53 A.D. 65 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1900
This action is brought against the defendant, as a director of the Hudson Valley Knitting Company, upon the statutory liability for a failure to make and tile an annual report.
The Hudson Valley Knitting Company was incorporated, in
In December, 1894, the defendant, who was a member of the firm of Scott Bros., commission merchants in New York, had a conversation with Mr. Dowsley, the secretary, and with Mr. Fales, the treasurer of the corporation, and the trustees who had principally the management of the business, in respect to the sale by the defend
“ $5,000. Troy, N. Y., Oct. 10th, 1895.
“ Bour months after date we promise to pay to the order of ourselves Bive thousand dollars, at The National Bank of Troy, for value received. HUDSON VALLEY KNITTING CO.,
“ B. A. Bales, Treas.”
“ Hudson Valley Knitting Co.,
“ F. A. Fales, Treas.,
“ Troy, N. Y.
“ K. B. Dowsley,
“ Troy, N. Y.
“ F. A. Fales,
“ Troy, N. Y.”
and so indorsed was delivered to the plaintiff, who, on the day of its date, discounted the same for the Hudson Valley Knitting Company, and tiie proceeds thereof were paid over to the said company and by it deposited to its credit in The National Bank of Troy, where the said company kept its account. At the time of the making of this note F. A. Fales was, and during the existence of the corporation continued to be, the treasurer of the Hudson Valley Knitting Company, and had charge of its financial and banking matters. This note was renewed from time to time by notes of the said company similarly made and indorsed, the last of which, dated April 3, 1896, for $4,900, $100 having been paid on the principal, reads as follows:
“ $4,900. • Troy, N. Y., April 3rd, 1896.
“ One month after date we promise to pay to the order of ourselves Forty-nine hundred dollars, at The National Bank of Troy, for value received.
“ HUDSON VALLEY KNITTING- CO.,
“ F. A. Fales, Treas.”
This note was indorsed
“ Hudson Valley Knitting Co.,
“ F. A. Fales, Treas.
“ F. A. Fales,
“ K. B. Dowsley.”
and was on its date delivered to the plaintiff, who is now the owner of the same, and no part thereof has been paid, except $572.71 paid by the receiver of the Hudson Valley Knitting Company on July 29, 1898. To recover the amount due on this last note, given in renewal of the indebtedness of the Hudson Valley Knitting' Company to the plaintiff contracted on October 10, 1895, during which year no report was filed, this action has been brought.
It is well settled that this statute is a highly penal one, and that to establish a liability created by it, every fact upon which the right to recover against a director depends must be affirmatively proven. (Whitney v. Cammann, 137 N. Y. 344.) It is in the light of this principle that the questions presented in this ease should be considered and determined. The right to maintain the action depends upon the existence of three facts: the failure to make and file a report, a debt against the corporation and the directorship of the defendant at the time of the default. (Shaler & Hall Quarry Co. v. Bliss, 27 N. Y. 297; Duckworth v. Roach, 81 id. 49 ; Gold v. Clyne, 134 id. 262.) The failure to file reports in 1895 and 1896 is conceded. The indebtedness and directorship are controverted. This brings us to the consideration of the question whether a valid indebtedness then existed against the corporation in favor of the plaintiff. If a debt exists against the corporation to which it has no good defense at law or in equity, the statutory liability of the defendant attaches. ( Whitney Arms Co. v. Barlow, 63 N. Y. 62.) The alleged indebtedness arose out of the discounting by the plaintiff for the corporation of the note dated October 10, 1895, for $5,000, which was renewed from time to time and in renewal of which, except $100 paid on the principal, the note of April 3, 1896, for $4,900 was given. It is maintained by the defendant that these notes were upon their face not the notes of the Hudson Valley Knitting Company, but the individual notes of Kales and of Dowsley, but I think it is well settled by the authorities that they are the notes of the corporation. They are signed in the name of the corporation by F. A. Fales, the treasurer, who had authority to make them. Furthermore, the original note was given to the plaintiff in consideration of the proceeds of the same received by the defendant which were placed to its
The defendant further maintains that the proof fails to show that lie was a director of the Hudson Valley Knitting Company at the time of the failure to file the annual report. One of the grounds for this contention is, that it was essential to his election as a director in February, 1894, that he was then a stockholder, and that the ■only evidence of who are stockholders of a corporation is the stock book provided for by section 29 of the Stock Corporation Law, which book was not produced in evidence. That section requires that every stock corporation shall keep a book to be known as the •stock book “ containing the names, alphabetically arranged, of all persons who are stockholders of the corporation, showing their places of residence, the number of shares of stock held by them respectively, the time when they respectively became the owners thereof, and the amount paid thereon.” It further provides that such book “ shall be presumptive evidence of the facts therein so •stated in favor of the plaintiff, in any action or proceeding against •such corporation, or any of its officers, directors o" stockholders.” While this statute makes the stock book “presumptive evidence ” of who are stockholders in an action against any of its directors, it does not make it the only evidence. The Hudson Valley Knitting Company did not keep the stock book required by this statute, and the neglect to keep such a book cannot exclude common-law evidence of who are stockholders. In this case it was clearly piroved by competent common-law evidence that the defendant was a stockholder. It is also contended by the defendant that his election as a director in February, 1894, was void, for the reason that the meeting of the stockholders for the election of trustees was held in Troy and not at Waterford ; and for the further reason that the inspectors of election did not file their oath of office in Kensselaer •county. Section 20 of the Stock Corporation Law provides that “ The directors of every stock corporation shall be chosen from the
It is strenuously urged by the defendant that if he were legally elected a director in February, 1894, liis declaration made to Messrs. Dowsley and Fales in the following December and his non-participation with them thereafter in the active management of the business, of the company amounted to a resignation, so that on October 10, 1895, when the indebtedness of the corporation to the plaintiff was. contracted, the defendant had ceased to be a director-of the company. I do not think his language susceptible of such a construction. He testifies that he said to them “ I should not have anything more to do with the management of the mill when I wasn’t selling the. goods.” Whether this language has reference to his directorship or to his assisting the manager as he had theretofore done is not certain, hnt if it refers to the former it cannot be construed, especially in the light of his subsequent acts and conduct, as anything more than a threat to resign in case the goods of the concern should no>
I fully appreciate the fact that the penalty imposed by the statute upon a director for the omission to file an annual report is severe, and it may well be doubted whether in this case the plaintiff has sustained any damages whatever in consequence of such omission, but I am of opinion that upon the facts of this case the statutory liability has arisen, and that the plaintiff is entitled to judgment against the defendant in the sum of $4,900, with interest from May 4, 1896, less the sum of $572.71, besides costs.
A decision in accordance with the facts herein stated may be prepared by the plaintiff’s attorney and submitted to me for settlement at my chambers on five days’ notice to the attorneys for the defendant.