68 N.J. Eq. 605 | N.J. | 1905
Prior to May 7th, 1897, the complainant had invented some processes for the manufacture of smokeless powder, and at that time was the owner of about ninety per cent, of the stock of the Yolney Smokeless Powder Company, a corporation of this state, organized in 1896, with a nominal capital of $100,000. The capital stock had all been issued, but for what does not clearly appear. So far as is disclosed the company had no property, except one of the Yolney patents, issued in 1887, and the value of that, patent may be conjectured from the facts that the complainant did not operate under it in 1897, and early in that year had applied for two other patents on the same subject, which were issued in the fall of 1897.
This being the situation, the complainant and defendant, on May 7th, 1897, entered into a written contract, as follows:
“Memorandum, of agreement made this seventh day of May, 1897, between O. W. Yolney, party of the first part, and Lewis Nixon, party of the second part:
“Whereas, The said O. W. Volney is the sole owner of at least 60 per cent, of the stock of the Volney Smokeless Powder Company, organized under the laws of New Jersey, it is therefore mutually agreed:
“1. That the party of the second part, if he secures a contract for about 200,000 lbs. of smokeless powder, such contract being conditional upon the successful trial of a sample lot of powder made under the Yolney patents, shall supply $5,000.00 in cash for the purpose of manufacturing such sample lot of powder, the money to be supplied as required by the party of the first part. In consideration of the payment of this amount of $5,000.00 the said Yolney agrees to convey to the said Lewis Nixon $12,500 of his stock in the company above mentioned; and it is further mutually agreed that, in order to supply further money necessary to erect a plant for the manufacture of powder, $45,000.00 worth of the stock in the company above mentioned will be sold to the said Lewis Nixon for $45,000.00, and that the said Yolney will then assign to a new company, to be organized with a capital stock of one million dollars, all his titles and interests in the patents obtained by him during 1897, the conveyance to be made so that the stock of the present company can be taken by the new company on the payment of ten shares of the new for one of the present.
“C. W. Yolney, [l. s.]
“Party of the First Part.
“Lewis Nixon, [l. s.]
“Party of the Second Part."
Starting with this contract, the complainant’s contention is that the parties thereupon engaged in a joint enterprise for the manufacture of smokeless powder by the processes for which the Volney patents of 1897 were granted; that in this enterprise,he furnished his time and skill, and about $2,000 in cash, and the defendant furnished about $30,000; that with this money land was leased'or purchased; several small buildings and necessary machinery were constructed, and some explosives were manufactured ; that pending these operations negotiations were started and conducted by the defendant, on behalf of himself and the complainant, for the formation of a new corporation, which resulted, on April 6th, 1899, in organizing the International Smokeless Powder and Dynamite Company under the laws of this state, with a nominal capital of $10,000,000; that immediately after its organization the complainant assigned to the company his patents of 1897 and agreed to convey to it, without further consideration, all his future improvements and inventions upon the same subject-matter, and the defendant transferred to the company the land, buildings and machinery above mentioned, of which the title stood in his name, and that for the rights and property thus conveyed to the company the defendant received from the company seventy-nine thousand shares of fully-paid capital stock of the par value of $50 per share, and about $33,000 in cash, subject, however, to the defendant’s agreement to apply twenty thousand of the shares “for the benefit of the subscribers to the preferred stock of the company.”
On these claims the complainant insists that he is entitled to one-half of the defendant’s net receipts from the company, by virtue of the understanding between them, in pursuance of which their transfers to the company were made.
Respecting the precise terms of this understanding the parties are in dispute. At least some of its leading features (the de
“Elizabeth, N. X, April 5th, 1899.
