88 N.Y.S. 954 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1904
Lead Opinion
This action, being at issue by the answers of the various defendants, came on for trial at Special Term, whereupon counsel for the defendants moved to dismiss the complaint upon the ground that it did not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action. The court granted this motion and dismissed the complaint, filing a decision which recited that the complaint was dismissed upon the ground that the complaint did not state any cause of action against these defendants.
The question upon this appeal must be treated as though it were presented upon a demurrer based upon the ground that the complaint did not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action. The complaint is ■ quite voluminous, the judgment asked for being that certain deeds or bills of sale^ transfers and assignments made by and on behalf of the defendant, the Fishkill and Matteawan Equitable Gas Company (the old company) to the Fishkill and Matteawan Gas Company (the new company) be adjudged to be fraudulent and void and be set aside, and that the new company be directed to reassign, reconvey and transfer back to the ■ old company all the property and rights which it acquired from the old company, or from the individual defendants, and that the new company account to the old company for the profits of the said property; that certain bonds issued by the new company in the hands of the defendants be declared null and void, and that the said defendants surrender the same and be directed to deliver them up to be canceled, and that the individual defendants be held liable for the value of the plaintiff’s stock in the old company.
The substantial allegations of the complaint are, that the directors and officers of the Fishkill and Matteawan Equitable Gas Company, organized for manufacturing purposes, in pursuance of a resolution passed at a regular meeting of the stockholders of the corporation by a vote of the stock held by the individual defendants, being all the stock except thirty shares owned by the plaintiff, notwithstanding the protest and objection of the plaintiff, have sold all the property and franchises of the corporation to a new corporation
Under the provisions of section 33 of the Stock Corporation Law (Laws of 1892, chap. 688, added by Laws of 1893, chap. 638, and amd. by Laws of 1901, chap. 130) “ a stock corporation except a railroad corporation * * '* with the consent of two-thirds of its stock, may sell and.convey its property, rights, privileges and franchises, or any interest therein or any part thereof to a domestic corporation engaged in a business of the same general character, or which might be included in the certificate of incorporation of a corporation organizing under any general law of this State for a business of the same general character.” We think that this sale to the new corporation was authorized by this provision of the law, and if the officers of this corporation, in good faith, acting under the authority of more than two-thirds of the stock of the corporation, sold the property and franchises of the old corporation to the new corporation, the plaintiff as a minority stockholder could not complain. But the complaint expressly denies the good faith of the transaction. It alleges that the new corporation was organized and controlled by the officers and directors of the old corporation; that the stock of the new corporation was owned by the officers and directors of the old corporation) and thus the majority of the stockholders of the old corporation sold to themselves as the stockholders of the new corporation all of the property of the old corporation, valued at $250,000, for $66,000.
If these facts are true, and for the purpose of this appeal they must be accepted as true) there can be no question but that the sale was fraudulent, and that the old corporation would have the right
It follows that the judgment appealed from must be reversed and anew trial ordered, with costs to the appellant to abide the event.
McLaughlin and Laughlin, JJ., concurred; Patterson, J., concurred in result; Van Brunt, P. J., dissented.
Dissenting Opinion
I dissent; This action was not, and does not pretend to have been, brought in right of the corporation.
Judgment reversed, new trial ordered, costs to appellant to abide event.