Breslin v. Fries-Breslin Co.

58 A. 313, 70 N.J.L. 274, 41 Vroom 274, 1904 N.J. LEXIS 112
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedJune 20, 1904
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 58 A. 313 (Breslin v. Fries-Breslin Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Breslin v. Fries-Breslin Co., 58 A. 313, 70 N.J.L. 274, 41 Vroom 274, 1904 N.J. LEXIS 112 (N.J. 1904).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Pitney, J.

In an action upon contract the plaintiff recovered a judgment against the defendant company for $52,306.94, principally for the amount of a balance standing [275]*275to his credit upon defendant’s own books of account, plus interest thereon. The account ran from the month of .June, 1891, until the month of October, 1902, with frequent entries on both sides. The total of the items debited to the company was about $120,000, in'which were numerous items of interest; the credits aggregated about $74,000, leaving a balance of about $46,000. The recovery included additional interest down to the date of judgment. It also included an item of $5,000 for salary, not entered in the books, but which is not now in dispute. The action was commenced in November, 1902.

The defendant is a manufacturing corporation of this state, organized May 20th, 1891. During the entire period covered by the controversy the plaintiff was a stockholder of the company and a member of its board of directors.

That portion of the account which was in controversy consisted of sundry items debited to the company and credited to the plaintiff during the years 1893, 1894, 1896, 1897 and 1898, as his share of the profits of the company’s business. The items, as stated in the plaintiff’s bill of partieulars, are as follows:

1893.
April 25. Cash, part of profits............ $1,496 97 1894. • '
May 13. Cash, share of profits........... 5,286 92
Dec. 13. Cash, l/3 profits........'........ 5,486 67 1896.
July 6. Cash, y3 profits, 6 months....... 6,126 92
Dec. 31. Cash, 1/3 profits, 6 months....... 6,141 02 1897.
July 3. Cash, y3 profits, 6 months....... 6,768 58
Dec. 30. Cash, y8 profits, 6 months....... 6,542 48 1898.
June 30. Cash, y8 profits, 6 months....... ' 9,862 65
Dec. 31. Cash, 1/3 profits, 6 months...... 10,029 94
$57,742 15

[276]*276The case shows' that in the company’s ledger these items were entered simply as “cash,” because they were posted from the cash-book, but that in the cash-book they were entered up as “profits.”

The principal questions raised bjr the bills of exceptions are whether there was any lawful evidence justifying a finding by the jury that these amounts, respectively, were lawfully declared and set apart to the plaintiff as dividends by the board of directors; and if so, whether payment thereof had been demanded before suit brought.

The evidence returned with the bills of exceptions shows that, under the instructions given by the justice presiding at the trial, the jury could reasonably find the following facts: The defendant company1, during the period in question, was successful in business. No question was made that the profits, alleged to have been divided, were in truth earned, and so the prohibition of section 30 of the General Corporation act, as construed in Appleton v. American Malting Co.; 54 Atl. Rep. 454, has no applicaney. It was what is commonly known as a “close corporation.” The original incorporators were six in number — Frederick A. Fries, Thomas J. Breslin (the plaintiff), John M. Carroll, Edward McGill, P. J. Murphy and James G. Carroll. From the incorporation of the company until May 18th, 1893, they were the only stockholders and together constituted the board of directors. The capital stock was originally $50,000, divided into shares of $100 each, and remained at that amount until the date last mentioned. It was he] d as follows: Fries, seventy-five shares; Breslin, seventyr-five shares; John M. Carroll, one hundred shares; McGill, fifty shares; Murphy, one hundred shares; James G. Carroll, one hundred shares. On or before May 18th, 1893, at a meeting attended by all these parties — apparently treated as a meeting of directors rather than of stockholders — a resolution was adopted requiring the conversion of all the original stock, except that held by Fries and Breslin, from ’common into preferred stock, entitled to cumulative preferred dividends at fifteen per cent, per annum. Four of the parties voted in favor of this resolution. Murphy and [277]*277McGill voted in opposition ; they held at the time one hundred and fifty out of five hundred votes — a little less than onetliird. Pursuant to the resolution, and at the same meeting, the secretary wrote across the face of the stock certificates held by the two Carrolls, Murphy and McGill the - words ‘‘Preferred stock, lo per cent, cumulative.” These certificates, or substituted certificates similarly inscribed, have been outstanding at all times since. Tlio jury had a right to find from the evidence that, as a part of the plan of creating “preferred stock,” it was agreed that the stockholders thus preferred should retire from the board of directors and should no longer have any voice in the management of the company, either as directors or by virtue of their ownership of the stock thus preferred. Whether this part of the plan was embodied in a formal resolution does not clearly appear, the minute-book then in use having been lost. It was proven beyond dispute, however, that after May 18th, 1893, neither 'Murphy nor McGill acted at any time as a director. Their stock was purchased by John M. Carroll, Fries and Breslin in the latter part of 1894, or early part of 1895; John M. Carroll taking from Murphy his one hundred shares and Fries and Breslin each taking twenty-five shares of the fifty shares that McGill held. James G. Carroll did not act as director after May 18th, 1893, until some time in 1899, at which time, in order to qualify him as a director, John M. Carroll transferred to him .one share of common stock that the latter acquired after his own original stock had been converted into “preferred stock.”

On May 18th, 1893, and after the three hundred and fifty shares had been converted into “preferred stock,” proceedings were taken to increase the capital stock of the company from $50,000 to $75,000, by the issuance of two hundred and fifty shares of common stock. Of the new issue, John M. (‘arroll took two hundred shares, Fries and • Breslin each twenty-five.

At this point, therefore, assuming the validity of the proceedings to create preferred stock, the status was as follows:

[278]*278Preferred Shares. Common Shares.
John M. Carroll................... 100 200
Fries ............................... 100
Breslin ........................'..... 100
McGill................'........... 50
Murphy.......................... 100
James G. Carroll.................. 100
350 100

From the time when Murphy and McGill sold their holdings until the date, in 1899, when John M. Carroll transferred one share of common stock to James, the holdings ■were as follows':

■ Preferred Common Shares. Shares.
John M. Carroll................... 200 200
Fries ............................

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
58 A. 313, 70 N.J.L. 274, 41 Vroom 274, 1904 N.J. LEXIS 112, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/breslin-v-fries-breslin-co-nj-1904.