228 F. 150 | D.N.J. | 1915
The plaintiff sues, in a representative capacity, as a stockholder of the defendant the Securities Corporation, Limited (which will hereafter, for convenience, be referred to as “Securities Corporation”), to set aside and cancel a demand promissory note given by it to the defendant Guanajuato Development Company (which will hereafter be referred to as “Development”) dated September 1, 1911, for $350,634.08; a sale made by Development of the securities pledged as collateral for the payment of the note; an assignment of a claim of Securities Corporation against a corporation known
The note in question was given as evidence of what was considered an indebtedness due from Securities Corporation to Development. The stocks pledged as collateral security for the payment of the note, together wkh an assignment of a claim of Securities Corporation against the Refugio Syndicate, constituted practically all of the assets of Securities Corporation. The debt was of long standing, and the pledged
It would serve no useful purpose here, and would unduly lengthen this opinion, to discuss at length the evidence in respect to the indebtedness. I have carefully examined it, and reached tire conclusion that the Development Company has established the existence of the indebtedness and that it could have been enforced in an action at law. A part of this indebtedness represents moneys loaned by Development to Securities Corporation directly, and moneys of Development used by Securities Corporation for its own purposes. Moneys were also advanced by Development for and used in connection with a project known as the Refugio-Ore Grande Mines matter, and these moneys were charged on Development’s books to Securities Corporation and credited on the latter’s books to Development. The circumstances under which these payments were made were, briefly, as follows:
Securities Corporation had entered into- a contract with the Refugio Syndicate (which, in turn, had secured, by contract, certain rights from another corporation, known as the Ore Grande Mines Company) to-sell certain of the stock of the Ore Grande Mines Company. As a consideration for selling' this stock Securities Corporation was to receive a cash commission on the sales, a large amount of common and preferred stock of the Ore Grande Mines Company, and the cancellation of an indebtedness which Securities Corporation owed to the Refugio Syndicate. Securities Corporation guaranteed to sell $800,000 par value of such stock. The moneys collected on the sales of stock, after deducting the cash commissions, were to be remitted by Securities-
I think it clear that some part of the indebtedness of Securities Corporation to Development, which went to make up the amount of the note in question, represents moneys advanced by Development in the Ore Grande Mines matter in excess of the moneys which Securities Corporation was under obligation to remit to Refugio; but the amount thereof is not entirely clear, and I think that only a careful audit by an expert accountant could definitely fix it. If I were convinced that Development could not legally recover this excess from Securities Corporation, 1 think that the note would have to- be set aside, because, if substantially all of the indebtedness which it purported to evidence was not legally enforceable, then manifestly the giving of the note was unfair, and in law, under the circumstances of this case, fraudulent. It appears satisfactorily that the greater part of the indebtedness represented by the note arose through loans made directly to Securities Corporation and moneys of Development used by Securities Corporation for its own purposes. As to these moneys there can be no doubt of Securities Corporation’s legal obligation to repay them. Nor can there be any doubt of Securities Corporation’s obligation to repay any moneys advanced by the Development Company on the Ore Grande project to the extent of the moneys which Securities Corporation was under an obligation to transmit to Refugio,.for this would be merely the paying of Securities Corporation’s debt at its request. Strictly speaking, any moneys advanced by Development for the Ore Grande project in excess of Securities Corporation’s obligation to Refugio were moneys loaned to Securities Corporation.
