159 N.Y. 490 | NY | 1899
This action was brought by the plaintiff as a judgment creditor of the Eureka Chemical Company. Its purpose was to set aside two judgments recovered by Margaret A. Townley against it upon claims for salary due to, and money advanced by, Hugh C. Townley which were previously assigned to her by him. The latter was treasurer, general manager, a stockholder and director of the corporation, which was duly organized under the laws of this state.
The action was based upon a statute which provides: "Whenever any incorporated company shall have refused the payment of any of its notes, or other evidences of debt, in specie, or lawful money of the United States, it shall not be lawful for such company, or any of its officers, to assign or transfer any of the property or choses in action of such company, to any officer or stockholder of such company, directly or indirectly for the payment of any debt; and it shall not be lawful to make any transfer or assignment in contemplation of the insolvency of such company, to any person or persons *494 whatever; and every such transfer and assignment to such officer, stockholder or other person, or in trust for them or their benefit, shall be utterly void." (1 R.S. part 1, chap. 18, tit. 4, § 4.)
The plaintiff's claim is that the object of the assignments to Mrs. Townley was to avoid this statute which prevented her husband from securing a preference after the company had refused payment of its notes or other evidences of debt. If we assume that such was their purpose, yet, as the transfer was based upon a good consideration and the title to the claim assigned was absolutely transferred, so that the assignee became the actual owner and entitled to enforce it, does it follow that such a transfer is void under this statute?
The statute in substance declares that when certain conditions exist, it shall not be lawful for a corporation to assign or transfer any of its property to any officer or stockholder for the payment of any debts; that it shall be unlawful to make any transfer in contemplation of the insolvency of the company to any person whatever, and that every such transfer shall be utterly void. It is to be observed that what the statute declares unlawful are transfers by the corporation to its officers or stockholders, or transfers by it in contemplation of insolvency. We find nothing in the statute which prohibits the officers or stockholders of a corporation from transferring to others their own property, or even their claims against the company. It is the property of the corporation alone that is impounded, and not that of its stockholders or officers. Therefore, the transfer under consideration was not forbidden by the statute, and is not within its letter or spirit. As was said by Judge ANDREWS in Throop v.H.L. Co. (
The uncontradicted proof in the record discloses that Mrs. Townley's husband was actually indebted to her for money *495 which she inherited from her father and which she loaned him in an amount largely in excess of the value of the claims assigned, and that among other evidences of his indebtedness she held his note for twenty-five hundred dollars, which was the consideration for such assignments, and was canceled when they were made. The claims assigned amounted to the sum of $2,448.76 only, while the debt that was canceled amounted to more than twenty-five hundred dollars.
The trial court, however, found that these assignments were made and taken for the purpose of enabling the assignee to obtain a judgment and lien upon the property of the corporation, to avoid and evade the statute and the decisions of the courts under it, and to create and obtain an illegal preference over the plaintiff and other creditors of the Eureka Chemical Company. If this finding is to be construed as a finding that the assignments were a mere sham, and not intended to transfer the interest of the assignor in the claim assigned, but to simply place it in the name of his wife to collect it for his own benefit, it may well be that, if justified by the evidence, it was sufficient to sustain the judgment below. Therefore, it becomes necessary to examine the record and ascertain whether there was any evidence to sustain the finding when thus construed.
If there is any such evidence we have been unable to discover it in the record, except as it rests upon the mere fact that the parties to the assignment were husband and wife, and that they knew that the corporation was indebted to others when the assignments were made. The other proof bearing upon that question was plainly to the effect that the transfer was made in good faith for a valuable and sufficient consideration, and for the sole purpose of paying a just debt which was owing by the assignor to the assignee. It also shows that there was no title, interest, advantage or benefit reserved or retained, or intended to be retained, by the assignor, but that the assignments were absolute and unconditional and were intended to and did transfer to her his entire right to the claims thus assigned, and with no intention to evade or circumvent *496 the provisions of the statute. If the assignee became the owner of the demand and was, therefore, entitled to employ the usual remedies for its enforcement, then surely she obtained noillegal preference over the plaintiff or any other creditor. We think the evidence in the record was insufficient to justify that finding of fact.
The only question relating to the merits of this controversy, briefly stated, is whether this statute prohibits an assignment by an officer of such a corporation of any claim he may have against it to secure or pay his bona fide creditors, where the transaction was in good faith, and with the intent of paying or securing a debt which he honestly owed.
Obviously, if the transfer to Mrs. Townley was not in contravention of the statute, the determination of the court below was erroneous, and the judgment should be reversed. After a careful examination of the evidence we have reached the conclusion that the mere relation of husband and wife between the parties and a knowledge that the corporation was indebted to others, were not, in view of the other evidence in the record, sufficient to justify the finding that the parties by their transfer intended to evade or circumvent the provisions of the statute under consideration. (French v. Andrews,
In Varnum v. Hart (
In Throop v. H.L. Co. (
Again in French v. Andrews (
We find nothing in the Throop case, which is relied upon by the plaintiff, at all adverse to the right of an assignee of a debt due from a corporation to one of its officers, and who, by such assignment, becomes its creditor, to pursue the usual and ordinary remedies for the enforcement of his debt against it. When the assignments in this case were made, the relation of debtor and creditor, which existed between the corporation and its officer, was at once terminated. A new relation, however, sprang into immediate existence between the corporation and the officer's assignee, who thereupon became its creditor to the amount of the claim assigned. Assuming, then, that the transfer was in good faith, for a valuable consideration; that the proof was insufficient to establish any intent of the parties to evade or circumvent the statute, it is manifest that the judgment appealed from cannot be sustained. *499
The plaintiff insists that Mrs. Townley, under the assignment to her, acquired no greater rights than her assignee possessed, and, hence, she could not obtain a valid judgment upon her claim. So far as this principle relates to the validity of the debt against the corporation, there is probably no doubt as to the correctness of that contention. If the corporation had any available defense based on an existing counterclaim, or upon the invalidity or non-existence of the demand itself, the assignee could not enforce it against the corporation. To that effect are the authorities cited by the respondent. But no such condition exists here. There is neither pretense nor claim that the corporation was not indebted to her assignor to the amount for which she recovered judgment. That question had been conclusively settled by former judgments between Mrs. Townley and the corporation in actions which were defended by it. While this demand rested in the hands of an officer of the company, the statute forbade its enforcement by him under the conditions then existing. The statute affected the remedy of the officer only, and in no other way affected his right of property in his claim against the corporation. The assignor certainly had a valid claim against it, which he could have enforced but for the fact that he was then an officer of it. Had he died or resigned we perceive no reason why it could not have been enforced by him or his representatives in the same manner as a debt of any other creditor. His inability by action to enforce his claim did not relate to its nature, character or validity, but was personal to the assignor and was because of his official relation to the corporation. While he remamed an officer and retained the title to the claim, the statute and decisions under it denied him the ordinary remedies for its enforcement. But when he transferred his claim to another, so that the office and title ceased to rest in the same person, the statutory restraint upon its enforcement was removed, and it became enforceable against the corporation. If the legislature had intended to impound all claims of its officers against a corporation in their own hands and thus prevent an assignment and consequent action *500
by their assignee, it would have so declared in the statute. It by no means follows that an assignee may not maintain an action because his assignor has no capacity or is forbidden to sue. (McBride v. Farmers' Bank,
The judgment should be reversed and a new trial granted, with costs to abide the event.
All concur, except PARKER, Ch. J., GRAY and HAIGHT, JJ., dissenting.
Judgment reversed, etc.