an action the complaint should set forth but two things, first, the cause of action in favor of the corporation, and, second, the facts -which entitle the plaintiff to maintain the action in place of the corporation. (Kavanaugh v. Commonwealth Trust Co., 181 N. Y. 121.) The corporation cannot recover dividends it has paid, if earned, because it did not pay all the stockholders. The stockholder-may have an individual action against the corporation to recover dividends which should have been paid to her (Peckham v. Van Wagenen, 83 N. Y. 40), but this is not that action. She sues not in her own right but. that of the corporation.
2. The appellants strenuously contend that these payments were not dividends but were additional salaries. They point out that they were credited at the end of each year while the regular dividends were declared at ■ a meeting of the board of directors in March of each year for the preceding'year; that they ceased to be paid when an employee died or left the employ of the company. They assert, as the authority for the payment thereof, the resolutions of July 8, 1896, and March 1, 1897, the latter reading: “Be it Resolved, that in order to show due appreciation to some of our best and trusted employees, that we make to those an annual increase in salary, to continue until
And Finckenstadt, a director and the secretary of the corporation, testified: “The resolution * * * to make payments (to our best and trusted employees ’ included Mr. Pettee. He was a. director. * * * Q. Can you state whether it was determined which of your employees, officers and directors came within * * * the class described by the resolution? A. My instructions from Lyman F. Pettee, Q. In other words Mr. Lyman F. Pettee determined these questions ? A. I suppose, with the directors. After I became a director of the company, acting under the resolution of March, 1897, I received the same directions from Mr. Pettee.”
Accepting the claim of the appellants there seems no escape from the conclusion that the defendant directors are accountable for the sums thus paid to directors during their several terms of office. The validity of payments made to themselves by directors has been carefully, considered by this court in the case of Carry. Kimball (153 App. Div. 825), handed down at the present term of the court, and the above proposition is fully supported by the cases there cited. (Butts v. Wood, 37 N. Y. 317; Kelsey v. Sargent, 40 Hun, 150; Copeland v. Johnson Mfg. Co., 47 id. 235; Sage v. Culver, 147 N. Y. 241; Bosworth v. Allen, 168 id. 157; Jacobson v. Brooklyn Lumber Co., 184 id. 152; Miller v. Crown Perfumery Co., 57 Misc. Rep, 383; mod. and affd., 125 App. Div. 881; Davids v. Davids, 135 id. 206; Fitchett v. Murphy, 46 id. 181.)
We do not think, treating these payments as salaries, that the directors are accountable for the sums paid to other employees, not directors, for the reasons stated in Carr v. Kimball (supra).
The appellants claim that there is no finding of the court that the additional salaries so paid by the directors to them
It having been established that these additional salaries were paid by the directors to themselves, the burden was upon them of justifying the payment by estabfishing the value of their services. We are satisfied that a recovery of these amounts is right and that Pettee should- be charged with $65,943 paid to himself, $3,600 paid to Washburn while he was a director, $5,400 paid to Oookingham while he was a director, and $2,700 paid to Finckenstadt while he was a director, making in all the sum of $77,643; and that Finckenstadt should be charged with $2,700 paid to himself, $1,350 paid to Washburn and $17,955 paid to Pettee during his directorate, amounting in all to $22,005. No additional salaries to directors appear to have been- paid during the period that Pfeiffer was a director.
3. On the 14th of November, 1906, the board of directors, consisting of Pettee, Finckenstadt and Pfeiffer, voted to themselves increases of salary for the year 1906 as follows: Pettee, as president, from $5,200 to $15,000; Pfeiffer, as vice-president, from $2,590 to $4,500; and Finckenstadt, as secretary, from $2,600 to $5,000; and these salaries were continued to 1909. After said resolution none of the said- directors received anything on account of so-called “additional salaries” upon the basis of nine per cent of their stock holdings.
These increases come precisely within the condemnation of the cases heretofore alluded to prohibiting directors from voting salaries to themselves as officers. The court refused to find, at the request of the appellants, that the salaries paid pursuant to the resolution of November 14, 1906, were reasonable and proper sums to be paid for the services rendered therefor, and it did find that the services rendered by said officers were substantially the same after the passage of said resolution as prior
This latter conclusion we think erroneous. The evidence established that the services rendered by such officers were reasonably worth to the corporation at least what had theretofore been paid to them as regular salaries, and they should have been allowed these amounts.
4. When we come to consider the transactions connected with the discontinuance of the business of the Crandall & Godley Company, and the formation of the Orandall-Pettee Company, it would seem to present a case of consummation of the long-cherished design to get rid of the Godley interests, in which the Pettee interests took advantage of the fortuitous circumstance of the fire to “freeze” Mrs. Godley out and to turn the whole business of this long-existing and successful concern .over to a new corporation formed by practically the same interests with 1 the single exception of the plaintiff. The business was a going concern; its good will, when formed, was valued at $132,000 and so carried on its books; it had been prosperous; it was completely insured; the new company went right on with all the existing paraphernalia and plant which had not been wiped out by the fire — the old customers, the old trade marks, the old horses and wagons, with the old employees ■— every thing was continued with the exception of a name and the extermination of the Godley interest. The Crandall &c Godley Company has not been dissolved. It still exists as a legal entity. But it has practically ceased to exist as a business concern. Its -capital has been reduced to a nominal sum. This condition was brought about deliberately by its directors. In People v. Ballard (134 N. Y. 269, 296) Judge Vann said: “All. the authorities in this State are uniform in holding that the trustees of a corporation cannot so dispose of its property as to virtually end its existence and prevent it from carrying on the business for
The tangible property of the Crandall & Godley Company could not have been disposed of by its directors and appropriated by the Crandall-Pettee Company without an accounting therefor. The good will was property. It is an asset of a copartnership which on dissolution must be sold and accounted for. (Slater v. Slater, 78 App. Div. 449; 175 N. Y. 143; Matter of Silkman, 121 App. Div. 202; affd., 190 N. Y. 560.) It is an assignable asset of a bankrupt copartnership, which passes to the trustee in bankruptcy and upon a sale by the trustee passes to the purchaser. (Freeman v. Freeman, 86 App. Div. 110.)
