26 Barb. 46 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1857
The Eivas-Walker administration assuming the legislative and executive authority of Nicaragua, on the 18th of February, 1856, declared the charter of the Accessory Transit Company annulled, and the company dissolved and abolished, except for purposes thereafter mentioned. They then appointed persons called commissioners, to ascertain the amount due from the company to the state, and to hear the agents of the company, in Nicaragua, “with the privilege to defend the interests of their principals.” It was expressly declared that the company was tó be considered in existence for the purpose of conducting that examination, and for the purpose of being collectively responsible for such sums as might be ascertained to be due to the state, but for no other. The commissioners were to cause all the property of the company to be seized and to be held subject to the ordey of the board’.
The decree thus made can have no effect, except as to the property that might be actually grasped by the power that issued it. Its main object was (on its face) to seize the property of the company. Certainly our courts would not aid in the enforcement of that part of it, except that if the property actually within that state were seized there, and the title there lawfully transferred, the transfer of such property would be sustained here.
There are circumstances peculiar to this case that forbid the interference of our courts, in any measure, which would recognize that decree as valid in the United States. The charter was granted for the purpose of establishing canal and rail r.oad communication by the isthmus of Panama from the Atlantic to the Pacific ocean. This was a matter of national interest to our countiy. Our government accordingly entered into a treaty with Great Britain, agreeing that the persons to be emsployed in making the canal, and their property to be used for that object, should be protected, from the commencement of the canal to its completion, by the governments of the United State and Great Britain, from unjust detention, confiscation, seizure, or any violence whatever. Mr. Vanderbilt, the president of this company, appealed to our government, claiming protection and redress against the decree of the government of Nicaragua. ' If, as is generally understood, (although the papers below do not directly show it,) our government has recognized this claim, our courts also must recognize it; on the same principle upon which they look to our .government alone to ascertain our relations with foreign nations, or the character in which we are to regard them. If our government insists that this decree is a violation of the rights of our citizens, can our courts, even while the matter is in discussion,
If the decree were to be recognized here as entirely binding on the company and its stockholders, it would defeat the plaintiff’s claim. For by the decree, the property of the company is' to be seized and to be held, subject to the order of the board of commissioners appointed under the decree. By that decree, all right to the property is intended to be passed to the commissioners, and they, and not the stockholders, are to have title to it. The plaintiff, as a stockholder, could not, in the courts of Nicaragua, make the claim which he presents here, and cannot therefore succeed here.
Nor is the jn'oposition that a partner in a concern which is abruptly terminated by an act of usurpation, but which may be shortly established, is entitled to a decree winding up the affairs of the concern, clear law. The rule is one of equity, and not of arbitrary law, and is therefore to be molded and applied only as equity may require.
The judgment of the special term should be affirmed with costs.
Clerke, J. concurred.
The court at special term has decided and adjudged, that the decree of the 18th of February, 1856, made by Patricio Bivas, then provisional president of the state of Nicaragua, by which the Accessory Transit Company was declared to be dissolved, was the act of the de facto government of Nicaragua. The company had existed until that time, under and by virtue of a charter granted by the government of that state. It was the creation of that state, and in the absence of any thing in the nature of a compact to the contrary, the state retained the power to revoke at pleasure the franchise it had granted. In the exercise of that power it made the decree referred to, and thereby dissolved it. It was strenuously insisted at the trial that the decree was not the act of the legally instituted gov
This, however, is on the assumption that the plaintiff, as a stockholder, is entitled to a distributive share of the property of the corporation, now that its existence is terminated by dissolution. He is a shareholder, and his rights in virtue of that fact—in the absence of all express provision for them in the charter or elsewhere—depend oh the law applicable generally to stockholders of a dissolved corporation. He must have rights and interests in it to enable him to prosecute this suit; and in the inquiry as to his rights we encounter a difficulty which lies at the foundation of the plaintiff's case, and which singularly enough is not suggested by the answer, and nothing in the case shows that it was urged on the trial below. It seems to me to be fatal to the plaintiff, however, even at this late stage of the case. This corporation was created, had its career, and finally terminated its existence in a foreign country, to wit, nicaragua. When it was dissolved, the consequences of that act to stockholders and creditors, and all interested in it, depended on the law of that state. Of course the rights of the plaintiff herein depend entirely on that law; and he has omitted in his .complaint to plead it. Whether as a former stockholder he has a right to a distributive share of the property, without which he has no standing in court, depends on the law of the country in which the company existed and was dissolved. (Ang. & Ames on
Judgment affirmed.
Mitchell, Clerhe-axA Pecchod/y, Justices.]