36 How. Pr. 111 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1865
The order was affirmed at general term, and the following opinion delivered:
The statute in relation to the election of trustees or directors of corporations provides that any person or body corporate that may be aggrieved by or may complain of any election, or any proceeding, act or matter in or touching the same, may make application, on notice to those who are to be affected thereby, to the supreme court, to inquire into the cause and matter of complaint; and the court, upon hearing the parties, may establish the election complained of, or order a new election. (1 R. S. 603, marg., § 5.)
The Pioneer Paper Company was one of the parties which instituted the complaint in this case, and set forth in the affidavits all the proceedings relating to the election,
The joinder in the complaint of the trustees declared elected did not affect the rights of the company to institute the proceedings. I do not deem it necessary to determine whether the trustees declared elected could complain or be regarded as aggrieved by proceedings in which they were successful in every particular. The papers disclose the fact that the original stock ledger of this company, and the book of certificates of stock issued, containing merely the stubbs attached originally to the certificates issued, and upon which stubbs were entries of the names of the parties to whom the certificates were issued, the number of shares named in the certificates, and the dates of the certificates, were lost at the time of the election complained of, and could not be produced.' It also appears that after such loss, and just before the election, the company had obtained a new stock ledger upon which the secretary of the company had entered the names of the stockholders and the number of shares to which the stockholders were entitled, and that this book was produced at the election.
The entry in the book in relation to 19S shares of the stock of the company, which originally was issued to S. A. Parks & Co., was that the stock belonged to Coe S. Buchanan and Elisha Comstock. Eighty-five shares of the stock was at the time of the election represented by two certificates issued to S. A. Parks & Co., and 113 shares by certificates issued to Coe S. Buchanan alone, in December, 1859. This certificate was obtained by Buchanan upon a surrender of certificates to S. A. Parks & Co., and the stock was placed in his own name without the consent of Parks.
It did not impair the effect of that part of .the judgment declaring Buchanan and Comstock joint owners of the stock. This adjudication was founded upon the assignment by Parks to Comstock; and as the 85 shares were claimed by the same assignment, such assignment was properly decided by the chairman of the meeting of stockholders to pass the title to one-half of those shares to Comstock, to the same extent as it passed to him the title to one-half of the 113 shares.
The assignment and judgment showed that Buchanan and
Upon the whole case, I am satisfied that there was no error committed in the election, and that the special term properly ordered that Wilson, Elisha Comstock and Marcus W. Comstock were duly elected, and were the trustees of the Pioneer Paper Company, and that its order should be affirmed, with costs.