“Dr. Carl ~W. Vobiey, Keyport, 2í. J.:
“Dear Sir — Referring to our conversation of to-day, I beg to confirm what I have said, which is as follows: That in the organization of the new powder company, the consideration to you for the assignment of all the patents which you control will be one hundred thousand dollars ($100,000) par value of the shares of the International Smokeless Powder Company. In addition to this, it is understood between ourselves that I shall turn over to you fifty thousand dollars ($50,000) par value of the stock obtained by me from this company and two thousand dollars ($2,000.00) in cash. Assignments will be assigned, transferred and set over concurrently with the transfer of stock.
“Yours truly,
“Lewis Nixon.”
But it is contended by the complainant that his further understanding was that the entire capital stock of the new company should be only $1,000,000; that for the transfers made to it by the complainant and defendant not less than $350,000 of the capital should be issued to the defendant as fully-paid stock for property -purchased; that of this the defendant should set aside $50,000 for a certain influential person named by him and for certain newspaper men, and should divide the residue of the stock equally with the complainant, so that together they would acquire nearly one-third of the entire capital. This understanding, the complainant says, was induced by the statements of the defendant, and their expectations as to the division of stock were based on the contract of May 7th, 1897, modified so as to allow the defendant one-half instead of the smaller share indicated by that contract for the money actually advanced by-him, and not until after the $2,000 of cash and the $150,000 of stock mentioned in the letter had been delivered to the complainant, did he learn what the entire capital of tire company was, and what the defendant had actually received.
Assuming the facts to be as the complainant insists, he is not entitled to the aid of this court.
It must be remembered that under the laws of New Jersey the stock of a corporation can be originally issued for property pur
The evidence in this case satisfies us that the contract set up by the complainant, was in violation of this, statutory policy; that there was no honest judgment on the part of anybody that the property for which it was intended that the company should issue $350,000 of fully-paid stock was really1 worth that sum of money. After the contract of May 7th, 1897, the first operations in the joint enterprise began in the erection of some small buildings in Keyport, at a cost of about $1,700. In May, 1898, the erection of similar buildings at South River Junction was commenced, but these seem not to have been completed when the transfer to the new company took place. I find no reason to think that the entire tangible property (land, buildings and machinery) was worth over $5,000. At Export, during the year 1898 and the early part of 1899, some powder was manufactured, to be tested at Sandy Hook for the United States government, but no test made- resulted satisfactorily to- the United States officers. Although in 'the whole venture the parties seem to have expended about $32,000, no income was obtained and no- business was established, nor was it demonstrated that the processes of manufacture invented and patented by the complainant had any substantial value, so that when, -in March, 1899, these parties were discussing their prospects in view of the organization of the new company, the defendant said to the complainant that they could not get much money for their -stock, and the outlook, so far as realizing money from the enterprise was concerned, was rather poor. To this statement the complainant did not object, and, as he puts it, they “felt bad” about the situation. From these circumstances the only rational inference as to tire worth of the property which these parties were about to- exchange for corporate stock, is that it had but little value in comparison with the sum represented by the stock to- be issued therefor. No one, by the exercise of honest judgment, did o-r could appraise that property at $350,000.
We conclude that according to the complainant’s contention his bargain with the defendant was that the latter should get from the International Smokeless Powder and Dynamite Company an original issue of its stock, having a face value of $350,000, at least, in exchange for property which nobody believed to be worth that sum in money, and should equally divide with the complainant whatever he thus obtained. The purpose of that bargain was plainly illegal.
It is the settled policy of the courts in this state not to aid in the enforcement of such contracts, having either an illegal or an immoral purpose, even although the objectionable feature has been accomplished, and there remains only the distribution of the proceeds among the contracting parties. Van Doren v. Staats, 3 N. J. Law (2 Penn.) 887; Watson v. Murray, 23 N. J. Eq. (8 C. E. Gr.) 257; Gregory ads. Wilson, 36 N. J. Law (7 Vr.) 315; Wyckoff v. Weaver, 66 N. J. Law (37 Vr.) 648.
On these grounds, the decree denying relief to the complainant and dismissing his bill should-be affirmed.