8 N.Y.S. 867 | The Superior Court of the City of New York and Buffalo | 1890
Lead Opinion
The plaintiffs are a corporation formed under the act of of the state for the formation of manufacturing and other kinds of corporations. They contest in this action the validity of a mortgage upon the real estate of the corporation, made to secure the payment of bonds, of some of which the defendants are the holders. The ground taken to impeach the validity is that “the written assent of the stockholders owning at least two-thirds of the capital stock” of the corporation was not given. There was a written assent. The plaintiff’s claim as to this is that 80 shares, represented in the assent, had never been lawfully issued, and that the remaining shares represented were not two-thirds of the capital. The learned judge below, in effect, found that, if the 80 shares were excluded, there were still represented in the assent two-thirds of the capital stock. In this he was correct, under the case of Sugar Co. v. Whitin, 69 N. Y. 339. That case decided that, “for the purposes of this act, * * * the amount actually issued and owned should be regarded as the amount of the capital stock. The design was to confer this power of assent upon those who represented two-thirds of the actual stock. They represented two-thirds of the pecuniary interest and property of the corporation.” The learned counsel for the plaintiff argues that the case cited makes a limitation of the general principle announced, by saying, in reference to what it held to be the amount of the capital stock, or the 2,000 shares, “and, for aught that appears, no more was intended to be issued.” The meaning of this I take to be that an assent to a mortgage made by two-thirds of the then actual capital stock will not be sufficient, if also then there is a definite intention of increasing the actual stock, by future issuing of shares in a manner that will increase the actual stock. The in
There was further objection taken on the ground that40 shares represented in the assent had not been paid for in full, but had been paid for only to the extent of the nominal value of 12 shares. It is held in Wheeler v. Millar, 90 N. Y. 359, that neither the issuing of a certificate for shares, nor payment for the shares, is indispensable to a subscriber being an owner of shares in capital stock. /‘Whatever may be said of a case where no fact is present, as the foundation of an inference that title has passed, except the bare fact of a subscription, it is entirely reasonable that where, in addition, the corporation has explicitly recognized the alleged stockholder as such, and the latter has acted in that capacity, such facts should be deemed sufficient to justify a conclusion of ownership, and make the subscriber a stockholder. ” In the present case, the facts justified the inference made by the judge below, that the persons who claimed in the assent to be the owners of the 40 shares were in fact stockholders and owners of capital stock to that amount. It is not necessary to determine that the 120 shares were or were not legally issued. They were issued to the other stockholders without any consideration received by the corporation. Whether they were legally issued or not, the result in this case would be the same. The findings show that the judge below acted upon this view.
The plaintiff further complains of the issuing of bonds of the company to the defendants, or some of them, upon the consideration of the payment to the company of 75 per cent, of the face of the bonds. The transaction, in itself, is not invalid. If the obligation were given by a natural person, there might be a valid objection that they were void for usury. A corporation cannot avoid its obligation for such a reason. Assuming, however, that such of the defendants as were trustees of the company when they took the bond from the company held such a relation to the company, the company could avoid the transaction, that right to avoid was an equitable right. The transaction was not void, and might be ratified. And if the stockholders ratified expressly or by acquiescence, after knowledge for a sufficient time, the plaintiffs cannot avoid. The finding below, that there was such a ratification or acquiescence by all the stockholders, was supported by direct and circumstantial evidence. The case does not disclose any errors, and the judgment should be affirmed, with costs.
Freedman, ,J., concurs.
Dissenting Opinion
(dissenting.) I am unable to concur with my associates. The plaintiff was authorized by statute to execute a mortgage upon its property to secure existing debts. It has been held that when a bond of a corporation is issued it is a debt, and that a mortgage to secure such a bond is valid; but the bond, as between the obligor and obligee, where such obligee is one of the trustees of the corporation, is only an obligation for the amount paid thereon. When, therefore, the corporation issued to its trustees bonds for