Colton v. Raymond

41 Misc. 580, 85 N.Y.S. 210
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 15, 1903
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 41 Misc. 580 (Colton v. Raymond) 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
Colton v. Raymond, 41 Misc. 580, 85 N.Y.S. 210 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1903).

Opinion

Greenbaum, J.

A correct comprehension of the issues is necessary in order to give effect to the various portions of the mass of testimony submitted in this case. The complaint alleges that a copartnership in the business known as “A. A. Vantine & Co.” existed between plaintiff and defendant James I. Raymond on April 20, 1894, when the latter, with fraudulent intent to deprive the. former of his alleged interest of $100,000 in said business, induced the plaintiff to organize a joint-stock association by a transfer to it of the [581]*581copartnership assets; that as a part of the said alleged fraudulent scheme 625 shares of stock of the association, representing an alleged value of $275,000, were issued to the plaintiff upon his executing to said defendant Raymond a note of $175,000, subsequently reduced to $165,000, payable with interest at five per cent, on a day certain, the payment of said note being secured by the deposit of the aforesaid 625 shares with Raymond,' “ who promised and agreed that if this was done said note should be paid from plaintiff’s one-fourth of the profits of said association, which should .be divided annually, and that said note should be renewed from time to time until paid out of said profitsthat thereafter large profits were made in the business carried on by said association, but the said Raymond, “ in violation of his promise,” and taking advantage of his ownership of substantially three-fourths of said stock, and of the control he exercised on the board of directors of said association, refused, after demand duly made, to declare any dividends from said profits, and “wrongfully prevented the plaintiff from receiving his share of said profits or from applying the same upon plaintiff’s note, excepting that in the year 1895 one dividend of $15,000 was declared, notwithstanding the profits during the eight years which have elapsed since the organization of said association amounted to over $800,000that ¡not only was plaintiff deprived of the benefits of dividends as aforesaid, but that under threats that plaintiff’s interest of 625 shares would be sold out, he was compelled on or about July 1, 1898, to give a note for $12,-248.36 for alleged overdrafts; that said note was delivered “ on the agreement that it should be paid from plaintiff’s share of the profits, and that until so paid it was to be renewed from time to time.” The complaint then alleges that on or about August 15, 1898, dissensions arose between the .parties, and that thereupon the plaintiff and defendant Raymond agreed to dissolve their previous relations upon the -agreement that plaintiff and his brother and father, who were then employed in said business, would all resign, and that he (plaintiff) would be paid “ his one-fourth interest in the said business less the amount owing by him upon his [582]*582notes as aforesaid;” that said resignations were duly effected, but that although the capital of said association was not only not impaired, but had largely increased by accrued profits on January 1, 1898, said Raymond refused to carry out said agreements or dissolve said association; that as a part of the aforesaid fraudulent schemes the said note of $12,-248.36 was transferred to the defendant, The Manhattan Company, for the purpose of bringing a suit thereon and precluding plaintiff from interposing any defense thereto. The prayer of the complaint asks for a dissolution of the association, an accounting, the appointment of a receiver and that the defendant Manhattan Company be decreed first to resort to certain collateral security in its possession for the payment of said notes, and that any deficiency then resulting be paid by the association and be charged against plaintiff’s interest.” The answers' deny the copartnership, the allegations of fraud, the various alleged agreements relative to extension of time and method of payment of said notes and as to the annual division of profits and the payment of one-fourth interest upon the resignations set forth in the complaint. The answers further plead as a bar. an adjudication in favor of the defendant Raymond in the United States Circuit Court in an action brought against him by plaintiff based upon a complaint containing allegations substantially like those set forth in this action, and in which plaintiff' sought to recover a certain sum of money under the alleged agreement that said Raymond would pay plaintiff the value of one-fourth interest of the business of said “A. A. Vantine & Company.” The- plea of res adjudicada was fully established upon the trial, so that, so far as all the allegations in the complaint which bore upon the alleged agreement of the transfer of a one-fourth interest in the association to plaintiff are concerned, they would seem to have no relation to the issues here presented, excepting possibly as they might throw light upon the issues hereafter to be considered. After plaintiff had presented a vast amount of testimony he was permitted upon the trial to amend the complaint by adding the following allegation: That A. A. Vantine & Company, the association, through its president, James I. Ray[583]*583mond, when he was in control of the association, committed fraud in its management by undervaluing its merchandise in his annual inventories, by paying excessive salaries to himself and his relatives, by appropriating the property of said association to his own use and by falsifying its books, all with the intent to defraud plaintiff and to conceal the profits made by said association.” Stripping the complaint of all the immaterial allegations as to the circumstances leading to the formation of the association and the agreement to purchase a one-fourth interest, a fact which was determined adversely to plaintiff in the United States court, the •only allegations remaining are, first, that the said Eaymond refused to declare any dividends from the profits by reason •of the advantage of his ownership of substantially three-fourths of the stock, for the purpose of preventing the plaintiff from receiving his share of the said profits and applying them on his note; second, that the association, through its president, “ committed fraud in its management by undervaluing its merchandise in its annual inventories, by paying ■excessive salaries to himself and his relatives, by appropriating property of said association to his own use and by falsifying its books — all with the intent to defraud the plaintiff and to-conceal the profits made by the said association.” It is evident that the plaintiff would not be entitled to a decree •of dissolution by reason of the defendant Eaymond’s alleged violation of a promise or agreement to declare dividends from the profits for the purpose of applying them upon plaintiff’s note. There is no allegation of any such agreement between the plaintiff and the association. This brings us to the other .grounds urged for a dissolution and to a consideration of the characteristics that pertain to a joint-stock association, and the power of the court to decree its dissolution. It is not essential for the purposes of this case to indicate the •origin and history of joint-stock associations. It will suffice to refer to such cases as Van Aernam v. Bleistein, 102 N. Y. 355; People ex rel. Platt v. Wemple, 117 id. 136, and People ex rel Winchester v. Coleman, 133 id. 279, for an exposition of their growth and right to existence and incidentally for an appreciation of the difficulty in definitely [584]*584and concisely stating the essential differences between joint-stock associations on the one hand and corporations and copartnerships on the other. In People ex rel. Platt v. .Wemple, supra, 43, it is stated:

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Related

Colton v. Raymond
114 A.D. 911 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1906)

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Bluebook (online)
41 Misc. 580, 85 N.Y.S. 210, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/colton-v-raymond-nysupct-1903.