128 Misc. 413 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1926
The questions here involved concern two separate and distinct claims which have been presented to the receiver, which claims he has disputed in so far as they seek to establish mortgages upon the property of the above-named laundry company. As to each claim the parties interested therein have stipulated certain facts and upon these facts have submitted the controversy to the court for determination.
The first claim to be considered is that of the State Bank of Endicott, which asserts that it holds a mortgage upon the real property of the laundry company, and asks to have said mortgage declared a first lien thereon. The receiver has rejected said claim in so far as it seeks to establish the validity of the mortgage, basing his rejection upon the ground that the giving of said mortgage was never authorized by two-thirds of the stockholders as required by section 16 of the Stock Corporation Law of 1909. It is true that two-thirds of the stockholders did not expressly consent to the giving of the mortgage either in writing or at a meeting duly called for that purpose; neither was there ever filed any certificate showing the giving of such consent, as required by said section.
The certificate of incorporation of the laundry company provided, among other things, for the payment for property “ in cash, stock, bonds, debentures or other securities of the corporation or otherwise.” The corporation was organized in 1920 and at a special meeting of the board of directors thereof held on the 15th day of July, 1920, at which there were present five of the seven
“Resolved, That the Gladding Laundry Company, Inc., borrow of the State Bank of Endicott, the sum of Fifteen Thousand Dollars, ($15,000.00), on first mortgage on the real property of the Corporation situate on the south side of Railroad Street (formerly Union) and that the President and Secretary be and they hereby are authorized and directed to execute the necessary bond and mortgage therefor and are also directed to attach thereto the corporate seal of the said Corporation of the execution thereof.”
The directors present and voting for said resolution were the owners of 231 shares of stock, there being issued and outstanding 395 shares. It thus appears that the directors present and voting at said meeting did not represent two-thirds of the outstanding stock. On the next day a bond and mortgage of said corporation executed by the proper officers was made and delivered to the State Bank of Endicott as security for the payment of the sum of $15,000, and said bank advanced thereupon to said corporation the sum of $15,000 in cash and there is due thereon the sum of $15,000 principal with interest from the 13th day of December, 1924.
It has frequently been held that the provision requiring the consent of stockholders to the mortgaging of corporate property is for the protection of the stockholders against improvident, collusive or other unwise acts of the trustees, the governing body of the corporation, in incumbering the property. (Rochester Savings Bank v. Averell, 96 N. Y. 467; Atlantic Trust Co. v. Crystal Water Co., 72 App. Div. 539; Matter of Wendler Machine Co., 2 id. 16; Greenpoint Sugar Co. v. Whitin, 69 N. Y. 328; Lord v. Yonkers Fuel
It appears that prior to the execution of said mortgage, directors owning 231 shares of the stock issued and outstanding adopted the resolution in favor of said mortgage as above set forth. At the same time they adopted a further resolution providing for the execution of a second mortgage in the sum of $10,000 to Ralph E. Gladding, then general manager of the company, as security for the purchase price of certain personal property and also as security for certain claims which Gladding held against said company. The resolution for the giving of the second mortgage was unanimously adopted by the five directors present, the arrangement being that said mortgage should be subordinate to the mortgage of the State Bank of Endicott. A bond and mortgage was thereupon executed to Gladding for the sum of $10,000, bearing. date the 18th day of April, 1921, recorded in the Broome county clerk’s office April 27, 1921. The said mortgage to Gladding recites that it is given, and accepted subject to the terms and conditions of the said prior mortgage given by said corporation to the State Bank of Endicott to secure the payment of the sum of $15,000. Gladding, at the time of the adoption of said resolution and of the execution of the mortgage to him, was the owner of 112 shares of stock of the company. The number of shares held by him together with the: number of shares held by the five directors who voted for the adoption of the resolution authorizing the mortgages totaled 343 shares of the 395 shares issued and outstanding. It thus appears that the holders of more than two-thirds of the outstanding capital stock of the company
' As to the claim concerning the mortgage held by the Workers Trust Company for $10,000, which was originally issued to Ralph E. Gladding and which was thereafter assigned by said Gladding to Leslie H. Baxter as trustee for Donald C. Morgan, Claude E. Bennett, George H. Nichols, Daniel Fruitiger and "himself individually and thereafter assigned by said Leslie H. Baxter as trustee to said Workers Trust Company, the facts have been sufficiently set forth herein to show the situation surrounding the transaction. The same facts and arguments which apply to establish and uphold the validity of the making of the mortgage of $15,000, held by the State Bank of Endicott, also establish the validity of said mortgage now held by the Workers Trust Company; The same principle of estoppel which precludes any question as to the validity of the first mortgage also applies in favor of the mortgage of the Workers Trust Company and said mortgage should, therefore, be declared to be a valid and subsisting lien, second and subordinate only to the mortgage of $15,000 held by the said State Bank of Endicott.
The receiver in rejecting said claims relied upon the authority of Leffert v. Jackman (227 N. Y. 310). That was an action brought by a general assignee of the corporation for the benefit of creditors against the mortgagee of a corporation to have such mortgage
The receiver also questions the right of the Workers Trust Company to collect said mortgage under and by virtue of its assignment as it holds said mortgage only as collateral security for the payment of certain notes given by said Morgan, Bennett, Nichols, Fruitiger and Baxter, but as all the parties interested in said mortgage are before the court, the rights and interests of the parties entitled to a portion of the mortgage proceeds can be adjusted at the time of the final distribution of the proceeds if the parties are unable to agree among themselves as to the amount payable to each.
The mortgages above referred to are, therefore, held to be valid and subsisting liens in the order of their priority as above set forth.