90 N.Y.S. 691 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1904
The defendant companies are domestic corporations having their principal and only places of business at Rome, Oneida county, H. Y. The Rome Metallic Bedstead Company, which for brevity will be called the Rome Company, was organized in 1895 with a capital stock of 1,000 shares of the par value of $50 each, and its business is the manufacture of iron bedsteads. It has been successful, and at the times of the "transactions in question had a large surplus, which made its stock worth several times its par value. It does not appear that there have been any actual sales of the stock other than those out of which the suit arose. On the 15th day of January, 1903, it purchased of one Dyett, a stockholder and director, 255 shares of its own capital stock and 51 shares of stock in the Manhattan Company for the consideration of $115,000 payable in the promissory notes of the company, indorsed by the remaining directors, including the plaintiff. It is conceded that the Manhattan stock thus purchased was worth $10,200, which would indicate that the company paid about eight times the par value of the capital stock of its own issue purchased by it. Shortly after this transaction the plaintiff became ill and unable to attend to business. He had been a director but was not re-elected at the annual meeting on the 12th of January, 1904. In his absence and without his knowledge, on or about the 9th of September, 1903, the company resold this stock to the Central Company for $63,750, payable in notes secured by the stock as collateral. This is a stockholder’s action to set aside this resale upon the ground that the same was collusive and fraudulent and a waste of the corporate assets, and a diversion thereof to the Central Company in which the defendants Carpenter are alleged to have a controlling interest; and it is alleged that the stock was worth at least $40,000 more than the price at which it was resold. The defendants claim that the resale of the stock was necessary ; that the same was made for its full value and that on purchasing the stock from Dyett the company, with a view to getting rid of him, paid more than it was worth. The plaintiff now resides in the city of Hew York. The transactions all took place in Rome, which, in and of itself, is a material consideration in connection with the convenience of witnesses. (Jacobs v. Davis, 65 App. Div. 144; Thompson v. MacKinnon, 57id. 329 ; Osterhout v. Robe, 39 id. 413.)
It follows, therefore, that the order should be reversed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements, and motion granted, with ten dollars costs.
Van Brunt, P. J., Patterson, O’Brien and Hatch, JJ., concurred.
Order reversed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements, and motion granted, with ten dollars costs.