22 How. Pr. 35 | The Superior Court of New York City | 1861
This action is brought for the purpose of charging the defendants with a debt alleged to be due from “ The National Plate Glass Company,” alleged to be a corporation organized under the “ act to authorize the formation of corporations for manufacturing and other purposes, passed February the 17th,
I. In order to establish the fact of indebtedness by the said company, the plaintiff was permitted to give in evidence the record of a judgment against the company, and an execution against the company returned by the sheriff unsatisfied.
The decision of this court in Belmont agt. Coleman, (1 Bosw. R., 188,) is to the effect that where stockholders are sought to be charged in a like case, a judgment against the corporation is complete evidence to prove the indebtedness. In that case the authorities bearing on the question are collected and reviewed, and that decision must be taken to dispose of the question in the present case. If competent as against the stockholders of a corporation, much more should it be held competent as against the trustees to whom the management of its affairs is confided. It is sufficient to say that it was prima facie evidence of the indebtedness ; and if it be conceded that it was not conclusive, and might be overcome by proof that it was obtained by fraud or collusion, or by proof that no such indebtedness in fact existed, still it was not erroneous to receive it in evidence when offered. The circumstance that the statute makes the trustees liable even without proof that a judgment has been recovered against the company, does not affect the question. If in any case a judgment is prima facie evidence as against a stockholder or trustee, that the debt exists, the circumstance that recovery of judgment must be had before suit brought, only makes the judgment serve the further purpose of showing that the condition has been complied with.
We do not perceive that the execution and the return thereof were in any wise material. If the judgment was satisfied, that was matter of defence, and it was altogether unnecessary for the plaintiff to prove that an execution had been issued and returned. But the reception of the evidence could not in any conceivable manner prejudice the defendants. It did prove one of the allegations in the complaint, which was distinctly put in issue by the answer, and it proved that allegation by the very best, if not the only proper evidence of the fact. And although we think the issue was an immaterial issue, we cannot say, that after the issue had been voluntarily made, the defendants were entitled to an exception to a ruling which permitted the plaintiff to prove what he had alleged and the defendants had denied.
II. In order further to prove the indebtedness of the corporation to the plaintiff, the latter was permitted to give in evidence a certificate or due bill stating the balance due the plaintiff on the 1st of January, 1857, to be $276.97, taken from the ledger of the company, and signed “ National Plate Glass Company, by J. N. Richmond as superintendent.”
There was proof tending to show that Richmond was the agent of the company; proof which the jury deemed (as
Under these circumstances the due bill was admissible on either of two grounds. First. The proof of Richmond’s agency was prima facie sufficient to warrant his giving this due bill, as a statement of account, an original voucher for the balance due, which, if not contradicted, disproved or avoided, was prima facie evidence of the debt arising in the course of Richmond’s agency. (Story on Agency, § 451.) Second. It was competent to produce and read it, to make the evidence of Richmond (already prima facie sufficient as to the fact of the indebtedness) definite ahd certain as to the amount of the balance to which he had testified. If in this aspect of the case it could be claimed that the books of the company should have been produced, no such point was raised at the trial.
III. If the foregoing views are correct, and it was not erroneous to permit the judgment record and due bill to he given in evidence, it follows that the judge committed no error in refusing to instruct the jury that neither the judgment nor the due bill were any evidence as against the defendants of a debt from the company to the plaintiff.
IY. The motion to dismiss the complaint was properly denied. The statute (Laws of 1848, ch. 40, § 9, p. 56,) in terms provides that the copy of any certificate of incorporation filed in pursuance of the act, certified by the county clerk, &c., shall be presumptive legal evidence of the fact therein stated, and requires that it be received as such evidence in all courts, &c. That certificate the plaintiff produced and gave in evidence. This prima facie established an incorporation under the act, and that the defendants were trustees on the 4th of April, 1856. It is made by the act presumptive evidence, and it is all the plaintiff was bound in the first instance to prove to show actual incorporation. Whether it was competent for the defendants to show that in fact the company never was formed; that this certificate was only an initiatory step ; that no certificate was ever filed in the office of the secretary of state as the act required ; and that the project was abandoned, will be presently considered; but the certificate made a prima facie case of an incorporation, and that the defendants were the trustees; He then gave proof to show that the company acted under the corporate name; that they became indebted to the plaintiff; and the allegation that no statement was filed as required by the act, not being denied in the answer, the plaintiff’s case was prima facie made out; and it was proper to put the defendants to counter proofs or proof of their defence.
Y. The remaining questions arise upon the offer of the defendant Brown to show that he resigned his office of trustee before the first day of December, 1856 ; the offer of both defendants to show that there was a proposition made to form a company to be called the National Plate
It must be assumed for the purposes of this appeal, that if the defendants had been permitted to give the proofs they offered, such proofs would have established the facts proposed to be established thereby; and our inquiry is, therefore, were the facts so proposed to be proved competent, or would they, if proved, establish or tend to establish any defence ?
And the questions so raised may be briefly stated : 1st. Can a trustee of a corporation organized under the act in question resign his trusteeship ? 2d. If he do resign, does he become liable for the debts of the company on the subsequent default or neglect of the remaining trustees to make and file the annual certificate required by the act ? 3d. Where individuals, with a view to the formation of a corporation under the act, are induced by false representations to consent, and as a step thereto sign and file a certificate
In relation to the first two of the questions thus stated, it seems to me that there is little room for doubt. If a trustee of such a corporation, acting in good faith, desires to terminate his official term, I perceive nothing in the nature of his office which forbids his resigning. Although called trustees in the act authorizing such incorporations, those officers are not trustees in the sense of being holders of the legal title to the property in trust for others, but they are made by the act 3) managers of the stock, property and concerns of the company, while the company itself, as a corporation, holds (§ 2,) the real and personal property necessary for carrying on its operations. And regarding a trustee as a mere manager or director, there is no inconsistency in allowing him the opportunity to resign that office, no more than there would be in permitting the president or other officer to resign.
