Briggs v. Cornwell

9 Daly 436
CourtNew York Court of Common Pleas
DecidedJanuary 3, 1881
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 9 Daly 436 (Briggs v. Cornwell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Common Pleas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Briggs v. Cornwell, 9 Daly 436 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1881).

Opinions

Charles P. Daly, Chief Justice.

The evidence shows that the defendant became a stockholder. He received, in [438]*438consideration of the transfer to the “ Citizens’ Gas Light Company of Long Island City,” of his interest in a franchise for laying down gas pipes in Long Island City, twenty shares of that company’s stock. The shares were duly transferred to him upon the books of the company; he received the certificate of the stock, gave a receipt for it, and still held it when this action was brought. Having thus become a stockholder, the liability imposed by the statute was created, and it is no answer to an action to enforce that liability, that he was induced to become a stockholder through false and fraudulent representations to him, by the president of the company, that the stock was “full-paid capital stock, upon which there was no liability of the stockholders.”

The question is not a new one. It was fully considered in respect to an analogous liability in Oakes v. Turquand (E. L. R. 2 H. of L. 325), the decision in which is succinctly stated by Vice-Chancellor Maliks in' Pugh and Shearman’s case (E. L. R. 13 Eq. 572), as follows: that where a man has become a stockholder, no misconduct of the company, or false representation made by them, to induce him to take shares, will release him from bearing the responsibility which he owes to creditors, whatever effect it may have between himself and other creditors, which is the present case; and a like decision was rendered in two other cases (Henderson v. Royal British Bank, 7 El. & Bl. 356; Powis v. Harding, 1 Com. B. N. S. 533).

In the case of The Empire City Bank (6 Abb. Pr. 402), where the defense to the personal liability of stockholders was that the stock was transferred to them by the directors of the bank, with intent to defraud them, the directors knowing that the bank was then insolvent, Judge Mitchell held that whatever right the proof of such facts might give the stockholders to rescind their contract as between them and the parties who sold them the stocks, it gave them no such right as against the creditors of the bank; and in The Matter of the Reciprocity Bank (22 N. Y. 17), Chief Justice Comstock said: “ A person may show, in exoneration of himself, that his name was placed on the hooks of the bank without his authority; but if - a party [439]*439makes an actual purchase of shares, whether from the corporation or an individual stockholder, and voluntarily allows himself to he represented to the world as a stockholder, he must take the responsibility of the situation; equities may exist between him and other parties, but the statute has no regard for such questions. He cannot disown the ownership when it ceases to be a benefit and becomes a burden. And to the same general effect see Ruggles v. Brock (6 Hun, 164); Ellis v. Schmoeck (5 Bing. 521); Spear v. Crawford (14 Wend. 24, 25). When a person has, through fraudulent representations of the seller of the stock or of the company, become a stockholder in a corporation where a personal liability to creditors may, by statute, arise, he can, in the appropriate action, after tendering the stock to the person or company who fraudulently induced him to buy it, and demanding back what he gave for it, be reimbursed for any loss or damage he has sustained, and be relieved thereafter from any further liability as a stockholder; but whilst he continues to be a stockholder his liability, under the statute, to creditors, continues (Wright's case, E. L. R. 12 Eq. 351; Henderson v. Royal British Bank, supra; Ellis v. Schmoeck, supra). The contract by which the defendant became a stockholder, if he was induced to enter into it through fraudulent representations, was not void, but merely voidable (Oakes v. Turquand, supra, pp. 345, 346). Until it was avoided by some act on his part, or adjudged void in a judicial proceeding, he was entitled to whatever benefits or advantages might accrue to him as a holder of the stock ( Wright's case, supra; p. 351; Clarke v. Dickson, 1 El. Bl. & El. 148); and it makes no difference that he did not know that the representation made to him was fraudulent until after the company had become insolvent (Wright's case, supra; Clarke v. Dickson, supra, 148). In becoming a stockholder, he must be held to the knowledge that by the law he would be liable for the debts of the company until a verified certificate that the capital had been paid in was recorded in the office of the county clerk. Whether such a certificate had been recorded or not, could have been ascertained by a simple inquiry at the office of the county clerk; and if he desired to avoid the [440]*440liability imposed by the statute, it was incumbent upon him to make that inquiry before he became a stockholder (Upton v. Tribilcock, 1 Otto [U. S.] 54; Peel's case, E. L. R. 2 Ch. 684; Kincaid's case, Id. 426, 527; Powis v. Harding, 1 Com. B. N. S. 533, 542 ; Henderson v. Royal British Bank, 7 El. & Bl. 363, 364).

If the defendant had paid debts of the company, or advanced money to it, for the payment of its debts, or incurred obligations -for it, in either instance, to the amount of his stock, it would have been a complete defense to this action (Agate v. Sands, 8 Daly, 66; 73 N. Y. 620; Mathez v. Neidig, 72 N. Y. 100). This is not a direct provision of the statute, but an equitable construction put upon it, on the assumption that it was not the design of the framers of it that a stockholder who was a creditor of the company to the full amount of his stock, should be individually liable to another creditor, as he stands upon the same ground, and is entitled to claim under the act, equally with the creditor who is not a stockholder (Briggs v. Penniman, 8 Cow. 392, 393; Garrison v. Howe, 17 N. Y. 458; Tallmadge v. The Fishkill Iron Co., 4 Barb. 389, 390, 391, 392; Bank of Poughkeepsie v. Ibbotson, 24 Wend. 473).

But it was not shown that the defendant had paid debts of the company, or advanced money to it, for that purpose, or incurred any charge or obligation for it. All that appeared was that he was the holder of two coupon bonds for $1,000 each, of the Long Island Gas Light Company, which, by an indorsement upon them, in the handwriting of the president of the Citizens’ Gas Light Company of Long Island City, purported to have been guaranteed by the latter company, and two promissory notes of the Citizens’ Gas Light Company of Long Island City, dated February 10 and March. 10, 1876, payable on demand, for $303. and $305, which bonds and notes were received by the defendant on the 1st of February, 1879, a short time before this action was brought.

It appears, on the face of the bonds, that they were issued in pursuance of an act of the legislature, for the extension and improvement of the works of the company, by which they were made; but upon what consideration, or why the payment [441]*441of them was guaranteed by the Citizens’ Gas Light Company of Long Island City, does not appear. All that appears is a statement that they were taken by one T. Rowland, in satisfaction of a claim which he had, for work done by him, in 1874, either for the Citizens’ Gas Light Company of Long Island City or one of its predecessors:

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9 Daly 436, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/briggs-v-cornwell-nyctcompl-1881.