17 N.Y.S. 46 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1891
The plaintiff brings this action as the assignee of five employes of a corporation known as the American Opera Company, Limited, to recover from the defendant the claims of these employes against such corporation. It is sought to charge the defendant as a director of the company under section 21 of chapter 611 of the Laws of 1875, pursuant to which act the corporation was organized. The section referred to reads as follows: “If any certificate or report made, or public notice given, by the officers of any such corporation, shall be false in any material representation, all the officers who shall have signed the same shall be jointly and severally liable for all the debts of the corporation contracted while they are officers thereof. ”
The first point presented by the appellant is that this section of the statute does not apply to a liability contracted by the corporation before the report
We think, however, that a consideration of the entire act, read in the light of its object and purpose, renders our construction still clearer. This purpose was defined by Judge Rapadlo in Pier v. Hanmore, 86 N. Y. 101, as follows: “The purpose for which the annual reports are required to be published is that the public may be correctly informed of the financial condition and resources of these companies, in order that they may judge of the credit
There is still another consideration which should be adverted to, for it seems crucial. We find that when the legislature, in the act under consideration, thought proper to include debts contracted in the past, it used unmistakable language. For instance, in section 18, providing a penalty for failure to file a report, the language is that, “if any corporation shall fail to do so, all the directors thereof shall be jointly and severally liable for all the debts of the corporation then existing, and for all that shall be contracted before such report shall be made.” So in the next section, (19,) with regard to the declaration of a dividend when the company is insolvent or embarrassed. There it is provided that the directors voting in favor of declaring such dividend shall be jointly and severally liable for all the debts of the corporation “then existing, and for all that shall be thereafter contracted while they shall respectively continue in office.” Substitute for the latter phraseology that used in the section under consideration, namely, that the directors who shall have voted for the dividend shall be jointly and severally liable for all the debts of the corporation contracted while they are officers thereof. Could it be successfully contended that the then existing debts, contracted while the same directors were in office, would be covered by this substitute? And, if such contention were made, would not he who made it have to stand, not upon the literal words of the statute, but upon the more reasonable position that existing debts were as much affected by an improper reduction of the company’s assets as debts subsequently contracted, and that for that reason it must have been the intent to embrace such existing debts? And is not this latter suggestion a perfect answer to the question, why were the words “then existing” and “thereafter contracted” used in the one section and not in the other? Is it not apparent that in the one case existing debts would necessarily be affected by the fraudulent act of the directors, and consequently they were distinctly specified, while in the other such existing debts would not be affected by the false report, and consequently they were omitted? We think it is quite evident, in view of these divergences of phraseology, that the legislature here intended to convey different meanings by the use of different words, and thereby to widen or narrow the sphere of penal action according to the legislative view of what varying circumstances called for.
Looking, then, at the statute as a whole, we perceive a distinct and reasonable policy with regard to these reports. That policy proceeds upon two lines: First, to require a report, and' to punish the omission to file it; second, to require accuracy in the report when filed, and to punish material inaccuracy. To secure compliance with the first requirement, a continuous punishment is inflicted. The directors are made liable for all debts contracted until they obey. Every day that they fail in their duty is a day oí continuous liability. It is thus that the law enforces its mandate. When, however, the main requirement is complied with, the liability resting upon non-action ceases, and a penalty adequate to redress an infraction of the second requirement is prescribed. The latter penalty has relation to the wrong to be then redressed. That wrong consists in the possibility of credit being given to the company on the faith of the report. Past credit is not affected by the misfeasance, nor is the existing creditor concerned therewith. Thus the intention was, first, to compel the filing of the report, to make the directors liable for all debts in case of failure in this particular and to continue this liability until compliance; then, upon compliance, to create a new liability in favor of all subsequent creditors who might possibly be affected by the falsity of any material representation in the report as filed. Such is our conclusion upon both the words and the intent of the statute. Any other conclusion would not only be contrary to these words and to this intent, but it would
In view of the conclusion thus arrived at, it is unnecessary to pass upon the numerous other questions presented. We may say, however, that we might not have felt justified in reversing the judgment on the second point presented, namely, the non-assignability of the penalty. It is true that the question does not seem to have been squarely presented to the court of appeals by the record in any of the cases. Bolen v. Crosby, 49 N. Y. 187; Pier v. George, 86 N. Y. 613; Stokes v. Stickney, 96 N. Y. 327; Brackett v. Griswold, 103 N. Y. 428, 9 N. E. Rep. 438. But the dicta are so numerous, and from so many distinguished sources, in favor of the assignee’s right, that we should have hesitated before expressing a contrary opinion. It may be difficult to appreciate the distinction between ownership of the debt by direct assignment, and ownership by legal devolution. The effect would seem to be equivalent, whether the debt comes to the owner by transfer from the living or by representing the dead. Yet it is said that, while in the latter case the owner of the debt cannot maintain an action for the penalty, an assignee can. In our judgment the debt merely measures the penalty, and that is the true reason why the penalty does not survive. If the penalty, instead of being measured by the debt, had been a fixed sum recoverable by each creditor, without regard to the precise amount of his debt, probably it would not have been suggested that even an assignee of the debt could recover such penalty. But we need not pursue this subject further, as the judgment must be reversed, not only upon the question already discussed, but upon still another ground.
We think the admission of the judgment recovered by the present plaintiff against the company was error. It has been expressly held by the court of appeals that, in actions of this character, proof of the recovery of such a judgment is neither conclusive nor prima facie evidence of the debt. Miller v. White, 50 N. Y. 137. This case has since been followed, and its doctrine reaffirmed. McMahon v. Macy, 51 N. Y. 155; Rorke v. Thomas, 56 N. Y. 565. These cases were distinguished, but in no respect overruled or even questioned, in Stephens v. Fox, 83 N. Y. 313, and Allen v. Clark, 108 N. Y. 269, 15 N. E. Rep. 387. On the contrary, Miller v. White was referred to with approval in both of these later cases. Stephens v. Pox was the case of a stockholder who was indebted to the corporation to the amount unpaid upon his stock. The creditor sought to recover that indebtedness in satisfaction of his claim against the company. It was held that as the creditor claimed through the company, and was simply subrogated to its claim against the stockholder, the judgment was admissible. “A judgment,” said Rapallo, J., “against the corporation, being the highest evidence against it, should be as effectual to pass its title to the fund in question [the fund being the company’s claim against the stockholder for his unpaid assessment] as a deed or any other form of transfer.” In Allen v. Clark the judgment was for costs recovered against a manufacturing company, plaintiff, by a defendant, in an action brought by it. • It was held that this judgment was a debt of the company which it was under the same obligation to pay as any other debt. The reason upon which the decision in Miller v. White is based “can have, ” said Earl, J„ “no application to a case like this, where there was no
In the present case the plaintiff introduced evidence tending to support the claims upon which this judgment was recovered, but the learned judge did not submit this evidence to the jury. On the contrary, he held that the defendant was concluded by the judgment, and instructed the jury that, if the plaintiff was entitled to recover, it should be the amount of the judgment, including interest and costs. The judgment and order appealed from should be reversed, and a new trial granted, with costs to the appellant to abide the event. All concur.