The fourth section of the act expressly contemplates a resignation by a trustee, provides for the exigency, and so impliedly sanctions it. It enacts that “ when any vacancy shall happen among the trustees by death, resignation or otherwise, it shall be filled for the remainder of the year in such manner as may be provided for by the by-laws of said company.”
The power and right to resign the office of trustee is therefore, I think, clear, and such a resignation in the very terms of the statute creates a vacancy. With such resignation the powers of the resigning trustee cease, and it would seem a necessary corollary that his duties also cease.
When it is said in section twelve of the act, that “ every such company shall, within twenty days from the first day of January, annually make a report which shall be published,” &c., “ and if any of said companies shall fail so to do, all the trustees of the company shall be jointly and severally liable for all the debts of the company then existing, and for all that shall be contracted before such report shall be made, it means all those who are trustees when the company shall so fail—all those whose duty as managers it is to see. that the report is made. As well might it be said that all who have ever been trustees are liable for such a subsequent default, as that any one who, though once a trustee, has by resignation ceased to be one, is liable.
The clause making the trustees liable, until such report is made, shows that the liability is imposed upon persons who have it in their power to limit their liability by causing the report to be made and filed.
I think it as clear as it is just, that the penalty imposed by this section falls upon those whose duty has been neglected, and not upon those who having resigned, had no duty to perform in the matter.
This construction of the act is sustained by Boughton agt. Otis, 29 Barb. R., 196; affirmed 21 N. Y. R., 261; The Shaler and Hall Quarry Co. agt. Bliss, 10 Abb. R., 311; Young agt. New York & Long Island Co., id., 229; Garrison agt. Howe, 17 N. Y. R., 458 ; Tracey agt. Yates, 18 Barb. R., 152.
It was argued that it was proper to reject evidence that Brown had resigned, because it was not also offered to prove that his resignation was accepted. We think there is no foundation for this suggestion. The resignation spoken of in the statute requires no acceptance. It is a surrender of the office, a voluntary yielding of its possession, and is consummated by the act of the' resigning trustee, declaring to the company his resignation and his vacation of the office, by whatever form expressed.
Whether the resignation was recorded in the minutes or not, could not affect the power of Brown to resign, or the effect of such resignation to relieve him from further duty as trustee. So that proving it by the record would not necessarily be the only mode of establishing the fact. Besides, the proof was rejected, not because it was offered to be proved by parol, but “ the court refused to admit evidence of such facts unless it was shown that such resignation took place before the plaintiff’s debt was contracted, and that the plaintiff knew it.” And again : the witness who was under examination, had the minutes in his hands, and it does not appear by the case that it was not by those minutes (proved by the witness,) that the proposed fact might have been established.
There was, therefore, error in rejecting proof that the
The third question above stated, if it was thq simple inquiry whether trustees who have acted as such, and have held the corporation before the public as duly constituted, and so invited the confidence of the community, and especially of the plaintiff, can, when proceeded against by the plaintiff as a creditor, deny the incorporation and prove that it was not lawfully organized, might perhaps be answered by the cases which declare that such acts of the trustees create an estoppel in favor of creditors, and so forbid their proving that the corporation was not what it was held out to be by themselves, or that they are not what they have professed themselves to be, trustees of a corporation. (Eaton agt. Aspinwall, 6 Duer R., 176 ; 19 N. Y. R., 119, and the cases therein referred to; Caryl agt. McElrath, 3 Sand., 126; Mead agt. Keeler, 24 Barb. R., 20; Jones agt. Dana, id., 395.)
But the offer here goes further, and bore directly on the question whether in truth there ever had been any other organization than the National Plate Glass Works, and whether all that was done was not in fact by the managers of that company, in pursuance of an expectation that the organization of the new company would be completed. If in fact the defendants were defrauded into a consent to take part in organizing a new company, but before the new organization was completed they discovered that they had been deceived, and actually abandoned the enterprise before the alleged default in filing a certificate, so that in truth in January, 1857, there was no such corporation, then there are two answers to the plaintiff’s claim.
First. That there never was any such company, and the defendant never did anything to create any belief that the company was organized ; and
Second. At the time the alleged default arose, the company had been abandoned and its affairs were in liquidation. We are not satisfied that if the defendants had*48 been permitted to prove all that they offered, they would not have so overcome the proof given by the plaintiff, as to have shown that no estoppel existed.
The allegations in the defendants’ answer are quite loose and general, and it might, on a critical examination, be suggested that the answer would not be likely to apprise the plaintiff that the resignation of the defendants, or the facts relied upon, would be shown on the trial; but no objection was made there, nor is it suggested on the argument of the appeal that the answer is not sufficient to let in the proof, if otherwise competent, or rather that it is not sufficiently set up in the answer.
There must be a reversal of the judgment as to the defendant Brown, and a new trial ordered, with costs to abide the event.
And as to the other appellant, Dusenbury, the same defence of resignation applies also to him; and if he is not liable as a trustee of the National Plate Glass Company, by reason of his resignation, or because that organization never was completed, then he is not liable in this action as a trustee of the National Plate Glass Works, in which he was confessedly a trustee, because it is not averred or shown that the Plate Glass Works contracted the debt or are liable to the plaintiff therefor. On the contrary, his judgment is not against that corporation ; and it is not alleged that that corporation did not file reports as required by law.
Judgment reversed, and new trial ordered, costs to abide the event of the suit.