5 N.Y.S. 937 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1889
This is an action on a promissory note bearing date December, 1884, for $2,500, made by the defendant, the Holmes & Wessel Metal Company, payable to the order of Frederick Shonnard, one of the defendants, and indorsed by the defendants Shonnard, Morse, and Wessel, and delivered to the plaintiff. The defenses were ultra vires, failure of or no ■consideration, and non-tender of certain stock for the purchase price of which the note in suit was given. The case was tried before a referee, and upon his report a judgment was entered in favor of the plaintiff, from which this appeal is taken.
In view of the rule of law applicable to the facts developed upon the trial it may be entirely unnecessary to recite many of the facts found by the referee, but it may be best to do so in order that the whole transaction may be ■understandingly set forth. The plaintiff was organized in July, 1869, under the manufacturing act of 1848; the objects of the corporation being the manufacture and sale of sheet and roll brass, wire, and other articles composed wholly or in part of metal. In July, 1881, one Holmes, the president, and •one Edwards, the secretary, of the plaintiff entered into an agreement with the defendants Morse, Shonnard, and Wessel, by which they agreed to organize a new company under the manufacturing act, to be known as the Holmes & Wessel Metal Company, with a capital stock of $100,000, three-fourths thereof to be subscribed and paid for by said Holmes and Edwards, and the remaining one-fourth by the other parties to the agreement. The agreement further provided that the new company should buy from the plaintiff its plant at the price of $50,000. In pursuance of this agreement the parties signed •and acknowledged the certificate incorporating the Holmes & Wessel Metal Company, which certificate was duly filed, and in which were named the said Holmes, Edwards, Shonnard, and Wessel as trustees. On the 20th of July, 1881, a meeting of the plaintiff’s stockholders was had, at which a resolution was adopted authorizing the sale of the plant for $50,000, and also authorizing a sale of all the stock and material owned by the plaintiff at certain prices ■amounting to about $31,000. The further resolution was adopted authorizing the president and secretary to subscribe for 3,000 shares of the capital .stock of the Holmes & Wessel Company, and to pay for the same out of the proceeds of the sale of the plant and materials of the plaintiff company, and to hold the same as trustees, or to transfer the same directly to the plaintiff. The first meeting of the stockholders of the defendant company was held on
Our attention has been called to numerous authorities going to show that the acquirement of this stock was contrary to law, and therefore void. Conceding that the plaintiff corporation was prohibited by its charter from entering into such an arrangement, or dealing in such securities as the stock of the defendant company, the validity of that transaction is not the subject of investigation in this action. If the plaintiff company has violated its charter by this transaction, upon a proper action brought by the people its franchise may be forfeited, the corporation dissolved, and its business wound up. But the action now before the court is not upon any illegal contract which the plaintiff company has made for the purpose of acquiring the stock of the defendant corporation, but is to recover upon a promissory note given in payment of stock the title to which was vested in the plaintiff. That this is the true situation is distinctly held by the court of appeals in the case of Sistare v. Best, 88 N. Y. 527. In that case the plaintiff was employed as a broker to sell certain stock, the title to which the bank of which the defendant was re
Our attention is called to the case of Crocker v. Whitney, 71 N. Y. 161, where it was held that a mortgage given to a national bank to secure future advances was void, and could not be enforced for advances which were subsequently made, because the act under which such banks are incorporated prohibited them from taking a mortgage on real estate except to secure a preexisting indebtedness. In that case there was an attempt to enforce an illegal contract. So the case of Pratt v. Short, 79 N. Y. 437, and all the other cases cited on this point, were cases where an attempt was made to enforce a contract which was illegal. There was no illegality in. the contract of the plaintiff, being the owner of the stock, to sell the same in the manner in which it was proposed to do, and which it attempted to do, by the agreement of December, 1884.
The only other question which it is necessary to consider is the necessity of a tender of the stock in question. The ordinary rule in reference to the payment of promissory notes is that where by the form of the note stock or merchandise is to be delivered, or where collaterals have been deposited for the note, a tender of the collaterals or stock and merchandise at the time of the demand of payment of the note is necessary in order to make a complete default. But in all these cases it would appear that the maker of the note, upon payment, was to be entitled to the collaterals, or to the stock or merchandise, and therefore it is assumed that the payment of the note and the delivery of the consideration thereof are to be simultaneous acts, and one cannot be demanded without a tender of the other. But in the case at bar the stock was to be delivered to a third party not the maker of the note. The-plaintiff therefore could not upon demanding the payment of the note deliver the stock, because it was not to be delivered to the maker, but, as already said, to a third party; and therefore it must have been the intention of the-parties that .after the payment of the note, then the claim to a delivery of the stock should become vested in the third person, and it could not have been the intention in that case that the delivery of the stock and the payment of