25 Misc. 2d 339 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1960
Motion for an injunction pendente granted cause set down for trial at Special Term, Part III, of this court for June 6, 1960, subject to the consent of the Justice therein presiding or for such other date as the said Justice may direct.
This is a stockholder’s derivative action instituted by the plaintiff on behalf of himself and others similarly situated to enjoin certain proposed transactions between the defendant Molehr Corporation, the individual defendants and The Ocean-Dune Apartments Corp. The plaintiff and the individual defendants are each the owners of one third of the outstanding stock of the defendant Molehr Corporation and comprise the board of directors thereof. The sole asset of this corporation is a parcel of improved real property known as No. 23 William Street in the City of New York valued at approximately
The Ocean-Dune Apartments Corp. operates a resort motel at the eastern end of Long Island and in its operations for the fiscal year ending September 30, 1958 realized a net loss of $147.24, due in large portion to a depreciation account provided for amortization of its indebtedness in the approximate sum of $20,000. In the fiscal year ending September 30, 1959 the operations resulted in a net profit of approximately $6,800. During the same period, depreciation carried on the company’s books with reflected amortization of their indebtedness amounted to approximately $20,000. During the period of the company’s operations since 1954 this company has reduced its mortgage indebtedness by approximately $50,000. The defendants constitute the majority of the board of directors and The Ocean-Dune Apartments Corp. now proposes to enlarge the operation and to construct 16 additional units which it is alleged would increase the gross income from the operation by approximately $25,000 and the net income by approximately $16,500. Such construction, including furnishings of the new apartments, will cost approximately $120,000 of capital expenses. The individual defendants, as a majority of the board of directors of the Molehr Corporation, now propose to finance construction by having Molehr lend to Ocean-Dune Corp. approximately $125,000 upon the unsecured note of The Ocean-Dune Apartments Corp., which would be subordinate to the rights of the creditors of The Ocean-Dune Apartments Corp. Molehr was to raise said funds by borrowing $50,000 on its note in the
The corporate charter of defendant Molehr Corporation does contain authorization for it to borrow money but such authority is limited “ for its corporate purposes ”; nor is there any power contained therein authorizing the corporation to lend money for any purpose whatsoever. Defendants contend that the Molehr Corporation, both by virtue of the previously quoted provision of this charter and section 16 of the Stock Corporation Law, has the power to borrow money for its corporate purposes. With this the court agrees. However the question presented here is whether or not the financial arrangements proposed are for the corporate purposes of the Molehr Corporation. While it is true that a corporation has the power to borrow money and to lend the same to a subsidiary corporation, such power is limited to any situations where the benefit to the subsidiary corporation is also a benefit to the parent