7 N.Y.S. 406 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1889
The judgment from which this appeal has been brought, dis-
solved the defendant as a corporation previously formed and existing under the laws of this state. It was organized under chapter 40 of the Laws of 1848 as a manufacturing corporation, and its business was generally that of refining and selling sugar, syrups, and molasses. It was incorporated for this object in February, 1865, and continued to carry on its business until the close of the year 1887. Before that time, but in that year, a plan was formed and
To maintain the action, it was alleged that the defendant did become a party to this association or combination, although it revoked and withdrew the authority of its secretary to subscribe its name to the agreement. This was denied on behalf of the defendant; it being insisted, in support of the denial, that what had taken place was done by the stockholders of the company, as distinguished from’its trustees and the company itself. And the further position has been taken that the action proved to have been had by the stockholders was inoperative in the way of bringing in the defendant as a party to this combination. It is undoubtedly true, as the law was stated to be in Car Co. v. Railu ay Co., 115 U. S. 587, 6 Sup. Ct. Rep. 194, that while the stockholders of corporations, in a general sense, own its property, they “are not the managers of its business, or in the immediate control of its affairs. Ordinarily, they elect the governing body of the corporation, and that body controls its property.” 115 U. S. 597, 6 Sup. Ct. Rep. 199. And that this was the scheme, generally, under which the defendant was incorporated, appears from the act of 1848, and its various amendments.. But it is far from following, from the existence of this general principle, that the defendant did not become a party to this association and agreement. That it intended to become such party appears from the minutes of the meeting of its stockholders held on the 22d of April, 1887; for a resolution was then adopted empowering three persons, who were members of its board of trustees, as “a committee to make arrangements to perfect the said consolidation in behalf of the North River Sugar Refining Company, with full power to act, and to sign all contracts and agreements in the name of the said North River Sugar Refining Company, of whatever name or nature, concerning said consolidation;” and further authorizing the president and secretary of the company “to sign all contracts, agreements, and papers which the above-named committee may make in relation to the said consolidation . ” And it was under this authority that the secretary did subscribe the name of the corporation to the deed or agreement. On the 4th of November, 1887," another meeting of the stockholders of the defendant was held, in which the proceedings of the previous meeting were referred to, and revoking the powers thereby conferred upon the president and secretary, and discharging the committee from further consideration of the subject, and canceling and annulling the preceding resolutions. But that it was designed to decline in this manner to become a party to tlje deed and the association appears not to have been the fact; for a further meeting was held by the stockholders of the company on the 25th of November, 1887, at which it was finally resolved, through
And by this proceeding they practically renounced and abandoned the control which, through its board of trustees, they were to exercise over the management and business of the corporation, and transferred it to the board of' the Sugar Refineries Company, and, with the other associates, thereby completely abolished all power of competition between these companies. That' was an abandonment of the authority vested in this corporation by the statute-for its management and government, and the delegation and transfer of that management and government to a body of men entirely distinct from that designated by the statute for the control and management of the corporation. By these circumstances it ceased to exercise the functions prescribed by law, and placed the corporation under the dominion of an authority unknown to-the statute; and it thereby offended against the provisions of the act by and under which it had been created, and for that reason it is asserted to have become liable to this action for its dissolution. Code Civil Proc. § 1798, subd. 1.
