Burden v. Burden

8 A.D. 160, 40 N.Y.S. 499, 1896 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 2308
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJuly 1, 1896
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 8 A.D. 160 (Burden v. Burden) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Burden v. Burden, 8 A.D. 160, 40 N.Y.S. 499, 1896 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 2308 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1896).

Opinion

Judgment affirmed, with costs, on opinion in the court below.

All concurred.

The following is the opinion of the court below :

Edwards, J.:

The careful examination by the court of the very voluminous testimony in this case, required for the purpose of making its rulings on 400 propositions of fact and of law which have been submitted to it by counsel, has involved so large an expenditure of time that it must confine any further consideration of the questions presented to some of those which are deemed to be of the most importance, and to which many of those passed upon are only subsidiary.

A part of the relief sought is to have the certificate of November 26, 1884, increasing the number of the trustees of the Burden Iron Company from three to fi ve, adjudged to be invalid, and to restrain the additional trustees from exercising any of the functions of their office. I apprehend that the true solution of this question depends npon the construction to be given to the promoters’ agreement, which was executed simultaneously with the certificate of incorporation of the Burden Iron Company. A brief history of the facts preceding and inducing this agreement and incorporation may render more intelligible some of the controverted questions. For several years prior to June 30, 1881, the plaintiff and his brother, the defendant James A. Burden, had been engaged, as equal partners, in the manufacture of iron in the city of Troy, and owned a large and valuable property for the purposes of their business, besides two valuable mansion houses, known as Woodside, and occupied by them as residences, a farm of about 170 acres and a large number of shares of stock in various corporations. Differences of opinion as to the management of the business arose from time to time between the brothers, which they, unfortunately, regarded as irreconcilable.

In June, 1881, this uncontrolled feeling culminated in a determi[165]*165nation on the part of James to dissolve the co-partnership, and sncli purpose was communicated, through counsel, to the plaintiff.

To avoid an enforced dissolution, negotiations between them were instituted for the formation of a corporation, not only for the purpose of allaying the existing strife, but also in case of its continuance to preclude the disastrous results which were possible under the co-partnership. These negotiations resulted in the assent of the plaintiff to the terms and conditions persistently insisted on by James; but, notwithstanding the fact that the plaintiff’s submission to the terms exacted was reluctant, the evidence clearly shows that it was with his full knowledge and appreciation of the possible consequences to himself. These terms were, in brief, that the entire partnership property should be transferred to a corporation to be organized, should be capitalized at $2,000,000, and that the stock should be distributed among the two brothers and the defendant John L. Arts, and should be subject to the provisions contained in the following so-called promoters’ agreement, which was executed by the two brothers and Arts on June 30, 1881:

“For value received, it is agreed between the undersigned, who are • the sole associates of the Burden Iron Company, that the stock of said company shall be taken, owned and held as follows, to wit:
“ James A. Burden shall take, own and hold 1,000 shares; I. Townsend Burden shall take, own and hold 998 shares, and John L. Arts shall take, own and hold 2 shares.
“ The said James A, Burden agrees to and with the said I. Townsend Burden, that if he shall, at any time, sell or assign 998 shares of his said stock, then and in such case he will, without any consideration for the same, transfer the other two shares of his said stock to the said I. Townsend Burden, his executors, administrators or assigns. All the profits arising from the business of the said corporation shall be divided equally between the said James A. Burden and I. Townsend Burden. The said Arts agrees for himself, his executors and administrators, that in case of a sale of any or all of his said stock that said James A. Burden and I. Townsend Burden shall be entitled to the same severally, share and share alike, at and for its par value; and in case either of them shall refuse in writing to make such purchase then the other shall be entitled to his half, or the whole thereof, as he may elect. It is further agreed that said [166]*166Arts shall not receive any dividends, income or profit from the said corporation, or its business, but that in place thereof he shall have and receive a salary to be fixed by the said board of trustees of said corporation.”

On the same day James A. and I. Townsend Burden and John L. Arts, who executed the foregoing agreement, duly executed, acknowledged and filed a certificate, in the form required by statute, whereby the Burden Iron Company was incorporated under the General Manufacturing Act of 1848. This certificate set forth that the signers had associated as a manufacturing corporation to continue for the period of fifty years; that the corporate name is the Burden Iron Company, the amount of capital stock $2,000,000, divided into 2,000 shares of $1,000 each; that the number of trustees is three ; that the names of the trustees who will manage the affairs for the first year are James A. Burden, I. Townsend Burden and John L. Arts, and the operations of the corporation are to be carried on in the city of Troy.

Thereupon all the partnership property of James A. and J. Townsend Burden was transferred by them to the corporation, and it issued its $2,000,000 of stock therefor to the said promoters and incorporators in the proportions provided for in the promoters’ agreement, and they continued to he the sole stockholders and trustees until about November 22, 1884, when the defendant James A. Burden transferred one of his shares of stock to each of his brothers-in-law, the defendants William Irvin and Richard Irvin, Jr.

On November 26, 1884, the defendants Burden and Arts, two of the three trustees, under the statute providing for an increase of the number of trustees, executed and filed a certificate increasing the number from three to five, by the addition of the said William Irvin and Richard Irvin, Jr.

The plaintiff contends that this increase should he adjudged to be invalid, and that the 'additional trustees should be enjoined from exercising any powers as trustees of the corporation. On the motion made by the plaintiff for a temporary injunction, at a Special Term held by Mr. Justice Peckham, the only ground on which the increase of the number of trustees was claimed to be illegal was that the certificate was not made at a meeting of the board of trustees of which the members had notice. The learned justice held that the [167]*167statute providing for an increase of the number of trustees is complied with- if the certificate is signed and acknowledged by a majority of the existing trustees without any meeting of the board of which the members have notice. While the plaintiff does not abandon the ground taken by him at Special Term, he now bases his claim on the further ground that the increase is in contradiction of the promoters’ agreement, which, he maintains, is binding on the corporation. I shall, of course, follow the opinion of Judge Peokhaii and hold that a meeting of the board, on notice to the members, was unnecessary, and shall consider only the other ground now urged by the learned counsel.

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Bluebook (online)
8 A.D. 160, 40 N.Y.S. 499, 1896 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 2308, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/burden-v-burden-nyappdiv-1896.