Bank of China, Japan & the Straits, Ltd. v. Morse

61 N.E. 774, 168 N.Y. 458, 1901 N.Y. LEXIS 894
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 1, 1901
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 61 N.E. 774 (Bank of China, Japan & the Straits, Ltd. v. Morse) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bank of China, Japan & the Straits, Ltd. v. Morse, 61 N.E. 774, 168 N.Y. 458, 1901 N.Y. LEXIS 894 (N.Y. 1901).

Opinion

Martin, J.

This action was to enforce a claim against the defendant as a shareholder of the plaintiff company under an alleged scheme- or agreement for winding up the plaintiff and transferring its property and business to another company. The plaintiff seeks to recover a personal judgment against the defendant as the holder of six hundred and eighty-five shares in the plaintiff company for the whole amount unpaid thereon for the benefit of a new corporation in which he has no interest. ■ The plaintiff has retired from business, is being voluntarily wound up, and all its creditors have been paid. A. new company was organized which has taken to itself the business and property of the plaintiff. It claims to have thereby acquired the right to enforce payment of calls against the defendant and other shareholders to the full amount unpaid ón their shares, or rather to indirectly enforce such payment through an action by the plaintiff, a recovery in which would alone benefit the new corporation an-d its stockholders.

*465 The plaintiff is an English company and on December 6, 1889, was incorporated by virtue of the English Companies Act under the name of the “ Trust and Loan Company of China, Japan and the Straits, Limited.” Its main office was in London, but it had branches and agencies in China, Japan, India and other eastern countries. The plaintiff was not organized to do banking, but to loan money, make advances on mortgages and other securities, and to do a general trust and agency business. The plaintiff’s memorandum of association seems to contain no provision authorizing it to do a banking business. At first it did not attempt it, and until 1891 did not even post in its office the notice required of all English banks under the Companies Act. .Its original capital was one million pounds, divided into 99)815 ordinary shares of ten pounds each, of which one pound five shillings-was paid, and 1,250 founders’ shares of one pound each which were fully paid up. In February, 1891, it declared a dividend of sixteen per cent on ordinary shares and eight hundred per cent on founders’ shares, besides carrying fifty-five thousand pounds to its reserve fund. At the same time it voted to increase its capital to two million pounds by issuing one hundred thousand additional shares of ten pounds each on which one pound five shillings was to be paid up, and to change its name to its present title. At that time it was stated that the business of the company would continue on its former lines. At the end of the second year the company reported a surplus of 223,629 pounds, besides its paid-up capital, and a dividend of eight per cent on the ordinary shares was declared February 29, 1892. In January, 1893, in the report of the company it was announced that it had lost its entire reserve fund and a part of its capital. In September, 1893, the plaintiff’s directors sent out a call of twenty shillings per share, stating in their notices that it was made in consequence of the.company having arranged to do general exchange business in China and Japan. This call was quite generally resisted by shareholders as being a departure from the plaintiff’s business and beyond *466 its powers. The defendant received no notice of. that call. In 1891 the defendant, in Yokohama, Japan, purchased through brokers six hundred and fifty ordinary shares of the plaintiff’s stock. They were paid for in Japan and dividends were paid there. These shares, with those purchased through an agent elsewhere, were registered in Hong Kong, and comprise the six hundred and eighty-five shares, to recover a call upon which this action .was brought. Late in 1894 the plaintiff having practically abandoned the trust and loan business, and its shareholders having refused to pay calls for doing banking business, its directors decided to adopt a scheme which provided for a new company to take over the business and property of the plaintiff and to carry on banking in all its branches. The scheme adopted in effect provided that any stockholder of the plaintiff who did not go. into the new company, taking share for share, should pay the total amount unpaid upon his old shares; but if a stockholder took shares in the new company, no calls upon the old shares were to be paid to the plaintiff and only three pounds fifteen shillings were to be paid to the new company. Hominally the .new shares were eight pounds each, but five shillings were to be paid for each share in the plaintiff company surrendered by those coming into the new scheme, leaving four pounds which might be called up,' but the stockholders in the new company were informed it would never be needed and it has never been required. December 3, 1894, this scheme was outlined to certain shareholders and creditors. On the same day an extraordinary meeting of shareholders was called for December twelfth to consider and, if thought best, to adopt by special resolution under section 161 of the Companies Act the scheme for the so-called reconstruction. The meeting was held December twelfth in London, but the defendant was in Hew York and had no notice of it. Ho shareholder from <>any other country was present in person or by proxy. Out of two hundred thousand shares, over one hundred and twenty-five thousand were on the eastern register for China and Japan, and less than seventy-five thousand on *467 the London register. The notices of the meeting of shareholders were not mailed for transmission to the plaintiff’s agents at Yokohoma where the defendant’s address was registered until December 7,1894, so that a notice could not reach there until after the meeting was held, five days later. The only notice that it is pretended the defendant had of this meeting was a posting of it on the wall of the plaintiff’s office in London some time in December. There is no evidence that even one-tenth of the capital issued was represented at that meeting. Still, three resolutions were voted by it: 1. That the company be voluntarily wound up with a view to reconstruction, and that its secretary be named as liquidator; 2. That the liquidator be authorized to consent to the formation of a new company under such name as the directors approved, with a memorandum and articles already prepared with the privity and approval of the directors; and 3. That the draft agreement submitted between the company, its liquidator and a blank company be approved and the liquidator be authorized, pursuant to section 161 of the Companies Act, to enter into an agreement with ¿such new company in the terms of the drafted agreement, and to carry it into effect with such, if any, modifications as he might see fit to assent to. Notices convening meetings at which resolutions are to be submitted in favor of proceedings to wind up a corporation under section 161 of the Companies Act, are required to clearly inform the shareholders that it is proposed to proceed under that section. The notices in the proceedings to wind up the plaintiff contained that statement. A new company under the name of “The Bank of China and Japan, Limited,” was registered December 28, 1894, the day of the confirmatory meeting. The same persons were directors of the new company as were directors of the plaintiff and the memorandum and articles previously prepared by them were adopted. On the same day the agreement was signed, and the liquidator applied to the court to summon a meeting of the creditors and to procure • the court’s sanction to the s«lieme so that the creditors would be bound. At the same time a supervision order in the

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Bluebook (online)
61 N.E. 774, 168 N.Y. 458, 1901 N.Y. LEXIS 894, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bank-of-china-japan-the-straits-ltd-v-morse-ny-1901.