Lead Opinion
This appeal is from an order of the Appellate Division affirming a Special Term order granting a stay of proceedings in the action pending the furnishing of security pursuant to section 61-b of the General Corporation Law. In granting leave to appeal, the Appellate Division certified the following questions:
“ 1. Is an action by a stockholder against the corporation and its directors to compel the declaration of a dividend upon all of the outstanding stock an action brought in the ‘ right ’ of the corporation within the intent and meaning of Section 61 (b) of the General Corporation Law authorizing the Court to require the plaintiff to give security for the expenses which may be incurred by the corporation in the action?
“ 2. Was the order of Special Term, appealed from herein, properly made? ”
The constitutionality of this section of the General Corporation Law has been upheld in Lapchak v. Baker (
The test of whether an action to compel declaration of dividends is maintained in the interest of the corporation, is whether the object of the lawsuit is to recover upon a chose in action belonging directly to the stockholders, or whether it is to compel the performance of corporate acts which good faith requires the directors to take in order to perform a duty which they owe to the corporation, and through it, to its stockholders. To state the problem in this manner is, in effect, to answer it. - When a dividend has lawfully been declared, the relation of debtor and creditor is created between the corporation and each stockholder for his proportion of the dividend. If the corporation refuses to pay, each stockholder may recover it in his own right in an action against the corporation (Godley v. Crandall & Godley Co.,
Unless a dividend has been declared, upon the other hand, no portion of the assets of the corporation has been set aside for « stockholders, and no right of action inheres in them to be paid any part of the corporation’s funds. It is well settled that “ whether or not dividends shall be paid, and the amount of the dividend at any time, is primarily to be determined by the directors, and there must be bad faith or a clear abuse of discretion on their part to justify a court of equity in interfering; accordingly, unless fraud, bad faith or dishonesty on the part of directors can be shown, their judgment in withholding a dividend from the stockholders will be regarded as conclusive ” (11 Fletcher’s Cyclopedia Corporations [Perm, ed.], § 5325). The New York cases amply sustain the necessity to establish bad faith on the directors’ part (City Bank Farmers Trust Co. v. Hewitt Realty Co.,
Unlike an action at law by stockholders to recover dividends that have been declared, a suit in equity to compel the declaration of dividends is in theory against recalcitrant directors to cause them to perform their duty as officials of the corporation. It has even been held in some cases that directors are indispensable parties (Jones v. Van Heusen Charles Co.,
In the leading case of Hiscock v. Lacy (
The analogies which he draws with other kinds of stockholders’ suits, leave no doubt that in Judge Vann’s mind an action to compel the declaration of dividends is brought in behalf of the corporation, as in the case of actions against directors for waste
The idea is too restricted that derivative actions are limited ,, to such as are brought to compel the directors to pay or restore money to the corporation. A number of specific situations instanced in Judge Vaotst’s opinion in Hiscock v. Lacy (supra) concern other duties to he performed by the directors. In general, it may be said that an action is in the right of the corpora
The situation in this respect is different from that where a contract is involved obligating the corporation to pay dividends periodically at a specified rate. Boardman v. Lake Shore & Michigan Southern Ry. Co. (
The distinction is not between preferred and common stock; it is that punctual payment of the Boardman preferred dividends was guaranteed, and that they could not have been passed if earned without violating the express promise of the corporation to pay them. They were akin to income bonds. In other words, where such dividends have been earned, they are required to be appropriated under the contract with the shareholder to
These two situations should be kept distinctly and separately in mind. It is only by obliterating this distinction that the cases of Swinton v. Bush & Co. (
The Kroese and Stevens cases, like the Swinton case at the Appellate Division, involved situations where the action was likely to be defeated if it were necessary to bring in a majority of the directors, due to their diversity of residence. What is said in the opinions in those cases about the theory of the action, particularly in the Stevens case, was not necessary to the decision. In the Kroese case the opinion by Judge Goodrich for the United States Court of Appeals in the Third Circuit proceeds on the practical basis, saying that “ It would be most unjust if he [the stockholder plaintiff] could not prove the claim for lack of a proper forum ” (pp. 765-766). The opinion further states that “ when it appears that the persons who are charged with management according to their business judgment are not exercising their judgment, but are profiting from participation in the enterprise at the expense of others, then courts do interfere to protect the participants to whom this wrong is being done * * *. In such a case, even though individual directors are joined as parties, they are not called upon to exercise any business direction. The case has passed that point.” (P. 763.) After saying that the judgment of the court is substituted for the honest judgment of the directors, for the reason that the latter is not obtainable, Judge Goodrich points out that it is not necessary to have a formal meeting of the board of directors to carry out the mandate of the court, inasmuch as its decree is substituted for a resolution of the board. “ It follows,” the Third Circuit concluded, “ that directors are not indispensable parties to a lawsuit by a defrauded shareholder to recover dividends in a proper case.” (P. 764.) That is substantially what appears to have been decided by the Appellate Division in Swinton v. Bush & Co. (