But it is not requisite to place the disposition of the case solely upon the effect to be attributed in this manner to what was shown to have taken place;, for it is to be inferred from the provisions inserted in and made a part of the deed or agreement, and accepted in this manner by the defendant, that this association or combination of the parties engaged in this business was intended to bring about and secure ulterior advantages in the way of advanced profits to the associates themselves, and the persons who had received their certificates of shares of the Sugar-Refineries Company. It has not, it is true, been in words asserted in the deed or agreement that the association was designed to control the sale of sugar, syrups, and molasses throughout the country; neither was it necessary that it should be so stated, as long as that may reasonably be inferred to have been a leading object or inducement to the-creation of the association itself. And the case was so tried as to allow that-inference to be followed. At the close of the evidence given upon the trial, each party applied to the court to dispose of the action by a direction for a. verdict. Neither suggested or claimed that any question of fact had been presented which should be submitted to the jury; and the court, acting upon these applications, directed a verdict in favor of the plaintiff, holding, under the evidence, that an unlawful combination had been entered into by the defendant and these other companies to control the production and sale of sugar in the country. And if that conclusion may be supported, by way of inference, from the provisions contained in the agreement, and the evidence given upon the trial, the direction was right; for the court was at liberty, under these applications, to draw the same inferences from the proofs which the jury would have been justified in drawing if the case had been submitted as a matter of fact to them. Stratford v. Jones, 97 N. Y. 586; Provost v. McEncroe, 102 N. Y. 650, 5 N. E. Rep. 795. Whatever presumptions or inferences, therefore, may be deduced from the evidence were then, and are now, to be adopted, so far as that may be a necessity, for the support of the verdict and judgment. The law does not require that instruments of this description, before they may be declared to be illegal, shall in plain language affirm the intention to be to prevent competition, and control the market, or advance the prices of necessary commodities, as the •articles of sugar, syrups, and molasses clearly are. If it did, it would by that requirement supply a device for evading its wholesome restraints, and rendering its principles utterly nugatory. That has never been exacted. But the courts, as in other cases, are permitted to place themselves in the position of the parties entering into the agreement or arrangement to discover the objects or designs by which they, may have been actuated. Woodruff v. Woodruff, 52 N. Y. 53. It was there
In Stanton v. Allen, 5 Denio, 434, this precise point was presented under the same statute, as it was then a part of the general laws of the state; and it was there held that an association of boat proprietors on the canals, though not including all of them, under an agreement to regulate the price of freight by uniform scales to be fixed by a committee chosen by themselves, and to divide the profits of their business according to the number of boats employed by each, was unlawful; for it was considered that the effect of the association or agreement was to increase prices and prevent competition in the business to which it related. A similar point came before the court in Hooker v. Vandewater, 4 Denio, 349, and the same ruling was made by the court. In Coal Co. v. Coal Co., 68 Pa. St. 173, five coal companies entered into an agreement in this state to divide two coal regions of which they had the control, to appoint a committee to take charge of their interests, which was to decide all questions, and appoint a general agent, through whom the coal mined was to be delivered, each corporation to deliver its proportion at its own cost in the different markets at such time and to such persons as the committee might direct, which was to adjust the prices and rates of freight, and enter into agreements with other companies, and by which the five companies might sell their coal themselves only to the extent of their proportion, and at prices adjusted by the committee, and the agent to suspend shipments by either beyond their proportion, the prices to be averaged and payments made to those in arrear by those in excess, and neither to sell coal otherwise than as agreed upon. And this agreement was held by the court, under the statute already referred to, to be void, and incapable of being carried into effect. It was held to contemplate a business arrangement injurious to the trade and commerce of the state, and for that reason incapable of being legally supported, This case, as well as the others, is direct authority against the legality of the association to which the defendant was made a party. The only substantial difference between the cases is that arising out of the fact that, in those referred to, the parties had expressed by their agreement, what in this case was left to be plainly inferred from it, and from the circumstances attending the consummation of the arrangement, that it was part of the object in view to regulate prices, and in that manner promote the interests of the associates in the sale of their productions. In Arnot v. Pittston, 68 N. Y. 558, a quite similar case was brought before the courts in this state; and the agreement there made, including no other essential attributes than those which by plain inference are attached to the present case, was held, for the reasons already mentioned, to be illegal and void. In the opinion which was then delivered it was said: “That a combination to effect such a purpose is inimical to the interests of the public, and that all contracts designed to effect such an end are contrary to public policy, and therefore illegal, is too well settled by adjudicated cases to be questioned at this day.” Id. 565. And in support of this conclusion the case just mentioned, decided in the state of Pennsylvania, is cited with approval. A like combination between producers and dealers in salt was in the same manner condemned in Salt Co. v. Guthrie, 35 Ohio St. 666. And so it was in Association v. Hock, 14 La. Ann. 168, where an agreement was made between several commercial firms for three months not to sell India cotton bagging without the consent of the majority. The court, in its decision, held that “the agreement between the parties was palpably and unequivocally a combination in restraint of trade, and to enhance the price in the market of an article of primary necessity to cotton planters. ” Id. 169. In Railroad Co. v. Railroad Co., 15 Fed.Rep. 650, the same rule was followed. And so it was in Hilton v. Eckersley, 6 El. & Bl. 47. The action was there' upon a bond to carry into effect a similar arrangement; and it was held by the court to be void, and that the suit could not be sustained. In Transporta
