Chase v. Lord

23 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 369
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1878
StatusPublished

This text of 23 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 369 (Chase v. Lord) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chase v. Lord, 23 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 369 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1878).

Opinion

DANIELS, J.:

The Columbian Insurance Company, which was a corporation formed for the purpose of carrying on the business of marine insurance under the authority of chapter 308 of the Laws of 1849, on the 1st of February, 1865, issued a policy of insurance to the plaintiff in the sum of $50,000 on the ship Eagle Wing and her freight. During the continuance of this policy she became a total loss, and notice of such loss was given to the company about the 11th of October, 1865. The company became insolvent early in the year 1866, and its affairs passed into the hands of, and were closed up by receivers appointed by this court. The assets proved insufficient to pay any considerable portion of the debts of the company, and this action was prosecuted against the defendants to recover the amount due and owing under the policy on account of this loss. The testator was one of the associates in the organization of the corporation, and also a stockholder while it continued in the transaction of its business. The company was formed in the year 1857. Its capital, by the charter adopted, was declared to be the sum of $500,000, divided into 5,000 shares of $100 each, with liberty to increase it, by issuing additional shares of stock, to an amount not exceeding $1,000,000. This was still further increased by chapter 127 of the Laws of 1864, Avhich provided that the capital of the company should consist of $1,000,000, with liberty to increase it from time to time to the sum of $5,000,000, and under this authority, by resolutions of the board of directors, the capital was afterwards advanced, first to the sum of [371]*371$2,500,000, aucl next to tbe sum of $3,500,000. The testator subscribed to eacb issue of stock in the advancement of the capital of the company, and paid in full all his several subscriptions, and all the stock which the company proposed to issue was subscribed for, and all the subscriptions under the last issue of stock provided for in advancing the capital of the company were paid, except those of three persons, who subscribed for 597 shares of the par value of $59,700 which was never paid. The last advance was made m the amount of the capital on the 30th of January, 1865, and on the first of the following month the policy in suit was issued.

Before the company commenced doing business, it received in cash subscriptions the sum of '$152,000 ; and the certificate of three persons, appointed by the Comptroller to make an examination of the facts, was made upon oath, stating that $150,000 in cash had been paid in, and was then possessed by and was a part of the capital of the company. No other certificate was at any time made showing the payment of any portion of its capital; and this was held at the trial to be insufficient to constitute a compliance with what the statute had required for the legal organization of marine insurance companies. For that reason it was further held that the testator, as a corporator and stockholder in the company, had become personally liable for the loss sustained by the plaintiff under the policy, and a verdict was accordingly directed against the defendants, who. were his executors. Whether these rulings •were correct is consequently the controlling point, required to be decided in the disposition of these appeals.

In order to form a company under chapter 308 of the Laws of 1849, it was necessary that not less than thirteen persons should associate and file in the office of the Secretary of State a declaration, signed by them, expressing their intention to form such company. That was required to comprise a copy of the charter proposed to be adopted by them ; and notice of their intention was * then required to be published for at least six weeks in a public newspaper in the county in which it was proposed to locate the company. (Laws of 1849, chap. 308, pp. 441, 442, §§ 1, 3.) After doing that the associates were empowered to open books for subscriptions to the capital stock of the company, and to keep them open [372]*372■until the full amount specified in tbe charter was subscribed; or, in case the business was proposed to be conducted on the plan of mutual insurance until propositions and agreements for insurance were entered into with at least 100 applicants, the premiums on which should bo $300,000, to entitle the company to do business in the city of New York, where this company was located. (Laws of 1849, §§ 4, 5.) The associates provided in their charter that the company to be formed by them might, from time to time, receive notes for premiums in advance of persons intending to receive its policies, after $200,000 of its capital stock should be subscribed for and actually paid. But it did not appear that anything had been done under that authority. The case proceeded on the theory that the company became incorporated, and afterward transacted business as a stock company; and in that view alone it will be material to consider it. As such it could not do business on a smaller capital than the sum of $150,000. (Laws of 1849, § 5.) But the amount to which that might be extended was no otherwise restrained, than by the requirement that whatever it might be it should be stated in the charter. (Laws of 1849, § 9, subd. 4.) And it was not provided that the business of the company could be commenced before the whole amount of its capital should be paid in. What was in terms provided was simply in the nature of a restraint, and that was that no company should be organized in the city and county of New York on any smaller amount of capital than $150,000. There was nothing in this section of the act authorizing any company organized under it to do business before all its capital, whatever that might be, was subscribed for and paid. It merely prohibited the organization of companies with less than the prescribed fund ; while the preceding section, declaring that the books might be kept open before the organization should be completed until the full amount of capital specified in the charter was subscribed, contemplated that the object so provided for would, in fact, be accomplished. It was the capital on which the company was to be organized that the act provided for and proposed to regulate; and it the company was not possessed of that capital it was not lawful for it to do business. (Laws of 1849, chap. 308, § 7.)

A construction that would not permit a company organized [373]*373on a capital of $150,000 to do business until it bad all been paid in, and would, at tbe same time, allow another, whose capital might be millions, to proceed with its business after it had secured the same amount, would be entirely unreasonable, and it should have plain terms to warrant it before it could be properly adopted. There is nothing in this portion of the act which would warrant the conclusion that this was all that was intended to be required. If it had been, then the capital of the company, required to bo stated in the charter, would form no criterion whatever of its safety or business competency; but it might be made the artifice and device of deception and fraud, entailing loss beyond computation upon those who, in their business, could be induced to measure the ability of the company by the statement of what its capital might be, instead of what it actually was.

This was not the policy nor the terms of the law; but its provisions, though obscurely expressed, were evidently intended to require that the company should become fully possessed of all the capital which its charter was to state as that which was to be employed by it in the business.

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Bluebook (online)
23 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 369, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chase-v-lord-nysupct-1878.