It is an oversimplification to treat such an action as this as being by individual stockholders against the corporation to enforce a contract right. This assumption is based on the idea that there is an adversity of interest between the several stockholders and the corporation, that it is in the interest of the corporation to defeat such a cause of action and thereby leave more assets in the corporate treasury, that calling the directors to account for fraud or bad faith in such a matter is a superficial formality and no longer essential as an ingredient in the cause of action, that equitable intervention by the court in the management of the corporate affairs is in such case an outworn legal fiction, to cloak what is actually an action at law by individual stockholders to recover their portions of the corporation’s earnings as a contractual right, and that the classification of such a cause of action with causes of action justifying the intervention of a court of equity on account of violation of trust duties by directors is unreal and should be abandoned. Until now, that has been held to be the basis for entertaining actions to compel the declaration of dividends. (Cf. par. 486, under § 27 of the General Corporation Law, in 1 White on New York Corporations [12th ed.], in which the basis for equitable intervention in corporate affairs is discussed, citing cases such as Kavanaugh v. Kavanaugh Knitting Co.,
Nor is it correct to assume that the interest of the corporation is not involved except adversely to that of the stockholder, nor that possible personal liability on the part of directors is excluded. By what is said in this opinion, it is intended to cast no reflection upon the directors of the respondent corporation herein. It may well be that they are innocent of the charges made against them in this complaint. What is said concerning this subject is merely in order to discuss the general question
The idea that the corporation itself has no interest in such a question except to defeat the claims of the stockholders to additional dividends, does not accord with the facts. A corporation has an interest of its own in being well managed. In this connection, it is significant that in City Bank Farmers
Equitable intervention by the court, in such cases, is not a cloak to cover what is in reality an action at law by the stockholders. This kind of action differs only from other instances of court intervention in that the immediate result is to bring about some distribution of corporate earnings to the stockholders. In other cases of intervention by the courts, the object is likewise to benefit stockholders or creditors through the corporation where the directors have been in some other manner deficient in performing their responsibility. The equitable intervention of the court in this situation, means that the court has to consider the interest of the corporation from every angle, including but not limited to its earnings, surplus, current and fixed assets and liabilities, the nature of the business and probable fluctuations in earnings and demands for new capital, competitive conditions in the industry, and so forth. These factors have to be weighed in the light of the circumstance that the stockholders are presumed to have invested their money with the expectation that they would receive a suitable return if the business prospers, and whether
Actions to compel payment of dividends have been described as “ derivative ” in opinions in courts of this State (Davidoff v. Seidenberg,
The order appealed from should be affirmed, with costs; the questions certified are answered in the affirmative.
Dissenting Opinion
(dissenting). Section 61-b of the General Corporation Law does not, in terms or in spirit, require the posting of security in every action by stockholders that challenges the conduct of directors. Concededly, it lays its burden only upon actions instituted by a shareholder ‘ ‘ in the right ’ ’ of his corporation, and yet the court is now reading into the statute a test which shifts the ground of dispute from the question of whose right is involved to that of whose conduct is attacked.
Section 61-b manifestly does not apply to actions brought by a stockholder to vindicate his personal right. Here it is alleged that the corporation has failed or refused to declare and pay dividends to which its stockholders are entitled. To me, those words plainly charge that the corporation has committed a wrong against the stockholders and, since the action is brought to redress only that wrong, it does not depend upon assertion of the right of the corporation to faithful performance of directoral duties. The plaintiff is entitled to seek — and here is seeking — specific performance of the corporation’s obliga
The nub of this appeal is to divine the meaning of the statutory phrase “ in the right ” of the corporation. In its search for that meaning, the court has adopted an elaborate test: ‘ whether an action to compel declaration of dividends is maintained in the interest of the corporation,” the opinion reads (p. 459), turns upon whether the object of the action is to recover upon a chose in action belonging to the stockholders or whether “ it is to compel the performance of corporate acts which good faith requires the directors to take in order to perform a duty which they owe to the corporation, and, through it, to its stockholders.”
