61 N.Y. 524 | NY | 1875
In January, 1866, one Harbeck, a stockholder of the Columbian Insurance Company, commenced an action in the Supreme Court against the company, in which he prayed that the company might be dissolved, a receiver of its affairs appointed and an injunction issued, on the ground that it had violated its charter in the declaration and payment of a dividend out of its capital stock. The insurance company appeared in the action, and such proceedings were therein had that, on the twenty-second day of January, a receiver of its property and effects was appointed, and final judgment dissolving the corporation and appointing receivers was entered February 2d 1866. The plaintiffs herein are the successors of those receivers.
Section 39 of article 2, title 4, chapter 8 of the third part of the Revised Statutes, provides that, "whenever any corporation, having banking powers or having the power to make *527 loans, on pledges, or deposits, or authorized by law to make insurances, shall become insolvent or unable to pay its debts, or shall have violated any of the provisions of its act or acts of incorporation, or of any other act binding on such corporation, the Court of Chancery may, by injunction, restrain such corporation and its officers from exercising any of its corporate rights, etc., until such court shall otherwise order." Section 40 provides that, "such injunction may be issued on the application of the attorney-general, in behalf of this State, or of any creditor or stockholder of such corporation, upon bill or petition filed for that purpose and upon due proof of any of the facts in the last section required to authorize the issuing of the same." Section 41 provides that: "Upon such application being made, and in any stage of the proceedings thereupon, the court may appoint one or more receivers to take charge of the property and effects of such corporation and to collect, sue for, and recover the debts and demands that may be due, and the property that may belong to, such corporation." It was under these sections that the plaintiffs claim their appointment as receivers.
The appellant claims that the receivers were not legally appointed, on the ground that the application under section 40 could not be made by a stockholder, but must always be made by the attorney-general, whether the application be on behalf of the State or on behalf of a creditor or stockholder. This is not the proper construction of that section. The attorney-general may make the application on behalf of the State, and any creditor or stockholder may make it on his own behalf without the intervention of the attorney-general. This is made clear by subsequent sections. Section 43 provides that, "if such application be made by a creditor of any corporation whose directors or stockholders are made liable by law for the payment of such debt, etc., such directors or stockholders may be made parties to the bill, etc.," thus recognizing that such application can be made by a creditor. And section 44 is still more significant; that section provides "that if any creditor of a corporation desires to make such *528 directors or stockholders parties to the suit, after a decree therein against the corporation, he may do so on filing a supplemental bill, etc.; and if such decree was rendered in a proceeding instituted by the attorney-general, such creditor may, on his application, be made complainant therein with, or instead of, the attorney-general, etc." And the practice and decisions are in accordance with this view of the law. (Mann v. Pentz, 2 Sandf. Ch., 257; Matter of Franklin Bank, 1 Paige, 86; Hill v. Nautilus Insurance Co., 4 Sandf. Ch., 580; Verplanck v.Mercantile Ins. Co., 1 Edw. Ch., 46; S.C., 2 Paige, 438.) Hence, the Supreme Court had jurisdiction to appoint the receivers; and, having jurisdiction, no question is made that it was regularly exercised. The receivers, when appointed, became at once vested with all the property and effects of the corporation, and were entitled to sue for and recover upon the notes in suit. (Verplanck v. Mercantile Ins. Co., supra; Bank of Com. v.Bank of Buffalo, 6 Paige, 503.)
It is also objected by the appellant, that the Supreme Court had no jurisdiction, in that suit, to dissolve the corporation. It was said by the chancellor, in Verplanck v. Mercantile Ins.Co., and in Bank Com. v. Bank of Buffalo (supra), that the appointment of a receiver and final judgment, under the sections above cited, operated a virtual dissolution of the corporation. But it may well be that the proceedings under those sections do not extinguish the franchises and terminate the existence of the corporation for all purposes. (Folger v. Columbian Ins. Co.,
After the receivers were appointed in this State, and thus became vested with all the property of the corporation, a creditor thereof sued the corporation in the State of Massachusetts, and attached the debt due upon the notes in suit, which attachment proceedings are still pending. The defendant *529 claims that such proceedings are a bar to this action. This claim is not well founded. The Columbian Insurance Company was a domestic corporation, and had in its possession the notes sued on. These notes were payable in this State, and passed into the hands of the receivers; they were property the situs of which was in this State. By the law of this State this property was put into the hands of the receivers for the benefit of all the stockholders and creditors of the company. The appointment of the receivers worked an involuntary transfer of the property to them, and there was an attempt to procure an involuntary transfer in Massachusetts for the benefit of a creditor there. Under such circumstances the first transfer must prevail; and there is no rule of comity or of law by which we are required to give effect to the legal proceedings in Massachusetts. The subsequent attachment of the debt in this State could not have interfered with the rights of the receivers; and it would be carrying the rule of comity to an absurd length, for our courts to give foreign creditors a better position in this respect than they do domestic creditors.
It is well settled that transfers of property in invitum, by operation of law, will generally have effect only in the State where the law which works the transfer has force. But such transfers have, generally, no force upon property outside of the State where they are made; but such property will be administered for the benefit of creditors, and others interested, by the courts of the State where it is found. (Embree v. Hanna, 5 J.R., 101; Holmes v. Remsen, 20 id., 229; Willitts v.Waite,
If the courts of Massachusetts should ultimately hold that defendant is obliged, also, to pay these notes for the benefit of a Massachusetts creditor (Taylor v. Columbian Ins. Co., 14 Allen, 353), there would be a conflict of jurisdiction much to be regretted. But such a consideration should not induce the courts of this State to yield their jurisdiction over property within this State which they have undertaken to administer for the benefit of all the parties interested.
It follows that the judgment must be affirmed with costs.
All concur.
Judgment affirmed.