Clark v. Dodge

199 N.E. 641, 269 N.Y. 410, 1936 N.Y. LEXIS 1402
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 8, 1936
StatusPublished
Cited by77 cases

This text of 199 N.E. 641 (Clark v. Dodge) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Clark v. Dodge, 199 N.E. 641, 269 N.Y. 410, 1936 N.Y. LEXIS 1402 (N.Y. 1936).

Opinion

Crouch, J.

The action is for the specific performance of a contract between the plaintiff Clark and the'defendant Dodge, relating to the affairs of the two defendant corporations. To the complaint a joint answer by the three defendants was interposed, consisting of denials and a separate defense and counterclaim. To the separate defense and counterclaim a reply was made. The defendant then moved under rule 112 of the Rules of Civil Practice, and under sections 476, 96 and 279 of the Civil Practice Act, to dismiss the complaint. The motion was made “ on the pleadings in this action and the admissions of the plaintiff ” in two affidavits submitted *413 by him on a prior motion in the action. The alleged admissions are equivocal at best, and clearly were not intended to be treated as a part of a pleading or made to avoid some question arising on the pleadings.” (Lloyd v. R. S. M. Corporation, 251 N. Y. 318, 320.) We shall deal, therefore, with the questions here presented in the light of the facts most favorable to plaintiff appearing in the pleadings only.

Those facts, briefly stated, are as follows: The two corporate defendants are New Jersey corporations manufacturing medicinal preparations by secret formulse. The main office, factory and assets of both corporations are located in the State of New York. In 1921, and at all times since, Clark owned twenty-five per cent and Dodge seventy-five per cent of the stock of each corporation. Dodge took no active part in the business, although he was a director and, through ownership of their qualifying shares, controlled the other directors of both corporations. He was the president of Bell & Company, Inc., and nominally general manager of Hollings-Smith Company, Inc. The plaintiff Clark was a director and held the offices of treasurer and general manager of Bell & Company, Inc., and also had charge of the major portion of the business of Hollings-Smith Company, Inc. The formulas and methods of manufacture of the medicinal preparations were known to him alone. Under date of February 15,1921, Dodge and Clark, the sole owners of the stock of both corporations, entered into a written agreement under seal, which after reciting the stock ownership of both parties, the desire of Dodge that Clark should continue in the efficient management and control of the business of Bell & Company, Inc., so long as he should remain faithful, efficient and competent to so manage and control the said business;” and his further desire that Clark should not be the sole custodian of a specified formula but should share his knowledge thereof and of the method of manufacture with a son of Dodge, provided, *414 in substance, as follows: That Dodge during his.lifetime and, after his death, a trustee to be appointed by his will, would so vote his stock and so vote as a director that the plaintiff (a) should continue to be a director of Bell & Company, Inc. and (b) should continue as its general manager so long as he should be faithful, efficient and competent;” (c) should during his life receive one-fourth of the net income of the corporations either by way of salary or dividends; and (d) that no unreasonable or incommensurate salaries should be paid to other officers or agents which would so reduce the net income as materially to affect Clark’s profits. Clark on his part agreed to disclose the specified formula to the son and to instruct him in the details and methods of manufacture; and further, at the end of his life to bequeath his stock — if no issue survived him — to the wife and children of Dodge.

It was further provided that the provisions in regard to the division of net profits and the regulation of salaries should also apply to the Hollings-Smith Company.

The complaint alleges due performance of the contract by Clark and breach thereof by Dodge in that he has failed to use his stock control to continue Clark as a director and as general manager, and has prevented Clark from receiving his proportion of the income, while taking his own, by causing the employment of incompetent persons at excessive salaries, and otherwise.

The relief sought is reinstatement as director and general manager and an accounting by Dodge and by the corporations for waste and for the proportion of net income due plaintiff, with an injunction against further violations.

The only question which need be discussed is whether the contract is illegal as against public policy within the decision in McQvade v. Stoneham, (263 N. Y. 323), upon the authority of which the complaint was dismissed by the Appellate Division.

“ The business of a corporation shall be managed by its *415 board of directors.” (General Corporation Law [Cons. Laws, ch. 23], § 27.) That is the statutory norm. Are we committed by the McQuade case to the doctrine that there may be no variation, however slight or innocuous, from that norm, where salaries or policies or the retention of individuals in office are concerned? There is ample authority supporting that doctrine (e. g., West v. Camden, 135 U. S. 507; Jackson v. Hooper, 76 N. J. Eq. 592). But cf. Salomon v. Salomon & Co. ([1897] A. C. 22, 44), and something may be said for it, since it furnishes a simple, if arbitrary, test. Apart from its practical administrative convenience, the reasons upon which it is said to rest are more or less nebulous. Public policy, the intention of the Legislature, detriment to the corporation, are phrases which in this connection mean little. Possible harm to bona fide purchasers of stock or to creditors or to stockholding minorities have more substance; but such harms are absent in many instances. If the ' enforcement of a particular contract damages nobody — ; not even, in any perceptible degree, the public — one sees no reason for holding it illegal, even though it impinges i; slightly upon the broad provision of section 27. Damage suffered or threatened is a logical and practical test, and has come to be the one generally adopted by the courts. (See 28 Columbia Law Review, 366, 372.) Where the~> directors are the sole stockholders, there seems to be no ¡; objection to enforcing an agreement among them to vote | for certain people as officers. There is no direct decision j to that effect in this court, yet there are strong indications j that such a rule has long been recognized. The opinion hr Manson v. Curtis (223 N. Y. 313, 325) closed its discussion by saying: The rule that all the stockholders by their universal consent may do as they choose with the corporate concerns and assets, provided the interests of creditors are not affected, because they are the complete owners of the corporation, cannot be invoked here.” That was because all the stockholders were not parties to the agree *416 ment there in question. So, where the public was not affected,

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Bluebook (online)
199 N.E. 641, 269 N.Y. 410, 1936 N.Y. LEXIS 1402, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clark-v-dodge-ny-1936.