A large class of cases has been cited and relied upon in support of the appeal permitting a limited division or mutual regulation of certain business interests; but they do not seem to be appl.cable to this controversy, for neither of them maintains the validity of a combination or association made between corporations or individuals engaged m the production and sale of necessary articles, through which competition is to be avoided, and the prices of such articles to the consumers are to be advanced. The ease of Match Co. v. Roeber, 35 Hun, 421, affirmed 106 N. Y. 473, 13 N. E. Rep. 419, and all other similar cases, are entirely distinguishable in principle from this controversy. And it was considered so in the decision made in the last case by the court of appeals, where it was said that “combinations betweeen producers to limit production, and to enhance prices, are or may be unlawful, but they stand on a different footing.” 106 N. Y. 483, 13 N. E. Rep. 422. The facts of the case of Railroad Co. v. Railroad Co., 6 H. L. Cas. 113, where the agreement between the different railway companies was maintained, has been given prominence as sustaining the combination now under examination. But, while that case sustained the agreement which was there made for the limited management of different railways, it is not to be followed as an adjudication having controlling weight over this controversy; for it was not understood or intended to be held by the courts in which that case was examined that an association or combination of this description, extending, as it does, from the Atlantic to the Pacific coast, and obviously designed to advance the price of • necessary commodities of life, could be maintained. In fact, the opposite principle was conceded when this case was decided by the court of queen’s bench, 21 Law J. Q. B. 89, for it was there added, in the course of the opin
As the facts have been developed, the association or combination into which the defendant has in this manner entered was created for an unlawful object; and it has, by making itself a party to that association, renounced and abandoned its own duties for the transaction and management of its business, andz placed its interests and affairs under the dictation and control of a board which legally should háve no power over it, and rendered itself liable to the judgment which has been recovered in this action. And the possibilities that other business enterprises in the same pursuit may be set on foot to counteract the effect of this combination will not relieve the defendant from this result. That, in view of the large capital and extended combination already secured, is a very remote probability; for other manufacturers, brought in competition with this combination, could easily be driven from the field of trade by it, and its paramount control still maintained and perpetuated. And the probability that its power would be used in this manner is so decidedly fortified by experience that capital would be reluctantly placed at the risk of loss by other persons, with so formidable a competitor to be encountered. But, if it should be otherwise, the law will not tolerate or excuse the combination.; for the interposition of third persons, in no way connected with it, to counteract its effects, is no excuse or justification for the wrong this combination has in this manner committed. A wrong-doer is never excused from the consequences of his wrong for the reason that other parties, not acting under his direction or authority, may interpose, and in a measure defeat the consequences of the wrong.
Evidence was given upon the trial tending to prove that the property previously used by the defendant in its business was intended to be taken as a public park by the authorities of the city, and thereby to excuse the cessation of its business, and that proceedings for that object had been instituted. But, while those may be the facts, it is still to be inferred from the other evidence upon the trial that its business was not discontinued by reason of the expectation that the property would be appropriated by the city for this object, but that it was done under the power of this combination to discontinue its productive use, and in that manner diminish the manufacture of refined sugar which it had previously carried on, to the extent of from 275,000 to 300,000 pounds of sugar a day. And this view is confirmed by the fact that it was allowed to participate in the 2J per cent, dividend declared for the five months preceding the April mentioned in his evidence by Mr. Searles. The company has been subordinated, and its own individual usefulness as a manufacturing competitor terminated, by the power of this combination; and, as it was voluntarily placed there, to this extent its own franchises have been subverted, and for the time being ended. And it became liable to the judgment which has been recovered against it in the action; for it is a condition on which a corporation is allowed to be created and maintained that it shall exercise and use its franchises for the benefit of the public; and when it voluntarily declines to do that, or places itself in a situation in which that may be prevented
Van Brunt, P. J. For the reasons contained in the written opinion, and •also for those contained in the opinion of Mr. Justice Barrett, who presided at the trial, I am of the opinion that the judgment appealed from should be •affirmed.
Brady, J., concurs.
NOTE.
Monopolies—Contracts in Restraint of Trade. A contract for the purposes •of forming a combination between all the lumber manufacturers at a certain place, limiting the amount produced, and increasing the price, is void, and unenforceable in any part. Lumber Co. v. Hayes, (Cal.) 18 Pac. Rep. 391. See, also, note, Id. So is a contract between two gas companies, each of which is authorized to supply gas throughout the entire city of Chicago, whereby they mutually agree not to compete with each other in the sale of gas within certain districts of the city. Coke Co. v. Coke Co., (I11.) 13 N. E. Rep. 169. But a contract whereby two rival manufacturers agree on a scale of selling prices for their goods, and one discontinues his business and becomes a partner of the other, is not void, where the manufactured goods are not articles of necessity. Dolph v. Machinery Co., 28 Fed. Rep. 553. See, also, note, Id. An elaborate note by Francis Wharton on the question of the illegality of contracts in restraint of business will be found attached to the report of Sharp v. Whiteside, 19 Fed. Rep. 156. See, also, on the same general subject, Telegraph Co. v. Railway Co., 11 Fed. Rep. 1, and note; Carroll v. Giles, (S. C.) 9 S. E. Rep. 422, and cases cited; Fowle v. Park, 9 Sup. Ct. Rep. 658.