170 N.E. 479 | NY | 1930
The plaintiff, a Russian bank, chartered in 1869 by the Imperial Russian Government, has deposit accounts with the defendant, opened in 1911 *27 and 1915, with a balance of $66,749.45 to its credit at the trial.
Following the Soviet revolution of November, 1917, the assets of the bank in Russia were seized by the revolutionary government, and the directors driven into exile. By decrees of the Russian Soviet Republic in 1917, the bank was declared to be merged in the People's or State Bank, its assets were confiscated, its liabilities canceled, and its shares extinguished, and by a later decree, in January, 1920, the People's or State Bank was itself abolished, a banking system having been found to be unnecessary to the new economic life.
The terms of the plaintiff's charter or "statutes" are printed in the record. The governing body was to be a directorate consisting of seven members, of whom three were to form a quorum. One of the directors lost his life in the revolution. The other six made their way to Paris, where they held meetings from time to time, and did such business as they could. All six were alive in October, 1925, when this action was begun. Three have since died, but a quorum, three, survive.
At the time of the revolution the bank had assets of large value outside the territorial limits of the Soviet Republic. The refugee directors have sought and are still seeking to bring these assets together at their present domicile in Paris. Branch banks were in existence in London, Paris, Brussels and Geneva. The assets in these branches, with the exception of those in Geneva, have been paid to the directors, and are held in the name of the bank to be distributed hereafter as justice may require. At times the payments have been voluntary, and at times in obedience to judgments of the courts. In fulfilment of the same policy, the directors have attempted to collect the balance on deposit with the defendant in New York. They requested payment, but the defendant declined to recognize their authority. They presented a check, signed by directors who had been accredited in *28 former years as competent to draw, but the check was dishonored. In this action, which followed, the defendant insists: (1) That the plaintiff corporation has been dissolved and is no longer a juristic person; (2) that if it be a juristic person, its former directors are without authority to speak for it; and (3) that the court, in any event, should decline jurisdiction since a judgment for the plaintiff will leave the defendant unprotected against the danger of conflicting claims. The Trial Term gave judgment in favor of the defendant, and the Appellate Division unanimously affirmed.
(1) We think the plaintiff is not dissolved, but is still a juristic person with capacity to sue.
The decrees of the Soviet Republic nationalizing the Russian banks are not law in the United States, nor recognized as law (Sokoloff v. National City Bank,
In saying this we assume, though we are not required to decide, that the decrees were intended to extinguish the life of the nationalized banks, and not merely to strip them of ownership or usufruct (cf., however, Russian C. I. Bank v. Comptoird'Escompte de Mulhouse, [1925] App. Cas. 112; Banque, etc., v.Goukassow, [1925] App. Cas. 150; Employers' Liability Assur.Corp., Ltd., v. Sedgwick Co., [1927] App. Cas. 95; Wohl, Nationalization of Joint Stock Banking Corporations in Soviet Russia, 75 U. of Penn. L. Rev. 385, 386, 392, 395, with references to decisions in France and Germany). Even so, the jural consequence of dissolution will not follow from what was said unless, though nothing had been said, it would result from what was done. The dissolution of the banks was not "mere *30 ordinary legislation, such as might have been had there been no war" (United States v. Insurance Companies, 22 Wall. [U.S.] 99, 103), but legislation closely interwoven with the overthrow of the old order and the creation of a new one. These and like circumstances have a bearing on the meed of recognition that is due in foreign lands. There is a distinction not to be ignored between the life of a human being and the life of a personaficta, the creature of the State. When a human being dies, his death is equally a fact whether it is brought about legally or illegally, whether he has died of illness in his bed or has been murdered on the highway. The event is not conditioned by the juristic quality of the cause. But in respect of juristic beings, the quality of the cause may determine the event as well. The personality created by law may continue unimpaired until law rather than might shall declare it at an end. Conceivably, the law will declare it at an end when marauders have brought frustration to the purpose for which personality was given. That is another question. What is not to be lost sight of is that even so it is the law and not merely an assassin that must pronounce the words of doom.
Putting aside, then, as irrelevant the fiat of the Soviet Government that the jural consequence shall be death, we are brought to the question whether the law of the Imperial Government of Russia or of the later Provisional Government would have ascribed the consequence of death to the supervening changes irrespective of the fiat. These changes in briefest summary are the loss of the Russian assets, the dispersion of the stockholders, and the exclusion of the directors as well as all subordinate agents from the soil of the old empire.
