157 N.Y.S. 413 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1916
Lead Opinion
In my opinion the evidence failed to establish liability on the part of these directors who were not members of the executive committee and who are not shown to have had any knowledge of or any hand in preparing the so-called booklet containing the false statements which constitute the basis of this action. They were not members of a syndicate of promoters seeking to sell stock for their individual benefit as were the defendants in Downey v. Finucane (205 N. Y. 251) and Lehman-Charley v. Bartlett (202 id. 524), but simply directors of a corporation which employed an agent to sell stock for the benefit of the corporation. ■ What interest such directors had in the corporation or to what extent they would be benefited by its successful flotation does not appear. As to these directors the rule is applicable which is clearly stated in Arthur v. Griswold (55 N. Y. 400) and Rives v. Bartlett (215 id. 33), and recognized in Downey v. Finucane (supra).
In Rives v. Bartlett this court (156 App. Div. 552) applied the Finucane case to a state of facts which upon the record much resembled the facts shown by the present record. The Court of Appeals said: “The doctrine of the Finucane case has no application to the facts of this case. In that case the defendants were held liable for the acts of Fenn, not on the ground
In my opinion this exactly expresses the position of the defendants who were directors of the company but not members of the executive committee, and, therefore, as to these defendants the judgment should be reversed, with costs, and the complaint dismissed, with costs, and in other respects modified in accordance with the opinion of Mr. Justice Page, and, as so modified, affirmed, with costs against the remaining defendants.
Clarke, P. J., and Smith, J., concurred; Page and Dowling, JJ., dissented.
Dissenting Opinion
This is an action for rescission of a sale of stock upon the ground that the purchase thereof was induced by fraudulent representations. The Blaugas Company of Cuba was incorporated in November, 1911, under the laws of Delaware for the purpose of the manufacture and sale in the island of Cuba and other West India islands of a liquefied illuminating and fuel gas known as “Blaugas.” The individual defendants were the directors and officers of the company at all the times hereinafter mentioned. The board of directors met for organization on December 12, 1911, and appointed an executive committee of five of their members, to which were given by the by-laws all the powers of the board of directors between meetings. The directors did not meet until February, 1912, when they elected a chairman and transacted no other business. No other meeting was held until November, 1912, when the newly-elected directors met for organization and the election of officers, and the same executive committee was continued. It would thus appear that all the powers of the directors had, to all intents and purposes, been delegated to the executive committee. This committee prepared and issued for the purpose of securing purchasers for its stock a booklet or prospectus containing a full list of the officers and directors of the com-
No such contention was made in the trial court and tender on February 27, 1913, was specifically admitted at the trial.
It is contended that the plaintiff’s right to rescind has become barred by its own laches in failing to assert such right within a reasonable time.
As a basis for this it is claimed that a letter addressed to the stockholders was sent to plaintiff, which stated that a delegation of the board of directors had just returned from a visit to Cuba, where they 'had selected a site for the first plant at Matanzas, and that they had abandoned by advice of counsel the option they held on a Havana water front property. Even if this letter had been received by the plaintiff on or about the day of its date (September 12,1912) a delay of five months before the tender of the stock was made I do not think would constitute laches. The learned trial justice refused to find that this letter was received by the plaintiff. In this he is justified by the evidence. Plaintiff denied that he had ever received or seen the letter, and stated that he did not learn of the falsity of the representation until December, 1912, and within two weeks thereafter he retained his present attorney to advise
The judgment against the company was amply justified by the evidence. Nor can any of the directors escape liability. The false representations were set forth in booklet and prospectus, containing their names and issued not alone on their apparent authority, but by the executive commitee, which they had duly authorized to act for them. Therefore, this is not the case of a director being held liable for the fraudulent act of a codirector (Rives v. Bartlett, 215 N. Y. 33), but rather the holding of those embarked in a common enterprise who are held liable for the fraudulent act of their authorized agents. (Downey v. Finucane, 205 N. Y. 251; Lehman-Charley v. Bartlett, 135 App. Div. 674; affd., 202 N. Y. 524; Mack v. Latta, 178 id. 525.) Through an evident inadvertence, as our attention was not called to the fact by any of the counsel, the decision does not recite the answer of the defendant Blaugas Company of Cuba, and the name of that defendant is omitted from the sixth and ninth findings of fact, and the 2d subdivision of the fourth conclusion of law. These deficiencies of the findings of fact should be corrected by amendment. The fourth conclusion of law should be amended by inserting in subdivision 2 between the words “defendants” and “Louis H. Holloway ” the words “ Blaugas Company of Cuba” and by striking from said 2d subdivision all the words commencing “ with an extra allowance ” to the end of the said subdivision, and inserting a 3d subdivision as follows:
(3) That the plaintiff have execution on said judgment against all of said defendants, the sheriff to be required to satisfy the said judgment first out of personal and real property of the defendant corporation, and if sufficient property of the defendant corporation cannot be found to satisfy the same, then out of the property of the defendants Holloway, Dunn, Sulzberger, Neely, Cushman, Coe, Grimes, O’Neill, Strauss and Buchman.
The present 3d subdivision should be number (4). The judgment should be modified to conform to the amended conclusions of law, and contain a further provision that the amount of the recovery therein, to wit, $14,192.47, shall have
DowLing, J., concurred.
As to directors who were not members of the executive committee, judgment reversed, with costs, and complaint dismissed, with costs; in other respects, judgment modified in accordance with opinion of. Mr. Justice Page, and, as so modified, affirmed, with costs as against the remaining defendants.