Cleary v. Higley

154 Misc. 158, 277 N.Y.S. 63, 1934 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1931
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 19, 1934
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 154 Misc. 158 (Cleary v. Higley) 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
Cleary v. Higley, 154 Misc. 158, 277 N.Y.S. 63, 1934 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1931 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1934).

Opinion

Rosenman, J.

The motions to dismiss the complaint as against all the defendants, made at the close of the plaintiffs’ case, are granted.

This is a derivative stockholders’ action brought for the benefit of Fox Film Corporation. As the proof has developed, the action is divided into two separate and distinct parts.

First, the plaintiffs seek to recover from the defendants all the profits made by the syndicate in the 240,000 shares of stock, totalling the sum of approximately $4,000,000. Second, the plaintiffs seek to recover from the defendants the damage which they claim Fox Film Corporation suffered as a result of the issuance by it on April 17, 1930, of 1,600,000 shares of its class A stock.

It is obvious that from both of these causes of action some of the defendants are completely immune so far as the evidence thus far adduced, or any reasonable inference based thereon, is concerned. The defendants Halsey, Stuart & Co. and Charles B. Stuart have not been connected in any way with either the profits made by the syndicate or the damage caused by the acts of the directors. The defendant Rogers, who was the attorney for the Fox Film Corporation, withdrew from the situation before any of the acts complained of were consummated; and consequently cannot be charged with liability on either branch of the case.

There seems to be no basis on which the Chase National Bank can be held hable either for the profits of the syndicate or for the loss arising to Fox Film Corporation. The only evidence upon which any claim is made against the bank is that the bank loaned the syndicate the funds with which to carry out their plan. No other participation by the bank is alleged or proved. There was no agency shown; there was no pleading or proof that the bank was the alter ego of the securities corporation. Even if it be assumed that the bank had full knowledge of the use to be made of these loans, it could not be made liable for the making of such loans in the ordinary course of its business, as a conspirator with the [161]*161borrower. Therefore, apart from the other considerations hereinafter discussed, the complaint should be dismissed as against these four defendants.

The transactions forming the basis of the complaint concern three separate corporations. It cannot be assumed, nor indeed is it contended, that any one of these corporations was set up as a dummy for the purpose of committing a fraud or of cloaking with the semblance of legality what otherwise would be unlawful. They had all been organized prior to the acts here complained of. Long before the date of the transactions giving rise to this litigation, each of these corporations had had its own separate existence, and had conducted its own separate and independent business transactions. Consequently it is impossible to disregard the various corporate entities here involved.

The basis of the complaint here is the exchange of certain properties and money between these three corporations, pursuant to a larger reorganization plan, in which each of the three corporations participated, and which was designed to clear from debt the Fox Film Corporation and the Fox Theatres Corporation. Specifically, on April seventeenth the Fox Film Corporation issued 1.600.000 shares of its class A stock. It transferred to Fox Theatres Corporation all of this stock, about $8,000,000 in cash and a release of a claim of approximately $19,000,000 which it had against Fox Theatres Corporation. In exchange, it received 660,900 shares of stock of Loew’s, Inc., and a release of a large contingent liability which had arisen on the prior purchase by Fox Theatres Corporation of Loew’s stock. Fox Theatres Corporation thereafter immediately transferred these 1,600,000 shares of Fox Film A stock to General Theatres Equipment, Inc., and received therefor the sum of $48,000,000. The syndicate had obtained for its members an agreement from General Theatres Equipment, Inc., to let it have

240.000 of this block of 1,600,000 shares at thirty dollars per share. Knowing that it was to receive this stock at thirty dollars per share, it proceeded to sell in the open market 120,000 shares at various prices approximating forty-two dollars per share. Therefore, by April eighteenth when the deal was consummated, the syndicate had a clear profit of approximately twelve dollars per share on 120,000 shares of this stock. After April eighteenth it continued to sell the remainder of its block of shares at a further profit. The total profit which it made on the entire block of 240,000 shares was about $4,000,000.

While it is perfectly proper for bankers in a transaction to make a profit for taking the risk involved therein, it is contrary to good conscience and to well-settled principles of equity for a director [162]*162of a corporation to make such profit at the expense of his corporation. The defendant Ingold and the defendant Dodge were directors of General Theatres Equipment, Inc. They were. also participants in the syndicate gains. As such directors they were disqualified from making a profit for themselves by trading in the assets of their corporation. If in violation of their duty they proceeded to make such a profit, they should be compelled by appropriate proceedings to give them up. Not only must they themselves surrender such profits, but those who co-operated with them with knowledge of the facts must likewise disgorge any profits which they have made as a result of the transaction. (Irving Trust Co. v. Deutsch, 73 F. [2d] 121.) The defendants Ingold and Dodge as directors, and the defendant Chase Securities Corporation as a member of the syndicate, are, therefore, hable, so far as the plaintiff’s case goes, for all the profits made by all the members of the syndicate, viz., approximately $4,000,000.

In this connection, as well as in connection with any similar statements elsewhere in this opinion, it is to be noted that this motion to dismiss having been made at the close of the plaintiff’s case, these defendants have not yet presented whatever evidence they may have on this subject.

The corporation entitled to a return of these profits, however, is not the Fox Film Corporation. It is the General Theatres Equipment, Inc. The claim for the return of these profits should not be confused with the claim for the damages sustained by reason of the transfers from Fox Film Corporation to Fox Theatres Corporation. This is not a suit to set aside the transactions of April seventeenth and April eighteenth. It would be obviously impossible to vacate all the transfers herein involved. If this were possible, and if the transfers were set aside so that Fox Film were again to become the owner of the 1,600,000 shares, some claim might be urged that the profits made by the syndicate belong to Fox Film Corporation and should be paid by the syndicate to Fox Film Corporation. However, the action here does not seek to rescind, but actually affirms, the transaction, alleging that because of the transaction the defendants are hable for damages resulting therefrom.

Therefore, it must be definitely taken that these 1,600,000 shares of Fox Film stock became the property of General Theatres Equipment, Inc. The defendants Ingold and Dodge as such directors could not undertake to do part of the financing by buying for themselves and their associates 240,000 out of the 1,600,000 shares and then take the profits arising therefrom. Their duty as directors was to permit General Theatres Equipment, Inc., [163]

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Bluebook (online)
154 Misc. 158, 277 N.Y.S. 63, 1934 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1931, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cleary-v-higley-nysupct-1934.