In White Corbin & Co. v. Jones (79 App. Div. 373), an action upon a stockholder’s liability on the claim that the property which made up the assets of the corporation had been knowingly overvalued and that the capital stock had not been fully paid up, it was held that the good will of two firms whose property had become vested in the corporation, whose name was in no way derived from or suggested either of said firms or any of their members, must be taken into account and estimated as property in the same manner as the machinery and tangible property was appraised.
If these decisions represent the law of the State, it follows, upon the findings of the Special Term, that this good will per
If modern business is to continue to be conducted by these artificial entities known as corporations, which are incapable of doing anything in and of themselves, but must be guided, controlled and governed by directors and managers, the courts, • when appealed to, must see to it that those directors and officers act honestly, straightforwardly and with a regard to the principles of equity which have been so often laid down.
5. The appellants object to the provision of the judgment requiring the payment of the legal fees and expenses paid out in and about the defense of this action and the amount paid as a premium on a bond to discharge a receiver herein. It would seem as if the directors of the company who were responsible for the conditions which required the action should pay such expenses instead of the corporation itself.
The judgment appealed from should be modified as indicated and as modified affirmed, without costs to either party on this appeal. The amounts stated therein will be materially changed and many of the findings will have to be modified. Our conclusions, however, are sufficiently supported by the facts as found and we are of opinion that under the recent amendment of section 1317 of the Code of Civil Procedure (Laws of 1912, chap, 380) an order can be made doing justice to all parties and thereby avoiding the necessity of a new trial, which, in view of the voluminous record, would be unfortunate.
Concurrence Opinion
I concur with Mr. Justice Clarke in his opinion so far as it affects the additional sums of money which the trustees voted to' themselves over and above the regular salaries that had been paid prior to the time that the increases were allowed, but I do not concur in the conclusion to which he arrives in regard to the good will of the Crandall & Godley Company.
After William D. Godley became ill and incapacitated in May, 1895, the entire management and control of the company devolved upon Lyman F. Pettee, who seems to have been the
I, therefore, dissent from the determination to affirm so much of the judgment as in this action imposes upon any of the defendants a liability for what the court finds was the value of the good will of the Crandall & Godley Company.
McLaughlin, J., concurred.
Concurrence Opinion
I concur entirely with Mr. Justice Clarke so far as he goes, but, in my opinion, we should go further and hold the defendants who were directors of the Crandall & Godley Company liable to the company, not only for the moneys fraudulently paid out to themselves under the guise of increased or additional salaries, but also for the moneys paid out in like manner and under the same guise to those favored stockholders who were employees, though not directors, of the corporation.
The basis upon which the directors are held liable at all is that they unlawfully diverted the money of the corporation to themselves and other favored stockholders ostensibly as salaries or compensation for services, but really with a view to dividing up the surplus among themselves and those whom they favored, thus undertaking to “ freeze out” the stockholders with whom they were not friendly. In effect they are found guilty of having paid the moneys of the-corporation to themselves and others without consideration or equivalent flowing to the cor- . poration. This was an unlawful diversion of the funds of the x corporation, and a fraud upon the minority stockholders. The reason why the directors are required to pay back what they illegally received under this scheme is that they were actors in it, and in so acting violated then fiduciary relation to the corporation and its stockholders. I think that they are liable for all that was thus illegally paid out as a result of then wrongful acts. In Latimer v. Veader (20 App. Div. 418) an officer of a bank who had embezzled its funds was held liable not only for what he had stolen himself, but for all that had been stolen
While entertaining, the views above expressed I am not' disposed to insist upon them if by so doing the disposition of the appeal will be delayed. The case is an important one, involving a large amount of money,-and will, I assume, be taken to the Court of Appeals. If so, we should not unnecessarily delay its progress. The case was carefully tried, and it is wholly improbable that any new facts would be developed upon a new trial. The appeal was fully and ably argued, and it is not probable that a reargument would throw any further light upon the questions as to which the members of -this court are divided in opinion. I am, therefore, prepared, in order that the case may be disposed of so far as this court is concerned, to concur in the opinion of my brother Clarke, merely expressing my own opinion as above stated.
Concurrence Opinion
I concur in the views expressed by Mr. Justice Clarke, excepting on one point. I am of opinion that the directors were guilty of a breach of their trust in authorizing the disbursement of moneys of the corporation in the form of salaries or bonuses 'to employees, based solely upon the stock ownership of such employees, by which, in effect, dividends were given to such stockholders in the form of salaries, for the purpose of depriving the plaintiff from participating in dividends. It was shown by the evidence and found by the trial court that such payments, in so far as they purported to be increases of salary or 'bonuses, were not based upon services rendered.
The principle upon which directors a,re accountable to the stockholders óf a corporation is that they OWe to Jhem a trust duty to exercise reasonable care in the management of the property and affairs of the corporation; and on that theory they are, I think, equally accountable for moneys which they negligently and without consideration to the corporation allow to be disbursed to employees, as for funds which they appropriate
I, therefore, vote to modify the judgment by confining the accounting concerning salaries received by the directors, or paid out pursuant to the resolution of November 14, 1906, to the increase of salaries received or paid out under said resolution, and for its affirmance as so modified.
Judgment modified as indicated in opinion of Clarke, J., and as modified affirmed, without costs. Order to be settled on notice.