An answer to that question leads us to the contentious problem of the origin and nature of juristic personality. The theories, broadly speaking, are two, though subject to many variations within the main lines. The one is the concession theory, by which corporate personality is invariably the gift and creature of the State (Holdsworth, *31
History of English Law, vol. 9, p. 48; Kohler, Philosophy of Law, Modern Legal Philosophy Series, p. 68; Dewey, The Historic Background of Corporate Legal Personality, 35 Yale L.J. 655). "Corporate life and form," says Holdsworth (supra), "cannot exist without the permission of the state, express, presumed, or implied." This is the prevailing theory in Anglo-American law, though rifts in its uniformity are visible here and there (cf.United Mine Workers v. Coronado Coal Co.,
The corporation once existing, the burden was on the defendant to overthrow the presumption of continuance and to show that life had ceased (Russian C. I. Bank v. Comptoir d'Escompte deMulhouse, supra; Matter of Huss,
We are not unmindful of the witnesses who testified to an opinion that the plaintiff, as a result of all the changes it had experienced, was no longer a juristic person in the jurisdiction of its domicile. Their opinion, at least in part, was based on the assumption that the Soviet decrees were to be given the effect of law. It is not easy to disentangle what is left when that assumption is withdrawn. Prove, indeed, they did that the law of Imperial Russia would not suffer a bank to carry on the banking business while thus despoiled and crippled. This was far from proving that there would be a lack of corporate capacity to gather in the assets and repair the spoliation. In determining that capacity, we think away the physical impediments to the attainment of the corporate will, and ask, if these could be surmounted, whether the law would interpose new impediments of its own, would hold the struggle vain for want of a living victor to enjoy the tardy triumph. The statute does indeed prescribe that a bank shall be liquidated if it loses a quarter of its capital. The witnesses for the defendant concede that this provision does not execute itself and is unavailing ipso facto to terminate the corporate life. The statute prescribes visitation and control by the Minister of Finance. The witnesses for the defendant do not say that there is any law whereby the death of the Minister is the death of the corporations subject to his scrutiny. The statute prescribes the election of the directors on the expiration of their terms at the annual meeting of the shareholders. The witnesses do not say that the shareholders would be prohibited by anything in the pre-Soviet law from coming together now and choosing a new board. The statute prescribes by implication, or so we may assume, that the *34 directors shall meet at the principal office of the corporation, which in this instance was stated in the charter to be the city of Petrograd. The witnesses for the defendant do not point to any law whereby the directors would be without capacity to meet in Petrograd today if the new regime were overthrown or its vigilance eluded. The sum and substance of their testimony is this and nothing more, that through the exercise of power without authority of law there has been a paralysis of action within the confines of the territory where the power is still dominant. They have yet to show that as a consequence of this paralysis of action the very law that has been flouted multiplies the misfortunes of the victim by taking back also the concession of juristic life. One of the witnesses was asked whether the plaintiff would be without corporate capacity if the revolutionary government were to be destroyed tomorrow and the empire re-established. He answered that capacity would fail because a new statute would be necessary to annul the Soviet decree that had nationalized the banks. Here, as often, interwoven into the statement of opinion even when formally disclaimed, is the notion that the Soviet decrees have the authority of law. Abstract that notion, and the structure falls.
We are told from time to time in textbook and decision that a finding of foreign law is a finding of fact, to be reviewed in subjection to the same restraints that apply to the review of findings of fact generally. True, of course, it is that there is no judicial notice of the law of foreign lands. This does not mean, however, that the mere opinion of a witness will control the judgment of a judge except to the extent that it is a reasonable inference from statute or from precedent or from the implications of a legal concept, such as contract or testament or juristic personality (Eastern Bldg. Loan Assn. v.Williamson,
We find no statute or precedent that points with reasonable clarity to the conclusion that by the law of pre-Soviet Russia there has been an extinguishment of life as well as a suspension of activity. We find nothing in the Russian concept of juristic personality that leads to that conclusion, for there is nothing to show that the concept differs from our own. This being so, the presumption of continuance must tilt the balanced scales. *36
The corporation survives in such a sense and to such a degree that it may still be dealt with as a persona in lands where the decrees of the Soviet Republic are not recognized as law. We think there is no substantial basis in the evidence for an opinion to the contrary (Matter of Case,
(2) The corporation surviving, the question must still be answered whether the former directors have authority to speak for it.
