199 A.D. 707 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1922
Under our system of practice and procedure, by which the courts may be called upon in advance of the trial to decide issues of law arising on the pleadings, we are often required to decide abstract propositions of law which, when the facts are fully developed on the trial, become quite immaterial and have no bearing on the final decision of the issues; and such very likely is the case presented by this appeal.
It is alleged in the complaint that on the 8th of October, 1917, plaintiff was appointed administrator with the will annexed of the estate of one Thomas Williams who died a resident of the county of New York in the year 1822, leaving a last will and testament, which was admitted to probate on the 21st of November, 1822, appointing Archibald Cornell his executor; that on the 19th of August 1823, a certificate for sixty-seven shares of the capital stock of the Mechanics Bank, a domestic banking corporation, incorporated by chapter 87 of the Laws of 1810, was issued by the bank to said Cornell as such executor; that on the 26th of January, 1852, Cornell died without having accounted as executor and leaving the estate wholly unadministered and that no accounting of the estate of Cornell has ever been had; that neither the estate of Williams nor that of Cornell has ever been fully administered and that said certificate still remains an unadministered asset of the estate of Williams. It is further alleged that the charter of said bank, as extended, expired on the 1st day of January, 1855, and that on that day the Mechanics Bank of the City of New York was incorporated as a domestic banking corporation and acquired the business and property of the former bank, and that under the plan of acquisition the stockholders of the former bank became entitled to certain shares in the Mechanics Bank of the City of New York in exchange for their stock in the former bank; that no stock was issued in place of the certificate for said sixty-seven shares of stock in the former bank so issued in the name of Cornell as executor, although the estate of Williams became the rightful owner of an equivalent number of shares of stock in the Mechanics Bank of the City of New York; that on the 6th of October, 1865, the Mechanics Bank of the City of New York was converted into a national banking
The answer puts in issue the allegations of the complaint with respect to the issuance and ownership of said certificate
If, as alleged by the defendant, all of the capital stock of the original bank was issued and outstanding in the names of others and so remained from some time prior to the year 1837 until after the death of the executor of the Williams estate fifteen or more years thereafter, and if, during that time, the stockholders of record were recognized as the lawful owners of all of the capital stock and dividends thereon were paid to them and the records of the bank did not show that any of the stock was outstanding in the name of the executor, and, as alleged in the complaint, no dividend was paid to him, it would seem that any cause of action on the certificate in behalf of the estate accrued while Cornell was executor and that the Statute of Limitations ran against the same in his lifetime, and if so, no action can now be maintained on the certificate. If, as alleged in the answer, the certificate, if issued to the executor by the bank, was transferred by him and a certificate issued to another in its place, the estate would have no cause of action, even though for some undisclosed reason the officials of the bank saw fit to recognize and enter the transfer upon the books of the bank without requiring the surrender of the outstanding certificate or retaining possession of it (See Brisbane v. Delaware, L. & W. R. R.Co., 94 N. Y. 204); and if the transfer was made without the authority of the executor, a cause of action in his favor at once accrued against the bank and the Statute of Limitations commenced running regardless of whether or not he had knowledge of the wrongful or unauthorized transfer. (Glover v. National Bank of Commerce, 156 App. Div. 247; 168 id. 903; affd., 219 N. Y. 618.) Glover v. National
“ § 10. The persons so constituted trustees, shall have authority to sue for and recover, the debts and property of the dissolved corporation, by the name of the trustees of such corporation, describing it by its corporate name, and shall be jointly and severally responsible to the creditors and stockholders of such corporation, to the extent of its property and effects that shall come into their hands.”
Plaintiff’s cause of action proceeds upon the theory that the successor to the original bank was incorporated by the officers and directors of the former bank for the purpose of taking over the assets and business and continuing it and that it took title and accrued dividends subject to an obligation, to issue its stock in exchange for the stock of the original bank and to account for the dividends received and that thereby it became a trustee for the stockholders of the original bank and obligated to them to issue its capital stock in exchange for theirs and to pay the accrued dividends, and in default thereof, at the election of the stockholders, it held the assets subject to their claims for the value of their stock and the dividends, and since it is alleged that the assets of the former bank were so taken over subject to the obligation to issue stock in exchange for the outstanding stock of the former bank and with full knowledge that the certificate of stock in question was outstanding and owned by the Williams estate and did
It follows that the order should be affirmed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements.
Clarke, P. J., Dowling, Page and Merrell, JJ., concur.
Order affirmed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements.