47 N.Y.S. 84 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1897
, On the 16th day of June, 1891, the defendant became a director in the Life Union, an insurance corporation organized under the laws of the State of New York upon the co-operative or assessment plan. On the twenty-sixth day of December,, in the same year, he became the president of the corporation. A considerable time before that, and in the month of April, 1891, the Life Union had been engaged, through some of its directors, in an effort to obtain' ■control of another insurance company known as the Flour 'City Life Association of Rochester." To that end an agreement had been made for the purchase by the Life Union of the membership ■of the Flour City Association. On the 10th of April, 1891, the trustees of the Life Union passed a resolution. to execute notes to . that corporation -to the amount of $35,000> the proceeds of which, were to be used in the purchase of the Flour City Association, and the notes were to be paid from such portion of the income of the Life Union as might properly be applicable thereto. In accordance -with this resolution, thirty-five, notes of $1,000 each were made by the officers of the Life Union, eleven of which were subscribed for by persons connected with the corporation, and three of them were taken by the defendant. These notes were utterly void, and were •subsequently so-adjudged. (McClure v. Levy, 147 N. Y. 222.)
It appears from the facts shown that at that time the Life Union was in a very solvent condition. As stated by the officers in a circular, signed by this defendant among others, the company had-something over $68,000 in cash and about $38,000 of unpaid losses,, of which a small portion only was due. There seems to have been a large reserve fund, the precise amount of which was not stated,, and assessments unpaid sufficient to meet a large portion, if not all,, of the expenses and just claims against the company, so that, the-members of the company had every reason to believe from the statement that its affairs were in a flourishing condition. Such being the condition of the company, it seems that one Mr. Louis- " P. Levy desired, for his own purposes, to jprocure the control of it,, and for that purpose he made a contract with the defendant, and other members of the board of directors, to the effect substantially that he would pay them the sum of $15,000, in consideration for which they would resign their offices as directors from time-to time, as he might request, and would substitute in their places-other persons to be nominated by him, so that he and his creatures-might have the entire control of the corporation. The money was to be paid by him in installments, the last of which was to-be paid at the time when he obtained the full control of the corporation, and the object of the contract, as stated by the witness, was to deliver to him the absolute control of the Life-Union. This agreement was carried out, and the result was that these trustees transferred to Levy the full control of the corporation, whose interests they were bound to protect, and received from him the amount of the consideration which he had agreed to give them. As might be expected, shortly after this transaction was-completed the affairs of the Life Union ceased to flourish, and within a few months it went into the 'hands of a receiver, Mr. Levy
What, then, was the contract that Law undertook to make? It is very plain. It was one which had no relation whatever to the
The case of The Metropolitan Bank v. Heiron (5 Exch. Div. 319) has been referred to. The question presented in that case does not arise here. In that case Heiron, a director of the Metropolitan Bank, had, by false and fraudulent statements as to the pecuniary position of a debtor of the-bank, induced the bank to accept from the debtor the sum of £50 in satisfaction of a claim which they had against him for £3,800. It was alleged that Heiron received from the debtor a bribe of £250, in consideration of which he made the false representations to the bank by which it was induced to compromise the debt for £50; and the action was brought by the bank to recover from Heiron the sum of £250. The plaintiff was defeated in that action because the Statute of Limitations had run against the claim, and the correctness of that ruling was the only question presented to the court. During the argument and in delivering their opinions the judges made use of some expressions from which it might be inferred that if the Statute of Limitations had not run the action might have been maintained, but the general drift of the opinions of the judges was to the effect, stated by Brett, L. J., that an action at'law might lie on the case for the misrepresentations made by the defendant, if they were fraudulently made, and that the loss which the bank suffered through them would be the measure of damages, but he did not understand how this £250 could be recovered at law on the ground that the defendant received it as a bribe. The court, in the argument, drew the distinction between a sum of money received by a director upon some trust connected with the business of the corporation and a sum of money received for a bribe,' and which never actually became a part of the funds of the company.. But in that case there were grounds upon which a recovery might’ have been sustained, because the act which the defendant had done in pursuance of the bribe was a thing done directly in the line of his duty as a trustee of the corporation, and if it was fraudulently done it might plausibly be said that the corporation could waive the tort committed upon it and claim from him
These considerations require us to hold that the action in the form in which the plaintiff elected to pursue it at the trial cannot be sustained, and the judgment must be reversed and a new trial ordered, with costs to the appellant to" abide the event.
Van Brunt, P. J., Patterson, O’Brien and Parker, JJ., concurred.
Judgment reversed, new trial ordered, costs to appellant to abide event.