41 Barb. 541 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1862
This action is brought against the defendants as trustees of the Rochester Iron Works, a corporation organized under the act authorizing the formation of corporations for manufacturing and other purposes, passed 17th February, 1848. The object of the action is to enforce a liability imposed by the twelth section of the act, which provides that every company organized under the provisions of said act shall annually, within twenty days from the first day of J anuary, make a report as prescribed in said section, “and if any of said companies shall fail so to do, all the trustees of the company shall be jointly and severally liable for all the debts of the company then existing, and for all that shall be contracted before such report shall be made.” (Laws of 1848, ch. 40, p. 57, § 12.)
The claim which the plaintiff seeks to recover was assigned to him by Rufus Keeler, and is for services rendered and ex
The defendants insist, however, that the claim which the plaintiff seeks to recover, was an existing debt of the company when the default occurred in 1856, or was contracted during its continuance. If this position were warranted by the evidence, the plaintiff could not recover, inasmuch as the official term of his assignor covered the period of that default, and he was responsible therefor equally with his associates; but I think the position above stated cannot be maintained.
In the first place it is to be observed that the default which happened in January, 1856, ceased on the fourth day of Febuary, in that year, on which day the trustees made and filed a report. (Id. § 12. 17 N. Y. Rep. 458, 466.) The defendants claimed upon the argument that the report referred to was not made by a majority of the trustees, and therefore was a nullity. The printed case does not show whether the report was signed by any one, nor that any point in respect to the want of signatures was raised at the trial. But the case does show that the report was duly verified by the oaths of the president and secretary, the former of whom was required by law to sign it, and that it was filed. In these circumstances, I think it is fairly to be inferred that the original report produced at the trial was properly signed.
It is to be noticed in the next place, that Keeler acted under a resolution of the company, adopted 15th September, 1855, appointing him the general agent and attorney of the company, by the terms of which resolution he was to receive a salary of $1000 a year for his services, besides expenses; the salary to commence 1st September, 1855, but no time was fixed when it was to become due and payable. The services
I do not think the company contracted a debt, within the meaning of the 12th section of the act above referred to, for the salary of Mr. Keeler as their agent, when they adopted the resolution appointing him such agent, nor that they contracted a debt for such services from day to day, or month to month, as they were rendered. The statute speaks of “debts” existing, or contracted, not of liabilities which may ultimately ripen into debts. Keeler was to be paid a price agreed upon, by the year, for his services; and as there was no express stipulation as to the time when he was to be paid, I think he was not entitled to pay, by the terms of the resolution, until the expiration of a year from the time when his salary was to commence. There would therefore have been no “ debt” against the company, on account of his salary, until he had rendered a year’s services, but for the modification of the contract in July, 1856, terminating the employment by mutual consent, and allowing him compensation for the eight months’ services theretofore rendered, at the rate of $1000 a year. (12 John. 165. 13 id. 53. 17 New York Rep. 465.)
I am also inclined to think that the expenses of the agent “incidental to the business” are, by the terms of the resolution under which he acted, put upon the same footing as his compensation for services, in respect to the time when they could be considered a debt against the company; but however that may be, it is clear that on the 4th day of February, 1856, the company was indebted only for such expenses as the agent had paid or incurred previously to that time. The amount of his expenses at that date does not distinctly appear, but the defendants’ counsel estimated it on the argument at 25/60 of the expenses of the trip to Europe, or $505.28. Assuming the estimate to be correct, the remainder of the claim, amounting to $1294.72, was not a debt against the company until after the 4th of February, 1856. Assuming also the correctness of the defendants’ position, that the payment of $1000 should be applied first to that portion of the claim not affected by the default of the plaintiff’s assignor, a point which in the view I take of the case it is not necessary to decide, and upon which I do not express an opinion, there would still remain a balance which the plaintiff was entitled to recover.
I am of the opinion that the1 other grounds upon which the defendants moved for a nonsuit are also untenable, and as it is xinderstood that the judge at the circuit so regarded them, I have not deemed it necessary to state the reasons which lead to this conclusion.
If these views are correct, there should be a new trial.
Welles, J. concurred.
• Johnson, J. dissented.
New trial ordered; costs to abide event.
Johnson, J. O. Smith and. Welles, Justices.]