The vice of the test is that it presupposes that every duty owed by corporate directors runs exclusively to the corporation as such and never directly to the stockholders in their personal and individual right. The law is otherwise. This court has recognized a ‘ ‘ relation of the directors to the stockholders ’ ’ and has defined it as “ essentially that of trustee and cestui que trust ” (Kavanaugh v. Kavanaugh Knitting Co.,
In a very real sense, all suits against corporations — which must of necessity act through directors and officers — involve the action of the directors or of officers responsible to the directors. An indictment under the antitrust laws or a suit based
Time may have dimmed Chief Justice Marshall’s pronouncement that a corporate charter is a contract with the state (see Dartmouth Coll. v. Woodward, 4 Wheat. [U. S.] 518), but it has never been doubted that it represents a contract among the shareholders and between them and the corporation. Some of the terms of the contract are expressed, others are implied, but those implied are no less important and enforcible. For instance, early charters were entirely silent on the pre-emptive right of stockholders to subscribe to new issues, but the right was implied as long ago as 1807 in Gray v. Portland Bank (
I can conceive of no more important or generally understood right of the stockholder in a modern corporation, where he is primarily an investor, than that of receiving dividends upon his investment. It is customary to delimit this right by express
In the present case, if the certificate of incorporation declared that dividends were to be paid on common stock when the corporation’s financial situation and other conditions warrant, it would be indisputable that the stockholders had the right to, and the corporation the corresponding duty of, dividend distribution. (See, e.g., Boardman v. Lake Shore & Michigan Southern Ry. Co.,
In a case such as the present, with but one class of stock outstanding, it is easy to slip into the fallacy of regarding the common and homogeneous right of the stockholders as the right of the corporation. To expose the fallacy, however, one need but consider the case in which more than one class of stock has been issued, and the shareholders have disparate and conflicting attitudes toward dividend distribution. Assume, for example, that the corporation’s capital structure consists of a class of
Since one class may urge and another resist a dividend distribution (see, e.g., Koppel v. Middle States Petroleum Corp.,
Nor does the fact that a stockholder may sue at law for a dividend declared mean that he is enforcing the corporation’s right rather than his own when he sues in equity to compel a payment. This is in essence no more than the ordinary distinction between an action for an accounting and one on an account stated. The right of a stockholder to a dividend payment is still personal to him and to his class; it is not the right of the corporation.
In an exceptional case, the failure to pay a dividend may wrong the corporation itself, a wrong which might be redressed through a derivative action. If, for example, such a failure results in the imposition of a penalty upon the corporation — under section 102 of the Internal Bevenue Code — presumably, an action will lie against the directors in the right of the corporation. Such an action, however, would seek payment to the corporation, not by the corporation — precisely the distinction
No one disputes the right of a corporation to sue its directors for breach of their fiduciary duties. And there is ample authority to sustain the proposition that, in cases of waste or mismanagement or other breach of duty owing directly to the corporation, only the corporation — or a stockholder in an action instituted in the right of the corporation — may sue the directors. No separate personal action may be maintained by the individual shareholder, even though he may have suffered damage through the loss in value of his prorata interest in the corporation. (See Niles v. New York Central & H. R. R. R. Co.,
For the very reason that dividend distribution is not the corporation’s right but its duty, the corporation may, in a dividend action, be sued as sole defendant. (See, e.g., Shay v. Metropolitan Life Ins. Co.,
The court, however, in its opinion (pp. 464 — 465), suggests that the rationale for permitting a corporation to be sued as a sole defendant in a dividend action is to prevent delinquent directors from thwarting justice by absenting themselves from the court’s jurisdiction. If that were so, if that reason were valid, it would, of course, hold equally in true stockholders’ derivative actions, but we know that no court has ever sanctioned a suit for waste and mismanagement against the corporation alone.
When I say that there is no corporate “ right” to compel payment of dividends, I do not mean to suggest that a corporation has no financial concern or business interest in that subject. On the contrary, a corporation, viewed as a legal personality, may have a very great concern in a balanced dividend policy. Once the law has breathed life into the artificial corporate being, it becomes an entity bent on self-perpetuation and growth. It takes nourishment from the investing public and its desire for continuance and growth makes it interested in remaining solvent and in maintaining a good financial reputation. However, the corporation’s interest in a sound dividend policy must not be confused with the question before us. Section 61-b requires the posting of security in only those actions brought in the corporation’s “ right ”, not in all those touching its “ interest.”
