10 A.D.2d 869 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1960
In an action by two stockholders of Douglaston Estates, Inc., a domestic corporation, against a third stockholder as party defendant, the latter appeals from an order, entered at Special Term without a hearing, which inter alla, conditionally discharged the respondent as temporary receiver for the corporation, directed him to file a supplemental account, and authorized him upon proof of compliance to apply for final discharge and cancellation of his bond. The corporation was formed to carry on a building construction program. As of the date of respondent’s appointment as temporary receiver on April 2, 1958, it had constructed one model house which, under a prior contract, dated August 16, 1957, was to be sold by the corporation. This model house was destroyed by fire or explosion on or about July 16, 1958. The principal question presented at the Special Term was whether, as of the date of destruction, the model house was covered by protective insurance either in the name of the corporation or the respondent. It is claimed that such insurance was in existence, in the name of the corporation, on the date of respondent’s appointment, but it was allowed to lapse, without notice to him, for nonpayment of the premiums due thereon. It appears that by the order of his appointment respondent was directed to carry on the business of the corporation in the completion of the sale and delivery of title of the model house, pursuant to the contract of sale, dated August 16, 1957. Order modified hy striking therefrom the third, fourth and fifth ordering paragraphs, and matter remitted to the Special Term to hear and determine the questions of fact and law hereinafter set forth. As so modified, order affirmed, with costs to abide the event. In our opinion, the present papers on appeal do not' adequately supply (except by way of hearsay) the facts requisite for the determination of respondent’s liability, if any there be, for the destruction of the model house. Pending the termination of the litigation, respondent as temporary receiver had no title to the corporation’s property but assumed mere custodial rights thereover, and his appointment did not stay or prevent the corporation from exercising its corporate powers nor deprive the corporation’s officers and directors of any of their powers (Garibaldi v. City of Yonkers, 198 Misc. 1100, affd. 278 App. Div. 571; Cohen v. Sherman, 279 App. Div. 939; Meltzer v. Grazi, 21 Misc 2d 536). However limited the scope of his duties, respondent as temporary receiver was nevertheless as much a fiduciary as is a permanent receiver who is endowed with title to corporate property (Atkins v. Judson, 33 App. Div. 42, 47). Under the circumstances, whether respondent should be held to be immune for failure to carry insurance, in his name as fiduciary, on the model house, is dependent upon many questions of fact, to be resolved at a plenary hearing with sworn witnesses and documented proof, so that the question of law as to whether respondent breached any duty