68 N.Y.S. 173 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1901
This action was brought to recover royalties specified in a license given by Henry Wilson, now deceased, to the defendant. It appears
Upon the trial of the action it developed that on the 25th day of July, 1887, the defendant was merged into a new corporation organized .under the laws of the State of Connecticut, which new company also purchased.the property of a Boston company which had theretofore furnished the defendant with certain paper and supplies used in its business; and the learned trial court, being called upon to give construction to the contract, held that the defendant could not be held responsible for the sales made by the new corporation after the 25th day of July, 1887, and dismissed the complaint in respect to- the claim for compensation after that time. The jury found a verdict for the plaintiff for the full amount of the claim up to the time that the new corporation took possession of the property, and the defendant has not appealed from the judgment. The only question presented on this appeal, therefore, is whether the court was justified in holding, as a. matter of law, that the defendant was not liable for the royalties upon the sales made of the goods manufactured and put upon the market by the new corporation.
The plaintiff, however, insists that the transfer of the property of the defendant to the Aeolian ■ Company was ultra vires / that it in some manner violated the statute forbidding transfers in contemplation of insolvency, etc., but we do not discover that the plaintiff is in a position to raise any of these objections. The plaintiff is not ■a stockholder, nor, in respect to the claim which is involved in this appeal, was she a judgment creditor at the time of the transfer. The claim which is here, asserted, and upon which the plaintiff claims the right to go to the jury, accrued after the transfer of the property was made to the Aeolian Company. She is, therefore, in the position of the plaintiff in the case of Gray v. National Steamship Co. (115 U. S. 116), and has no right to complain of the transfer. While the courts have, as in the case of People v. Ballard (134 N. Y. 269), held in behalf of non-assenting stockholders that a corporation could not sell all of its property to a foreign corporation for the purpose of carrying on its business, as that is a practical dissolution of the corporation, we find no authorities which hold that the stockholders may not authorize a transfer of the property to a new company, receiving . the stock of such company in payment of the purchase price. This is exactly what was done in the case of Holmes & Griggs Manufacturing Co. v. Holmes (& Wessell Metal Co. (127 N. Y. 252), and the act was sanctioned by the court, which held that, even though the transaction were conceded to be ultra vires, the contract having -become executed the title of the
While it is very likely true that Henry Wilson, in making his contract with the defendant, expected that the corporation would remain in existence and continue to sell the goods during the term Of the contract, it is impossible, without making a new contract for the parties, to read into the agreement a covenant on the part of the defendant to remain in existence, or to continue to sell the goods if it was not to its advantage to do so. The case in spirit is in harmony with that of Jugla v. Trouttet (120 N. Y. 21), and it would have been error on the part of the trial court to have speculated upon the question of whether the defendant sold the goods or not. It was for the plaintiff to show that the defendant had sold the goods, and there was no evidence in the case from which a jury would have been authorized to find that the defendant had taken any part in the transaction of the business of the Aeolian Company since it came into the possession of the property of the Mechanical Orguinette Company.
The judgment appealed from should be affirmed, with costs.
All concurred, except Hirsohberg, J., not sitting.
Judgment affirmed, with costs.