183 A.D. 77 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1918
The case of this bankrupt corporation presents in aggravated form the evil of permitting capital stock to be issued for “ services.” Notwithstanding the fact that the statute authorizes capital stock to be issued in consideration of labor actually performed for the benefit of the corporation, and despite the seeming liberality recently manifested in interpreting the statute (Morgan v. Bon Bon Co., 222 N. Y. 22), this record exhibits such a palpable attempt to evade the statute as to merit condemnation if the facts can be fairly distinguished from those in the case referred to.
The case comes up on the review of a judgment dismissing the complaint, in an action brought by the trustee in bankruptcy of an insolvent corporation, upon an agreed statement of facts, against a subscriber to the certificate of incorporation, to recover an amount claimed to be due and unpaid upon the defendant’s subscription. The defendant and two others organized' the corporation on September 6, 1912, and were the sole incorporators. The defendant subscribed for seventy shares, Einsetler for seventy shares and Buehler for forty shares, each of the par value of $50, the authorized capital being $10,000. The corporation was organized' and the subscriptions were made pursuant to a
The Stock Corporation Law (Consol. Laws, chap. 59 [Laws of 1909, chap. 61], § 55) provides: “ No corporation shall issue either stock or bonds except for money, labor done or property actually received for the use and lawful purposes of such corporation.” It was, therefore, a violation of law to issue to the defendant the seventy shares of stock before he had performed his alleged services. But it will be at once said, we are not concerned with the validity of the issue of. the stock in this action, but are solely concerned with whether it has been paid for, the action being to recover the amount unpaid. It is plausibly argued that it would be illegal for a corporation to issue its stock for promissory notes, but if the notes were paid, such payment would constitute payment for the stock and discharge the subscription. Therefore, it is said, as the stipulated facts show that the services were rendered, it must be held' that this stock was paid for. This argument'might be difficult to meet had the defendant and his codirectors not violated another well-settled rule of .law, which may be availed of to protect the creditors of this corporation.
The “ services ” rendered in this case, and claimed to
There is nothing necessarily to the contrary in Morgan v. Bon Bon Co. (supra), where the facts were quite different. It is true that in that case the court upheld the payment for stock by the rendition of services pursuant to an agreement made prior to the rendition of the services, but, as pointed out by Chief Judge His cock: “ There was no claim by the appellant to any stock or payment until after his services had been completed,”. whereas here the stock was issued upon the mere promise to render services. In the Morgan case the services rendered were of a bona fide character, for the person to whom the stock was issued was an accountant who was employed to and did lay 'out and put into operation a system of bookkeeping for the corporation, which may have been well worth to the corporation and doubtless would have cost $2,500, which was the par value of the stock issued in payment. Here, as above pointed out, the services were merely the ordinary duties of a director and officer, presumptively rendered without compensation. In the Morgan case the person who received the stock and rendered the services was a stranger to the corporation and had no part in the adoption of the resolution authorizing the agreement, whereas here the defendant violated his fiduciary obligation to the corporation of which he was a director by voting himself compensation and passing upon the value of his own services to the corporation. I do not believe that the Court of Appeals intended even by implication to sanction the legality of any such transaction as herein presented.
It is contended that this action cannot be maintained by the trustee in bankruptcy because he sues in the right of the corporation and that the corporation, having received the supposed benefit of defendant’s services, rendered pursuant to an agreement with it, would be estopped from denying that the services constituted payment of the defendant’s stock subscription. This point is not well taken, for the
The judgment should be reversed and a new trial ordered, with costs to appellant to abide the event.
Clarke, P. J., Smith and Page, JJ., concurred; Laughlin, J., dissented upon Morgan v. Bon Bon Co. (222 N. Y. 22).
Judgment reversed, new trial ordered, costs to appellant to abide event.