205 N.Y. 293 | NY | 1912
Lead Opinion
The plaintiff, trustee of the bankrupt corporation, Remington Automobile Motor Company, seeks to recover from the defendant a sum unpaid, as plaintiff alleges, upon a subscription by the defendant for two shares of the capital stock of the corporation.
The trial court found as facts: The bankrupt was organized in 1900 under the laws of New Jersey. Its authorized capital stock was $250,000, divided into twenty-five hundred shares of the par value of $100 each. Soon *295 after its incorporation, the board of directors adopted a resolution as follows: "Resolved, that for the purpose of securing a local interest in the Remington Automobile Motor Company on the part of the citizens of Ilion (N.Y.) that 200 shares of the stock be issued, to be sold at $25 per share, and that the proceeds of such sale be placed in the treasury to be used for regular expenses." Thereafter, in pursuance of the resolution, the general manager and secretary of the corporation presented to the defendant a writing which contained the agreements that the plant of the corporation was to be located and its business to be carried on at Ilion, and that the defendant would purchase two non-assessable shares of the capital stock of the corporation at $25 for each share and no more would ever have to be paid upon them. The defendant signed the agreement and purchased the two shares of stock upon the distinct understanding and agreement made between the defendant and the general manager and secretary of the corporation that $25 per share fully paid for the stock. He paid $50 for the two shares of stock at the time he received them. The corporation located its plant at Utica, New York, and not at Ilion. In December, 1902, the company was adjudged a bankrupt, and in April, 1906, the United States District Court granted an order directing a call or assessment upon the defendant and others of $75 per share to meet the deficiency in the assets of said corporation to meet the obligations of its creditors, said assessments to be paid on or before July 1, 1906, and the defendant was duly served with a copy of said order. The court found as a conclusion of law that the plaintiff was entitled to recover the sum of $150, a conclusion which the facts found do not support.
The liability of the defendant is to be determined by the law of the state of New Jersey. That state, through its laws, gave the corporation its existence, powers, liabilities and the limits within which it was free to act, *296
and a citizen of this state, who became a shareholder in it, entered into contract relations, the extent and obligation of which depend upon those laws, in so far as they do not violate a statute or the settled public policy of this state. (Lowry v.Inman,
It is urged by the respondent, at this point, that the order of the United States District Court directing the assessment of the shares of the defendant conclusively determined the validity and the amount of the assessment. It is true that the regularity and validity of the proceeding in that court and its conclusions cannot be attacked in this action; but the existence or non-existence of an obligation on the part of the defendant to pay the assessment was not within the subject-matter of which that court took jurisdiction. To enable the plaintiff to enforce the liability of the delinquent shareholders to the extent only which the deficiency in the corporate assets required and to effect parity of contribution between them it was necessary that an account of the assets and debts, of the entire amount of the capital remaining unpaid upon the issued shares, and the part of the face value of his shares unpaid by each stockholder should be *297
taken, and the aggregate assessment required equitably rated by the court, and it is upon those issues that its order is beyond attack in this action. (Great Western Telegraph Co. v. Purdy,
Inasmuch as no statute of the state of New Jersey, nor provision of the charter of the corporation relative to the liability of the defendant, was proven, we turn to the common law, remarking parenthetically, however, that we have not been referred to and have not found any domestic statute which prescribes, as a condition to the exercise here of the rights derived from the state of New Jersey that the shareholders shall be liable to the creditors or their representative up to the nominal value of their stock, and there is, therefore, no statutory, as there is no charter, prohibition against the issuance of the shares of the capital stock for less than their par value as named in the charter, and no statutory mandate that the shares shall be deemed issued and held subject to the payment of such value. Nor do the principles of the *298
common law of this state work such results. In Christensen v.Eno (
We have not considered or determined either the man ner or the extent in which a statute of New Jersey, inimical to the express agreement of the corporation and the defendant, would through implication affect it, or the effect of the statement of the corporation that it would locate its plant and carry on its business at Ilion, because the record submitted to us does not present those questions.
The judgment should be reversed and a new trial granted, costs to abide the event.
HAIGHT, VANN, WILLARD BARTLETT, HISCOCK and CHASE, JJ., concur; CULLEN, Ch. J., concurs in memorandum, as follows:
Concurrence Opinion
I concur on the sole ground that, as shown in the opinion of COLLIN, J., the question involved in the appeal is settled by the authority of the previous decisions of this court. Were it an original one I should reach a contrary conclusion.
Judgment reversed, etc.