Card v. Moore

68 A.D. 327, 74 N.Y.S. 18
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJanuary 15, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 68 A.D. 327 (Card v. Moore) 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
Card v. Moore, 68 A.D. 327, 74 N.Y.S. 18 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1902).

Opinion

Jenks, J.:

The question in this case relates to the title to the property and profits of a. business carried on from August .2.6,1897, to March 5, 190.1. Card, the plaintiff, and Morehouse made a written agreement on August 26, 1897. That agreement provided that Card, who was a lawyer licensed to practice in the State of Connecticut, together with Morehouse and Crandall, should form a corporation to be known as, the Salisbury Carbonate Iron Company, of Connecticut, with a capital stock of $30,000, and the company to be formed to the extent of obtaining the name, the election of directors and officers of said corporation, said Morehouse to be the president, and treasurer, and said Card to be the vice-president and secretary of said corporation,” that after the said name was obtained as aforesaid, the business be carried on under said name and Morehouse should own one-half and Card one-half thereof; that Crandall should be director but should have no interest; that Morehouse and Card should carry on the business as-a copartnership between them in the said name, and that they [329]*329should divide equally the profits and share equally the losses. The plaintiff contributed $2,000 in cash and stock in the Hamilton Iron and Steel Company, his half interest in the Kelley Mining Company and the Chatham Furnace Company as his half share. More-house made an equal contribution, but Crandall did not contribute. On August 31, 1897, articles of association were drawn up by Card and executed between Card, Morehouse and Crandall, whereby the corporation was located in the town of Salisbury, county of Litchfield and State of Connecticut, and the subscribers were stated to be J. J. Morehouse, of Salisbury, Conn., two hundred and eighty shares; A. M. Card, of Sharon, Conn., nineteen shares, and E. L. Crandall, of Hew York, one share. In September, 1897, these articles were filed with the town clerk of Salisbury, Conn., and published in a newspaper of Litchfield county. The business was carried on thereafter for fifteen years, with Morehouse in possession, management and control thereof. During that period, and on April 11, 1900, an agreement was made between the “ Salisbury Carbonate Iron Company, of Chapinville, Connecticut, a coi’poration duly organized and existing under the laws of the state of Connecticut,” Morehouse and Card, whereby Card abrogated and canceled his right and title and interest in a certain contract and transferred his interest to Morehouse and the said company, and Morehouse and the said company in turn discharged Card, and whereby Card agreed to resign as secretary and director, and to cause Crandall to resign, and also agreed to perform any act or to sign any paper, or to make any statement at the request of More-house which would “ aid or facilitate the perfecting of the corporate existence of the said company.” The agreement contained other provisions of adjustment and settlement not material to this case On J une 28, 1900, Morehouse and Card executed a further written agreement reciting that the parties had been in business together in different enterprises for fifteen years in the Kelley Mining Company, Salisbury Iron Company, and other enterprises,- and reading that whereas both of said parties were and are now equal owners and partners in said Salisbury Carbonate Iron Company, as heretofore under this agreement, and whereas there has (sio) been various agreements made between said parties and not carried out as they should have been,” it was covenanted and agreed that Morehouse and Card [330]*330“ have been, now are and shall continue to be joint owners in the Salisbury' Carbonate Iron Company, as heretofore, each owning the one-half thereof; ” that the same shall continue and be run the same as at the present time, each to receive half the profits and to bear half the losses, and that all agreements theretofore made regarding the company should be merged in this agreement, which, with all obligations, should be binding on the heirs and assignees of the parties. Morehouse died on March 5, 1901. Upon his death the defendants Moore and Mallory took possession of the assets and property of the Salisbury Carbonate Iron Company, and refused to surrender it to Card, and have ever since been in possession. On April 2, 1901, the defendants Moore and Mallory, as a majority of the directors of the Salisbury Carbonate Iron Company, adopted the original articles of association of Morehouse, Card and Crandall, and Crandall, on August 31, 1897, certified that they were published in a newspaper of the county of Litchfield on September 9, 1897, and caused the same to be filed in the office of the Secretary of State, as appeared by a certificate on April 3, 1901. The .existence of the corporation thus born in 1901 is not attacked in this suit. Indeed, the plaintiff pleads its existence and alleges that he made it a party for the reasons that the defendants Moore and Mallory claimed possession of the assets of the said partnership business heretofore conducted under the corporate name of the Salisbury Carbonaté Iron Company, as stockholders and directors. The line of demarcation between the business conducted under the corporate name and the corporation of the same name, which was perfected in 1.901 upon the basis of the procedure taken in 1897, should be kept clear before us in order to understand the complications of this case.

Thus, chronologically, I have detailed such facts as are necessary in order to understand the objections raised by the appellants against the judgment of the Special Term.

The plaintiff asserts title to the property and the profits of this business as the sole surviving partner of Morehouse, and seeks to enjoin the defendants from dominion over the property^ to compel them to deliver it to him, to accdunt and to respond in damages. The defendants contend that the property is theirs as directors and officers of the Salisbury Carbonate Iron Company. The learned Special Term (Dickey, J., presiding) found that upon the agreement [331]*331of June 28, 1900, Card and Morehouse entered into partnership in the business theretofore and since August 28,1897, conducted under the name of the Salisbury Carbonate Iron Company; that Card was the sole surviving partner; that the statutes of Connecticut required, as a condition precedent, the filing of a certificate in the office of the Secretary of State before the corporation could be formed; that this was not done prior to March 6, 1901, and only after the death of Morehouse; that Card and Morehouse never intended to form a corporation, and gave judgment for the plaintiff.

The learned counsel for the appellant contends, first, that there was a corporation formed by Card, Morehouse and Crandall. He says in his brief that “ the only step omitted was the filing of one of two duplicate certificates. One was duly and timely filed in the office of the town clerk of Salisbury, Conn. * * * The incorporators neglected to file the other in the office of the secretary óf state.” This is hardly accurate. For it assumes that the duplicate to be filed in the office of the town clerk is of the same potency and effect as that filed in the office of the Secretary of State. Extracts from statutes of Connecticut for the formation of corporations were read in evidence. (Glen. Stat. of Conn. [Revision 1887].) The germane provisions are as follows: Sec. 1944.

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Bluebook (online)
68 A.D. 327, 74 N.Y.S. 18, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/card-v-moore-nyappdiv-1902.