Viewed in this light, there could be no doubt of Securities Corporation’s obligation to Development for them, because the former unquestionably had the power to borrow money. But, in view of the existence of the common officers and directors, I propose to treat such excess as if the moneys were advanced by Development to Ore Grande, and the payment thereof was guaranteed or assumed by Securities Corporation. I do this because, as there were common directors and officers, Development must be charged with notice when the moneys which were being advanced by it for Ore Grande exceeded the obligation of Securities Corporation to Refugio, and that advances in excess thereof were not really loans to Securities Corporation, but rather loans to Ore Grande or Refugio. The question then arises whether, as to such excess, if a suit had been instituted by Development against Securities Corporation to recover it, the latter could have successfully ■interposed the defense that the guaranteeing or assuming of such loans
The expressions in the opinion of Mr. Justice Brewer in Eastern, etc., Ass’n v. Williamson, 189 U. S. 129, 23 Sup. Ct. 527, 47 L. Ed. 735, are but a concurrence of the Supreme Court in the statement by the state court of the law of that state. The Supreme Court, however, has, while refusing to maintain any action upon an ultra vires
But this rule, as I interpret the above-cited cases, is applicable only when the corporation setting up the ultra vires contract has itself received and enjoyed the property or money, and not when it has been received and enjoyed by a third party, although the defendant corporation may have been incidentally benefited thereby. In McCormick v. Market Bank, supra, speaking of this rule, Mr. Justice Gray said that an action could not be supported “to recover anything beyond the value of what the defendant has actually received and enjoyed.” In Rankin v. Emigh, supra, recovery was permitted to the extent only of the plaintiffs’ property which had been received and appropriated by the bank, of which the defendant was a representative. In the later Pullman Car Case, recovery was limited to the value of property transferred to and used by the corporation setting up ultra vires. The same applies to Aldrich v. Chemical National Bank, supra.
In February, succeeding the giving of the note, Development sold the securities pledged for its payment in accordance with the terms of the pledge, and later, having acquired a note given by Securities Corporation to a third party and the securities pledged for its payment, sold the latter. It is sought to set aside these sales. Neither the validity of the latter note nor of the pledge of the securities for its payment is questioned. If the former note and the pledge of securities for its payment were valid, clearly'Development had a legal right to-sell as it did. But, because of tire common directors in both companies, the question arises whether, under the rule above stated, the sale was fair and free from fraud ? In determining this question, the fact that the directors owed a duty to Development, as well as Securities. Corporation, must not be lost sight of. They owed a duty to Development to realize upon the assets so pledged whenever, in their sound business judgment, the same was necessary to properly protect it. As directors of Securities Corporation, they owed it a duty to protect it in so far as they could; but they did not owe it any greater duty than if they had constituted an independent board of directors of Securities Corporation. The query at once arises, therefore: What could an independent board of directors have done? The indebtedness having been established, as well as the clear legal right of Development to. collect the same, an independent board of directors of Securities Corporation could have done nothing more than attempt to raise money to pay the indebtedness or secure an extension. ■ The conclusion that they could not have raised money, when the then existing state of the market as respects the stock such as Securities Corporation owned is considered, is quite inevitable. Securities Corporation owed other moneys than those due to Development, and for a period of several months a stockholders’ committee endeavored to secure a loan from Development to pay the other indebtedness, as well as to secure an extension, for the payment of the debt due Development. In this they were unsuccessful.
In my judgment, it is not sufficient proof of bad faith or unfair dealing on the part of these directors to show that they, as directors of Development, had power to extend the time for the payment of the-indebtedness and to postpone the sale of the assets of Securities Corporation, and that they did not do so, because I think that in this respect they owed no greater duty to Securities Corporation than if they had had no connection with it. Although there is some evidence that the assets which were sold had a potential value greatly in excess of the amount of the indebtedness, still it is quite clear that these assets-brought at the sale all that they could be reasonably expected to bring in the then existing market. They were sold with full notice to the stockholders’ committee of Securities Corporation, in accordance with the terms of the pledge and in the way in which stocks and bonds-pledged as collateral security for indebtedness are commonly and usu
The views here expressed regarding the note and the giving of the collateral apply equally to the assignment to Development of the indebtedness due from the Refugio Syndicate to Securities Corporation. This conclusion makes it unnecessary to consider whether the plaintiff has made' sufficient efforts to secure action on the part of the corporation, in whose right he sues, to entitle him to bring this action in a representative capacity.
It follows that the bill must be dismissed.