32 N.Y.S. 701 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1895
This is an application to continue, pending suit, an injunction which was issued on the. 2Óth day of November, .1894, -and to the restraining, clause- of which strict attention must be paid in order that the precise qties^ tions of fact which -are to be considered may not be confused with other matters which are contained in the papers submitted on the motion..' The restraint contained in the order is:. '“ That- the defendants be and they hereby are enjoined, until the further order of this court, from giving away or.selling for' inadequate or illegal consideration any of the goods, property or capital stock of the Said company (the' Hall Signal Company), and from wasting any part thereof, and. from transferring any of the capital stock of said company now or at any time held by said defendants^ or by any one in their behalf, which stock has been issued for an inadequate or illegal consideration; and the said défendants and each of them' is also enjoined from disposing of' or paying out any of the said corporate funds by way of gratuities, gifts or in any manner than in the ordinary course of transacting
“ That as it has been agreed between the Hall Signal Company and Adoniram J. Wilson that the latter should assign and transfer to said company his entire interest in all the inventions of railroad signaling devices in and for the United States, and in all United States patents granted therefor, and
It is further set forth in the complaint that the only directors present at this time were Hall, Parker and Gilmore; that they did not constitute a quorum of directors, and that if they had done so the votes of at least two would have been necessary; that they caused the resolution to be entered in the minutes of the board of directors of the said Hall Signal Company, under date of December 22, 1893, as if it were a valid act of said corporation, by its board; that the said Wilson paid no consideration for the last-mentioned 3,000 shares of stock, and never received, nor controlled, nor disposed of said stock for his own benefit, but that the entire transaction was a device and pretext to enable the said president, William P. Hall, and the said treasurer, Winfield S. Gilmore, to take and dispose of the stock at their own pleasure, which they did. It is further alleged that on the 4th day of May, 1894, Hall, Parker, Miller and Gilmore, acting as directors, passed a resolution fixing the salary of Hall, as presi
I have gone thus particularly into the averments of the complaint in order that the scope of the inquiry may be limited to those matters which stand on the record as specific accusations of wrongdoing against the various defendants, and for the reason that in actions of this kind general charges are of no consequence whatever, and when grave imputations are made of the character here presented the parties against whom they are made should be called upon to respond only to the specific things alleged against them. Taking up the answers that have been interposed, all of the material charges
Concerning the 270 shares of preferred stock and the 214 shares of the common stock, there can be no doubt that William F. Cochran had a perfect right to buy those shares; the only thing that constituted an apparent wrong in the matter was selling them at a lower price than that which was fixed for them by the corporation, if that restriction actually remained as applicable to those shares at the time they were sold, which is doubtful. This would leave the case merely as one in which Mr. Cochran, or those who sold him the shares, would be liable to the corporation for fifteen dollars a share on the preferred stock and twenty-five dollars a share on the common stock, and there is no allegation whatever of insolvency of Mr. Cochran or the other parties, or that they are not able to pay the full price, or that if a judgment is rendered against him or them in this action for that difference that he or they will not be able to respond to it, and precisely the same thing may be said with reference to the 500 shares of common stock issued to Hau at fifty dollars a share instead of par. If the resolution under
. Concerning the 2,000 shares of the Hall Signal Company issued in the matter of the purchase of the Johnson Signal Company stock, it is not shown who is the holder of those shares, nor where they are, nor in whose possession they are, nor whether they have been sold, and the only relief that' can be awarded as to them would be that the parties who are implicated in the disposition of those 2,000 shares shall account for all moneys or profits which have been received upon them, and shall pay the moneys into the treasury of the Hall Signal Company; but there is no necessity for an injunction with reference to those shares, and,' indeed, there are no facts stated in respect to which restraint can be put upon the holder of a specific share or number of shares; or, in other words,' there is no way of ascertaining as against whom an injunction should issue or against what shares an injunction would be made operative in case one were to issue.
The serious feature of the matter, and the one in respect of which, on the argument of this case, I was strongly impressed by the plaintiffs’ contention, relates to the 3,000 shares of stock issued to Wilson; but an examination of the papers, however, makes it entirely clear that so far at least as the present status of those shares is concerned the charges of fraud which have been urged against the various parties are not made out in such a way as to induce the court to pass upon the question" of fact adversely to the holders of those shares. The plaintiffs have undertaken to present to the court proof of the fraudulent issue of these 3,000 shares of stock, but in their effort to present that proof they have produced and presented evidence directly to the contrary. The history of these 3,000 shares must be borne in mind. All or most of this stock originally
Concerning the payment of unauthorized salary, of course there is no occasion for an injunction. If that salary is really unauthorized, a person receiving it can be compelled to make restitution. .
There are no other matters involved in this motion which require particular consideration. On the whole case I am, therefore, of the opinion that the motion to continue the temporary injunction should be denied and that the injunction be vacated, with ten dollars costs, and upon the ground particularly that, whatever relief the plaintiffs may be entitled to in this action, there is no necessity and no propriety for any restraint of the court upon any of the holders of this stock at the present time nor for its interference with the management of this foreign corporation or of its directors, the stockholders being amply protected by such remedy as may be open to them to compel a restitution from solvent persons of the moneys on an accounting for the value of shares of stock if such shares have been irregularly issued and that value is properly recoverable by the corporation.. If there were allegations or evidence of insolvency or inability of any of the parties inculpaj;ed to make payment of any moneys which may be adjudged to be payable by reason of the matters com
Motion denied.