72 N.Y.S. 150 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1901
In 1882 the Mechanical Orguinette Company, a domestic corporation, was engaged in manufactnring and selling certain mechanical toys or musical instruments, with its principal offices in the city of New York. At that time the Orguinette company was in litigation with certain parties over the question of the ownership of certain rights in patents, and for the purpose of settling this litigation and placing the business of the corporation upon a safe footing a compromise was effected, in which one Henry Wilson, as the party of the second part in an agreement entered into, granted a license to use all his rights in certain letters patent to the Orguinette company,
Henry Wilson, party of the second part in the agreement above mentioned, died in 1891, leaving a last will and testament, which was subsequently admitted to probate, and the plaintiff in this action has - since the 30th day of September, 1898, been- the administratrix of his estate, with the will annexed. Acting in this capacity the plaintiff brought an action against the Crguinette company to recover the royalties due the estate-of Henry Wilson under the agreement above described, resulting in a judgment, which was duly entered and docketed in the office of the clerk of the county of Kings on the 19th day of December, 1899, for the sum of $25,398.99. A transcript of this , judgment was duly filed in the office of the clerk of the coun ty of New York and an execution issued upon the judgmént, which execution was' returned unsatisfied, whereupon the present action was brought for the; purpose of reaching the assets of the Orguinette ■ company which had been transferred to the HSolian Company, resulting in the judgment appealed from, in which theHlolian Company is directed to account to and deliver over to a. receiver the. sum of $88,932.03, with interest from the 25th day of July, 1887, which sum the defendant is adjudged to hold in trust for the benefit of the Orguinette company and its creditors.
• The appellant urges that the AEolian Company is a distinct legal entity from the Mechanical Orguinette Company, and that the new company is not liable upon the contracts of the old in the absence of fraud, and this general proposition may be conceded without helping the defendants in the present case, for the court at- Special Term has found that there was fraud, and we are convinced -that the evidence is sufficient to support this finding. Upon the appeal in Wilson v. Mechanical Orguinette Co. (57 App. Div. 158) we held, as' a matter of law (and it was the only question decided in that case), 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 cor- ' poration, the JEolian Company. ■ In other words, we decided that the
In the Hurd Case (supra) the court, in commenting on the case of Holmes & Griggs Manufacturing Co. v. Holmes & Wessell Metal Co. (127 N. Y. 252), say: “ The statement in the opinion in that case to the effect that a corporation has power, with the consent of all of its stockholders, to sell its plant to another corporation and to retire from business, taking payment in. the stock of the other corporation, was entirely correct as qualified by the facts before the court. No rights of creditors intervened, the stockholders' had all consented, and the question arose between the parties, to a promissory note given for some of the stock. Here we have an entirely different condition of things. The stockholders consent but the creditor objects. When he demands payment of his claim he is referred to tjie empty shell, which is all that is left of the live corporation whose tangible assets constituted a trust fund for the payment of his debt at the time of its creation.” This is the situation in which the plaintiff in this action was placed, and the judgment of the court below ¡seems to be in entire harmony with that in the Hwrd case, except that it does not appear from the opinion that the defendant was called upon to account for more than enough to meet the demands of the creditor, no evidence of other debts being shown
The appellant urges, however, that even if there is an equitable right to follow the assets of the Orguinette company into the hands of the defendant there is still a complete bar to the recovery in this case on general equitable principles, and that this bar rests upon the grounds of laches, acquiescence and equitable estoppel. We have examined these propositions with care, and we are unable to discover that they have any application to the case at bar. Henry Wilson, it will be remembered, entered into a written agreement by which he was to have an income of three per cent upon the gross wholesale price of all of the goods put upon the market by the Mechanical Orguinette Company in consideration of his grant of a license to the corporation to make use of his patent rights in the manufacture of such instruments. The defendants claim that no payments under this contract were made to Henry Wilson subsequent to 1881, and that there was no liability existing to Henry Wilson upon the transfer of the assets of the Orguinette company to the AEolian Company in 1887, or that if any such liability existed, it was wholly undisclosed and unknown to the stockholders of the ' Automatic Music Paper Company, who surrendered their stock in that company in exchange for stock in the AEolian Company, etc., and that Henry Wilson by his laches and by the acquiescence of himself and his representatives in the transfer to the new company, waived' and lost any rights which he may have had as against the Mechanical
The judgment appealed from should be modified as suggested above, and, as so modified, should be affirmed, with costs. The order amending the pleadings does not seem- to be very material, and the modification of the judgment, in effect conforming it to the original pleadings, sufficiently disposes of that question.
Goodrich, P. J., Hirschberg, Jenks and Sewell, JJ., concurred.
Judgment modified in accordance with the opinion of Woodward, J., and as modified affirmed, with costs.