Atlantic Trust Co. v. Consolidated Electric Storage Co.

49 N.J. Eq. 402
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedFebruary 15, 1892
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 49 N.J. Eq. 402 (Atlantic Trust Co. v. Consolidated Electric Storage Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Court of Chancery primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Atlantic Trust Co. v. Consolidated Electric Storage Co., 49 N.J. Eq. 402 (N.J. Ct. App. 1892).

Opinion

Van Fleet, V. C.

This is an application for the appointment of a receiver. Both parties are corporations. The complainant was organized under a law of the State of New York, and the defendant under a law of this state. They are the creations of different sovereignties, .and for that reason must be regarded as citizens of different states. The complainant claims to be both a stockholder and a creditor of the defendant, and seeks to have a receiver appointed for it on the ground of its insolvency. The defendant admits that complainant holds some of its stock as trustee, but denies that it is insolvent, and also that the complainant is its creditor. The sum in respect to which the complainant claims to be a creditor is a large one, being nearly $90,000, but its claim, both in whole and in part, is wholly unsupported by an express promise of the defendant. The defendant has never promised to pay a single penny of it in any way. On the contrary, it has always, from the time it was first intimated that a debt existed, disputed its liability, and denied that the complainant was its creditor. But it is not necessary that the complainant should be a creditor. [404]*404Its right, as a stockholder, to ask for the appointment of a receiver, if the pecuniary condition of the defendant is such as to warrant the exercise of that power, is beyond doubt. The question, therefore, whether or not the complainant is a creditor of the defendant is wholly immaterial in this case, except it shall become necessary to decide that question in order to properly determine the other and more important issue of the case, namely, is the defendant insolvent? If the defendant has been shown to be insolvent, excluding the claim of the complainant from among its liabilities, then it is a matter of no importance whether the-complainant is a creditor or not. In that case, the mere fact that it is a stockholder will entitle the complainant to the aid it asks. If, however, it shall, on the contrary, appear that the defendant is not insolvent unless the claim of the complainant is included among its liabilities, then the question whether the complainant is or is not a creditor will necessarily become one of vital importance. And the court will, in that event, be called upon to decide-whether, in a purely summary proceeding where it usually proceeds upon facts which cannot be denied or disputed, and 'where its action must be prompt and decisive in order to be effectual, it has authority to try a question of disjmted debt, respecting which-the evidence may be voluminous, contradictory and extremely uncertain and indeterminate, as preliminary to the determination, of the question whether or not a corporation is in such a state of insolvency as to justify the appointment of a receiver.

The power to dissolve an insolvent corporation and wind it up. is statutory. It formed no part of the original jurisdiction of the court. It was conferred by a statute passed in 1829, and the language by which it was conferred has remained unchanged-from that time to the present. Elm. Dig. 33 §§ 11, 13; Rev. 189 §§ 70, 72. This statute empowers the chancellor, on the-application of a creditor or stockholder, alleging that the corporation in which he is interested has become insolvent, to proceed in a summary way to inquire into the truth of such allegation, and if, upon such inquiry, it shall be made to appear that the corporation has become insolvent,,find shall not be about to. resume its business in a short time, with safety to the public and [405]*405•advantage to the stockholders, he may enjoin it from the further exercise of its franchises, and also from the further transaction of business \ and he may also, at the same time, or at any subsequent time during the continuance of the injunction, if, in his judgment, the circumstances of the case and the ends of justice require, appoint a receiver to dispose of its assets and distribute the proceeds. The exercise of this power to its full extent extinguishes a mere manufacturing or mercantile corporation completely and forever. The power is a strong one. Chancellor Williamson, in Rawnsley v. Trenton Life Ins. Co., 1 Stock. 95, called it an extraordinary power — one that should be exercised with great caution, and only when the circumstances of the case and the ends of justice required its exercise. The statute makes insolvency the jurisdictional fact. The court can do nothing — neither issue an injunction nor appoint a receiver— until insolvency is first established. That, in the language of Governor Pennington, is the foundation of the power, and unless it is satisfactorily made out the court has no jurisdiction. Oakley v. Paterson Bank, 1 Gr. Ch. 173, 176; Parsons v. Monroe Manufacturing Co., 3 Gr. Ch. 187, 206; Brundred v. Paterson Machine Co., 3 Gr. Ch. 294, 305. Chancellor Halstead expressed substantially the same view in Goodheart v. Raritan Mining Co., 4 Halst. Ch. 73, 77. And Mr. Justice Depue, in pronouncing the opinion of the court of errors and appeals, in Newfoundland Railroad Construction Co. v. Schack, 13 Stew. Eq. 222, 226, declared, in describing what averments a bill in such a cáse must contain, that it was not sufficient that the bill should merely allege that the corporation had become insolvent mnd had suspended its business for want of funds to carry on the same, but that the facts and circumstances on which the complainant relies to prove insolvency must be set out. If it is necessary that the facts and circumstances showing insolvency must be alleged, it follows necessarily, according to the uniform •course of judicial procedure, that if such facts and circumstances are denied, they must be proved before the judicial action asked •can be granted. It is thus made manifest that, both according to the plain letter of the statute and the uniform construction it [406]*406has received, the power of the court in such cases depends exclusively on the fact of insolvency, and that until that fact is clearly-established the court .can do nothing. .

The proof in support of a jurisdictional fact must always be-clear and convincing, for the court derives its power from the-fact, and hence, until the fact is shown to exist it has no power.. To doubt in such a case is to deny. The adoption of the opposite rule would unquestionably, in some cases, result in usurpation or an abuse of power. This is the view expressed by Governor Pennington, in Brundred v. Paterson Machine Co., supra. He there said, that where the proofs left the fact of' insolvency in doubt — his words are, “ if it be a balancing question” — and the conduct of tliose-who have had the management of the affairs of the corporation appears to have been upright and just, the court must resolve its doubt against the-application' and refuse to interfere. Nor is it the duty of the court to use its power in all cases where insolvency is shown. Something-more is required. The prerequisites prescribed by the statute-are, that it shall be made to appear that the corporation has become insolvent, and, also, that it will not be able to-resume its-business in a short time with safety to the public and advantage-to the stockholders. The power is only to be used when the ends of justice require its exercise. The court should strive in> such cases to foster and preserve rather than to- strangle or destroy.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
49 N.J. Eq. 402, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/atlantic-trust-co-v-consolidated-electric-storage-co-njch-1892.