127 Misc. 470 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1925
The facts will be covered in the findings and it is not necessary to discuss them here to any great extent. It is sufficient to state that the action is based upon a contract in writing which bears date the 20th day of November, 1916, made by and between
The defendant metal company further agreed to organize a corporation for the purpose of taking title to the properties described in the contract and other properties which it might be deemed advisable to acquire, and to convey such properties to said corporation, and that upon the organization of such corporation, the metal company should cause to be issued to Heckendorf twenty-five per cent of its capital stock.
The said agreement further provided:
“ Eleventh. Any and all sum or sums of money paid or advanced by the vendee pursuant to this agreement shall be repaid in full to the vendee from the operation of the properties described' in this agreement prior to the distribution to the parties in interest of any profits from such operation, and should a corporation be organized as herein provided for. a.nd the properties herein described
The said agreement Was made by Heckendorf on behalf of himself and certain associates who were interested in the mining properties mentioned in the agreement with him.
Heckendorf and his associates assigned the properties in question to the defendant the American Metal Company, Limited, pursuant to the said agreement and pursuant to agreement the metal company caused the defendant the Climax Molybdenum Company to be incorporated under the laws of the State of Delaware with a capital stock of 50,000 shares without nominal or par value, twenty-five per cent of which was issued to Heckendorf and his associates.
Prior to the incorporation of the Climax Company the defendant metal company advanced and paid out pursuant to the Heckendorf contract more than $400,000.
At all times after the incorporation of the Climax Company the directors of said company with the exception of E. G. Heckendorf were officers, directors or employees of the defendant metal company, and the officers of the Climax Company since its incorporation have been directly or indirectly connected with the defendant metal company and all such directors and officers of the defendant Climax Company with the exception of Heckendorf were and still are under the domination and control of the defendant American Metal Company.
After the incorporation of the Climax Company its capital stock was increased from 50,000 shares without par value to 100,000 shares without par value. And thereafter its capital stock Was further increased to 170,000 shares, 150,000 of which Were common stock without par value, and 20,000 shares were seven per cent non-cumulative preferred stock of the par value of $100 each.
On February 13, 1918, at the meeting of the directors, the defendant Climax Company assumed the performance of the Heckendorf contract, and also assumed the payment of the amount advanced by the defendant metal company up to February 13, 1918, to Wit, $448,131.43, and provided that that sum was to be paid before the declaration of any dividends by the Climax Company or the distribution of any profits to the stockholders of the Climax Company. And on the said 13th day of February, 1918,
The Climax Company also executed two demand notes to the defendant metal company, one dated April 1, 1924, for $525,124.03, and the other dated April 19, 1924, for $133,107.49, which the metal company assigned and thereafter by mesne assignments said notes were assigned to the defendant Grochau, who very soon thereafter demanded payment of them and on the 26th day of April, 1924, instituted an action thereon against the Climax Company the prosecution of which is sought to be enjoined in this action.
The circumstances under which these notes were given and so soon assigned and payment demanded, and under which the action was brought are significant. Grochau is represented in the action by lawyers whose offices are in the same suite with the counsel for the metal company and after the commencement of the action on the notes a special meeting of the stockholders of the Climax Company was held on the 9th day of May, 1924. Telegrams of protest "were sent to the company by the plaintiff and other minority stockholders. At the meeting a statement was made by the president of the company stating that the indebtedness Was a bona fide indebtedness of the company and that the company had no defense thereto, and a resolution Was passed to the effect that " no steps or proceedings be taken by this Company in said action and that judgment therein be permitted to go by default,
The methods of the metal company were improper in taking security for the moneys loaned and advanced under the Heckendorf contract for the furtherance of the venture, first, in the issuance of additional stock Which greatly reduced the percentage of the interest in the company held by the minority stockholders who had discovered the mines and turned them over pursuant to the contract, and second, in issuing notes for the amounts advanced and then having actions brought to collect the same out of the assets of the company, the result of which would be to foreclose these minority stockholders out of all their interests in the company, at a time when it is the evident purpose of the metal company to continue the business for its own benefit. By so doing it ignores the contract requiring it to wait for the repayment of its advances until the same could be repaid out of the operation of the mines, and such action is a clear violation of the contract.
The Climax Company took an assignment of the Heckendorf contract, and of all rights thereunder. It was its duty to enforce it upon all parties thereto including the metal company. In the interest of the metal company it evaded that duty, and so conducted itself that the minority stockholders will lose their interests in the property which may prove to be valuable. If it does not so prove the majority stockholders under the control of the metal company are not entitled by these methods to acquire and appropriate the entire assets to its and their benefit. There is abundance of authority for the proposition that it is the duty of the Climax Company to enforce the contract. (Seymour v. S. F. C. Assn., 144 N. Y. 333; Rogers v. N. Y. & T. L. Co., 134 id. 197; Morgan v. Bon Bon Co., 222 id. 22.)
It was not necessary for the plaintiff to request the Climax Company to bring this action, or to defend the Grochau action, and the plaintiff stockholder has the right to maintain it. (Hanna v. Lyon, 179 N. Y. 107; Brinckerhoff v. Bostwick, 88 id. 52; Sage v. Culver, 147 id. 241; Dykman v. Keeney, 154 id. 483; Pollitz v. Gould, 202 id. 11; Holmes v. Camp, 180 App. Div. 409.)
This action was brought in time. The contract is not unreasonable. It has not yet been shown that the mine cannot be successfully operated. When operated it Was during War time. After the War the demand for this new product failed. The large sums paid for experimentation and advertising and the fact that the operation of the mine was resumed shows that the project has not been abandoned.
•The indebtedness represented by the Grochau notes is not
Neither the plaintiff nor the Climax Company is estopped from maintaining this action by reason of any construction placed upon the contract at the first meeting of the Climax Company by its directors and counsel. (21 C. J. 1119 et seq.; Organ v. Stewart, 60 N. Y. 413; Newburger-Morris Co. v. Talcott, 172 App. Div. 485; Pollitz v. Gould, 202 N. Y. 11, 17; Holmes v. Camp, 180 App. Div. 409.)
The plaintiff is entitled to judgment.
First. Enjoining the defendant Grochau from collecting the notes held by him, and that he surrender same for cancellation.
Second. Enjoining the Climax Company from paying the same.
Third. Declaring that the acts of the Climax Company in issuing its notes and its increased capital stock, both common and preferred, in payment of its indebtedness to the defendant metal company were illegal and void and should be set aside, and the metal company be ordered and directed to surrender for cancellation all such stock now in its possession, or under its control, or to the extent that that cannot be done, indemnify the Climax Company against any loss and damage by reason of the issuance thereof.
Fourth. That the defendant metal company be ordered and adjudged to specifically perform the Heckendorf contract.
Fifth. That whenever it can be made to appear that the mining property of the Climax Company cannot be operated successfully by reason of temporary conditions that the said defendant metal company apply to the court for a temporary suspension of operations until conditions warrant another attempt to operate the said properties.
Sixth. That whenever it can be made to appear that said mining property is a failure and cannot be successfully operated, that the defendant metal company apply to the court for relief from said contract.
Judgment is, therefore, ordered accordingly, with costs. The parties may settle findings on notice.