Furthermore, it seems to me self-evident that there should be a reasonable and consistent relation between the theory of the action and the relief sought. If we adhere scrupulously to the separate entity theory of corporate personality, it is both illogical and ironic to say that an action must be brought “ in the right ” of the corporation in order to deprive the corporation of part of its assets by the payment of a dividend. And we are no better off if we look at the underlying realities of the controversy. Most of the litigated cases arise in closely held corporations, when it is advantageous for the dominant
An action is in the right of a corporation, then, if the plaintiff asserts a right deriving from and through the corporation. Such an action “ belongs primarily to the corporation, the real party in interest ”, and a resulting judgment or settlement “ belongs to it and not the individual stockholder plaintiffs ”. (Clarke v. Greenberg,
Several cases, as the court notes (opinion, pp. 468, 469), decided in this and other jurisdictions, have held that an action to compel the declaration of dividends may be brought in the right of the corporation (see, e.g., Davidoff v. Seidenberg,
The majority intimates that, since suits of this character may be subject to abuse, they fall within the policy of section 61-b. While I do not share the court’s apprehensions on this point, we are not here concerned with the power of the legislature to impose such a limitation on a suit to compel the payment of a dividend if it chooses to do so, but rather with whether it has done so in section 61-b. The statute as enacted does not look at the motives of the stockholder, but at the nature of the right which he asserts. If the stockholder does not proceed in the right of his corporation, as the term is generally understood in the substantive law, it is not the function of the court to extend the limitations of section 61-b to cover all cases in which there may or may not be a possibility of abuse.
Moreover, the legislative history of the section does not lend the slightest support for such an interpretation. The statute was aimed at a particular and well-perceived abuse — the so-called “ strike suit,” brought on behalf of a corporation against its directors or officers by persons who, since their holdings are “ too small to indicate legitimate personal interest in the outcome and accordingly in the bringing of the action,” realize the nuisance value of their suits and hope to be bought off by secret settlements. (Wood, Survey and Report Regarding Stockholders’ Derivative Suits [1944], p. 21; see, also, Public Papers of Governor Dewey [1944], p. 255; Cohen v Beneficial Loan Corp.,
However, since the directors are not threatened with personal liability, no such opportunities or temptations attend, or are characteristic of, a suit to compel the payment of dividends. That such actions were not the evil at which the legislation was aimed, was made clear by Governor Dewey when, in approving the legislation, he declared that it was aimed at “ stockholder suit[s] against corporation directors and officers.” (Public Papers of Governor Dewey, op. cit., p. 255; emphasis supplied.)
I would reverse the order of the Appellate Division and answer both certified questions in the negative.
Notes
. For example, in a proper case, stockholders may obtain direct redress for the directors’ refusal to permit them to inspect the corporation’s books or to vote or to have their stock transferred or to assert pre-emptive rights or to avoid a wrongful increase of stock issued to others which results in impairing their relative positions within the capital structure. (See, e.g., Witherbee v. Bowles,
. It is interesting to note that the same Appellate Division that decided the present case recently described a “ derivative ” suit as one which “ seeks to benefit the corporation by restoring property to it or compensating it for losses suffered.” [Fontheim v. Walker,
. The flat statement in Fletcher’s work on Corporations ([Perm, ed., 1932] vol. 11, § 5326, p. 816) to the effect that the action is “ generally ” derivative is based on dicta in the early New Jersey case (Laurel Springs Land Co. v. Fougeray, supra, 50 N. J. Eq. 756). The fact is, however, that the New Jersey court, twelve years later, unqualifiedly declared that the action is an “ individual ” or class action and is not to be brought in the right of the corporation. (See Stevens V. United States Steel Corp., supra, 68 N. J. Eq. 373; Raynolds v. Diamond Mills Paper Co., supra, 69 N. J. Eq. 299.)
Concurrence Opinion
(concurring for reversal). I concur for reversal, on the ground stated last in Judge Fuld’s able opinion. If we are to read the words of section 61-b “ any action instituted or maintained in the right of any * * * corporation ” in their most literal and sweeping sense, they could include at least some suits brought by stockholders to force payment of dividends. However, the ample history of section 61-b and of the strenuous debates that preceded and followed its enactment, demonstrates that the Legislature was concerned with, and legislating about, suits against directors for money damages for wrongs done by them to their corporations.
Lewis, Ch. J., Conway and Dye, JJ., concur with Van Voorhis, J.; Fuld, J., dissents in an opinion in which Froessel, J., concurs; Desmond, J., dissents in a separate memorandum.
Order affirmed, etc.
