Bijur v. Bijur Motor Appliance Co.

121 A. 6, 1 N.J. Misc. 218, 1923 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 85
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedApril 24, 1923
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 121 A. 6 (Bijur v. Bijur Motor Appliance 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
Bijur v. Bijur Motor Appliance Co., 121 A. 6, 1 N.J. Misc. 218, 1923 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 85 (N.J. Ct. App. 1923).

Opinion

Bentley, V. C.

This bill is for a receiver and is filed against the Bijur Motor Appliance Company, a corporation of the State of Delawaré, authorized ‘to do business in this state. It is filed by the complainant on behalf of himself and all other stockholders and creditors of the company who wish to come in and contribute to the expense of this suit. An independent bill was filed simultaneously by Lionello Perera., and by agreement of all the parties he is to 'be considered as a co-complainant.

The defendant is the successor of the Bijur Motor Lighting [219]*219Company which, finding itself in financial difficulties during the war, was placed in the hands of receivers. Out of that litigation there came a reorganization and the formation of the present company. The reorganization was financed by the General Electric Company, which thereupon became and has ever since been the principal stockholder and creditor.

The General Electric Company now owns nine thousand seven hundred and fifty shares of the common stock of the defendant company out of a total issue of ten thousand shares, five thousand shares of the first preferred stock of the defendant which is the entire issue of -that class, and two thousand six hundred and sixty-seven shares of second preferred stock out1 of three thousand one hundred and twenty-five issued. In addition, it has advanced and loaned, upon demand notes, $1,300,000, which is now due and owing from the defendant and, furthermore, has purchased $1,050,800 of notes issued by the defendant to other creditors, so that it has acquired all of the debts of the Bijur Motor Appliance Company except $7,900, excluding ordinary current expenses.

The complainant, Harry Bijur, owns one hundred and eighty-nine and one-half shares of second preferred stock and $1,500 of corporate notes; and the complainant Perera is the holder of eighty-seven and one-half shares of the second preferred stock; so that in the complainants there is not represented any of the common stock or the first preferred stock.

The bill charges., that until faced with the conditions consequent upon the world war the defendant’s predecessor was operated under a capitalization of $312,500, at profits ranging from $150,000 to $300,000 a year, and that since the control thereof has come into the hands of 'the General Electric Company the business has been operated at a constantly-increasing loss, until to-day the company is insolvent. That the defendant and its predecessors were organized and conducted for the purpose of manufacturing the necessary machinery for the starting and lighting of automobiles, and that- before the reorganization mentioned above the defendant’s predecessor, or the inventor, before conveying his rights in his [220]*220patents, licensed the Eclipse Machine Company, for a very smaE consideration, to manufacture under the inventor’s patents, which license has been the subject of litigation which has eventually terminated in upholding the validity of the same. Therefrom, the complainants charge, has arisen a situation whereby between them the defendant and the Eclipse Machine Company' enjoy the control of the manufacture of such devices throughout the world.

On March 23d, 1923, upon notice as prescribed by section 64u of the Corporation act of the State of Delaware, a stockholders’ meeting was held in Hoboken, at the plant of the defendant, where authority was voted by the stockholders to the directors to make sale of all the property of 'the defendant for a sum not less than $240,000, after it was explained to the stockholders that the defendant’s competitor, the Eclipse Machine Company, had -agreed to purchase the plant to be sold for the sum of $240,000. It should be said, in passing, that such sale was not to include cash in bank, claims for excess 'taxes paid, and certain other ehoses in action, but- was, however, to include all patents and patent rights of the defendant.

The insolvency of the corporation is not only abundantly shown but is conceded. So that it becomes a question whether, in its discretion, the court should continue the receiver or discharge him. The argument proceeded upon this theory and the dispute between the parties was whether the directors could and would dispose of the defendant’s assets to the best advantage of all the stockholders and creditors or whether a receiver would discharge that function to better advantage notwithstanding the increased burden of expense. Since the argument, however, there has been presented a further question as to whether or not the directors, under any circumstances, can make a sale of all or any of the assets of the company, in contemplation of the sixty-fourth section of our Corporation act.

The affidavits presented upon behalf of the defendant do not materially challenge the allegations of the bill except [221]*221to deny that the consummation of the contract with the Eclipse Machine Company will establish a monopoly of the starting and lighting industry in that corporation, with which denial I am inclined to agree,’ because of the fact that it is conceded that at least three of the leading American makes of automobiles do not use a system manufactured under the Bijur patents, namely, the Dodge, t'he Buiek, and the Cadillac.

The principal argument of the complainants is that the patents protecting the inventions made by Mr. Bijur are of enormous value, whereas they are listed in the defendant s statement as having but a nominal value of $8,921.38. The defendant has shown conclusively, so far as subsequent improvement patents are concerned, they are now in litigation and the decisions to date strongly indicate that they are of no value whatsoever.

But the complainant's say, even so, the original basis patent is the one under which the Eclipse Machine Company’s license was made and that the Eclipse Machine Company is making annually a profit of upwards of a million dollars in its manufacture of- starting and lighting devices. It appears that such devices made by the Eclipse Machine Company are the well-known Bendix Drive, of which only a part is manufactured under the Bijur license. The Eclipse Machine Company manufactures an individual part of such device which it sells in tremendous quantities to other manufacturers, and it is impracticable for the defendant to compete in such a trade. The defendant has been manufacturing not a part but a complete starting and lighting ■ system which apparently is used only in the very expensive grade of automobiles such as the Winton and the Eolls-Boyce. In short, it appears that the difficulty with the defendant’s business has been that it is making a high-grade appliance for which there is not a sufficient market to turn them out in production quantities so as to be commercialfy a success.

There has been no direct evidence- upon-'the part of the complainants as to the market value of the Bijur patent and, of course, this burden is upon them: The allegation is made with great- earnestness that such patent or patents are of very [222]*222great value. But they are assertions only. It does not appear that either Mr. Bijur or Mr. Perera are experts in this matter and, on the other hand, the affidavits of trained lawyers, specializing in patent law, justify the value placed upon such patents by the defendant..

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Bluebook (online)
121 A. 6, 1 N.J. Misc. 218, 1923 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 85, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bijur-v-bijur-motor-appliance-co-njch-1923.