The concept of corporate personality is to be kept distinct in thought from that of authority or agency, though they are easily confused. It is one thing to say that there is still a corporation for whom directors, legally qualified, will be competent to act. It is another thing to say that directors, so qualified, exist.
The defendant insists that at least for two reasons the former directors are not qualified today to represent the plaintiff corporation by suing in its name, even if corporate personality be assumed to have continued. One is that the directors, though lawfully elected, were chosen for terms which have expired, and that there has been no re-election since the Soviet revolution. The other is that meetings should have been held in Petrograd and nowhere else.
Neither objection, in our view, is sufficient to disprove authority.
The witnesses for the defendant state that there is no rule of Russian law whereby, in default of an annual meeting, a director holds over until the choice of his successor. The plaintiff's witness says the contrary, and reinforces his opinion by the analogy of precedents in which the principle of holding over has been applied to fiduciaries of other kinds. One finds it incredible that automatically, upon the failure to hold a meeting of the shareholders before the expiration of the year at which an election is due, directors, not re-elected, are shorn of their powers, the corporation becoming a derelict without *37
managers to guide it. Such a thing does not seem possible in an enlightened legal system. Taking the defendant's witnesses at their word, they do not go so far as to maintain that this chaos would ensue. The directors in their view would not hold over in the capacity of directors, but would be charged, none the less, with a special obligation of conservation and protection. That is merely to say in other words that they are directors de facto,
whatever the title of the office, since there is no one other than themselves on whom the duty to manage is imposed. We think their authority is sufficient in default of other representatives to permit them to sue in our courts in the name and for the benefit of the corporation they represent (James Co. v.Rossia Ins. Co.,
What has been said as to the consequences of a failure to re-elect the directors may be said with little variation as to the failure of the directors to hold their meetings at the banking house in Petrograd. The witnesses for the defendant assert that there was no authority to meet elsewhere. The witness for the plaintiff states the contrary. We may assume for present purposes that the principal banking house in Russia was the proper place *38
of meeting, and that any director, not present, might refuse to be bound by action taken elsewhere (cf. Ormsby v. VermontCopper Mining Co.,
(3) The possibility of adverse claims does not relieve the defendant from liability when sued in an action at law by a depositor who is successful in proving a title to the fund.
The defendant cites our decision in Russian Reinsurance Co.
v. Stoddard (
The argument is pressed that the danger of double liability supplies the basis for an equitable defense, if not for any other. The danger is not imminent, as the course of events since our decision in Russian Reinsurance Co. v. Stoddard (supra) sufficiently attests. France recognizes the Soviet Republic as a member of the family of nations. Yet, till now at least, it has failed to give effect to titles having their basis in decrees of confiscation (cf. Wohl, Nationalization of Joint Stock Banking Corporations in Soviet Russia, 75 U. of Penn. Law Rev. 385, 392, 395, with citation of French authorities). But in actions at law, the danger, whatever it may be, is no defense at all, whether equitable or legal. An equitable defense is one of such an order as would once have been enforced by the *40
Court of Chancery through the remedy of an injunction restraining the prosecution of the remedy at law (Susquehanna S.S. Co.,Inc., v. Andersen Co., Inc.,
The case comes down to this: A fund is in this State with title vested in the plaintiff at the time of the deposit. Nothing to divest that title has ever happened here or elsewhere. The directors who made the deposit in the name of the corporation or continued it in that name now ask to get it back. Either it must be paid to the depositor, acting by them, or it must be kept here indefinitely. Either they must control the custody, or for the present and the indefinite future it is not controllable by any one. The defendant expresses the fear that the money may be misapplied if the custody is changed. The fear has its basis in nothing more than mere suspicion. The directors, men of honor presumably, will be charged with the duties of trustees, and will be subject to prosecution, civil or criminal, if those duties are ignored. The defendant is not required to follow the money into their hands and see how they apply it. Its duty is to pay.
The judgment of the Appellate Division and that of the Trial Term should be reversed and judgment directed in favor of the plaintiff for $66,749.45 with interest from December 21, 1920, and costs in all the courts.
CRANE, LEHMAN, KELLOGG and HUBBS, JJ., concur; POUND and O'BRIEN, JJ., dissent.
Judgment accordingly. *41