Consider Parish v. New York Produce Exchange

61 N.E. 977, 169 N.Y. 34, 7 Bedell 34, 1901 N.Y. LEXIS 779
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 10, 1901
StatusPublished
Cited by41 cases

This text of 61 N.E. 977 (Consider Parish v. New York Produce Exchange) 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
Consider Parish v. New York Produce Exchange, 61 N.E. 977, 169 N.Y. 34, 7 Bedell 34, 1901 N.Y. LEXIS 779 (N.Y. 1901).

Opinion

Parker, Ch. J.

The defendant corporation came into existence under the name of the Hew York Commercial Association. Its purposes were declared by the act of incorporation to be:

“ To provide and regulate a suitable room or rooms for a produce exchange in the city of Hew York, to inculcate just and equitable principles in trade, to establish and maintain uniformity in commercial usages, to acquire, preserve and disseminate valuable business information, and to adjust controversies and misunderstandings between persons engaged in business.” (Section 3 of chapter 359, Laws of 1862.)

The name was subsequently changed to that of the Hew York Produce Exchange, hut it continued to he purely a commercial body, making no attempt to enlarge its field of operations beyond that specifically authorized by the act creating it. In the year 1881, however, certain members of the exchange urged that the association should have a life-insurance feature by which, on the death of a member of the association, his widow or next of kin should receive a sum of money as the result of an assessment upon the other members. A committee was appointed to take the matter into consideration and to report their recommendations. The committee, which consisted of seven members, reported some months later, and on the ninth day of January, 1882, recommending what *38 it termed a “ system of gratuity,” optional as to existing, but compulsory as to future members, and, as their plan could only be made effective by an act of the legislature and the amendment of the by-laws of the corporation so as to harmonize therewith, the committee recommended amendments to bj-laws numbered 3, 35 and 42, and the substitution of a new by-law numbered 51 for the existing by-law of that number which was to become number 58.

Stejis were at once taken to submit the recommendations of the committee to the members of the exchange which resulted in their approval by a large majority of the members, and in March of that year the legislature (by chapter 36 of the Laws of 1882) enlarged the purposes of the corporation by providing that in addition to those expressed in the original act it might also “make provision for the widows and families of deceased members.” In reference to the latter purpose section 3 of the act provided as follows:

“ Such present members of said corporation, as shall agree thereto, and all persons who shall hereafter join said corporation, may be assessed such sum as shall be provided in the by-laws of said corporation, upon the death of any such member agreeing thereto, or who shall hereafter join said corporation ; which sum, or such proportion thereof as the by-laws may provide, and such proportion of the surplus income of said corporation as the by-laws may provide may be paid to the widow, children, next of kin of, or other persons dependent upon said deceased member, in such manner as the said by-laws shall prescribe. But no such assessment shall be made upon, and no such payment shall afEect the proportionate share in ■the property of said corporation, of any present member not' consenting thereto.”

The exchange and its members, pursuant to the authority thus conferred, at'once created and put into effect a gratuity system. Briefly, it may be said that the plan contemplated payment, out of assessments collected, to the widow and children of a deceased member the sum of $2,000 or such proportionate part thereof as the subscribing memberships at *39 the time of such death should bear to the full number of memberships of the exchange. In case of death during the second year $3,000 or the proportionate part, the amount of payment increasing by $1,000 for each year after the adoption of the by-law until the maximum amount of $10,000 or said proportionate part should be reached. The gratuity was, in the main, to be paid by an assessment upon such existing members of the exchange as should assent to the plan and agree to be bound by it and by all future members of the exchange. The act of the legislature authorizing the exchange to adopt the insurance feature did not attempt to impose the gratuity system upon the existing members of the exchange, but instead so far as they were concerned the act was permissive and only to be put in force against any of them by their separate and express consent, but upon those who might afterward become members of the exchange the corporation was authorized to impose the gratuity system. The steps taken to accomplish this result, so far as the exchange as a corporate body was concerned, consisted of amendments to the by-laws in accordance with the recommendations of the special committee.

The new by-law added- (number 51) provided in substance (1) that upon the death of any subscribing member there should be assessed • against each subscribing membership the sum of $3, which should thereupon become due to the exchange and a lien on said membership; (2) the amount to be paid out of the money collected by such assessment, which amount was based upon the period intervening between the adoption of the by-law and the death of the member, the smallest amount being $2,000, and the largest $10,000; (3) for the division or distribution of the money collected among the members of the family of the deceased member, and designated the beneficiary in case a member should die without leaving either widow or children; (4) for the creation of a board of trustees to be known as the trustees of the gratuity fund, who were charged with the management and distribution of the fund and the execution of the provisions of the *40 by-law; (5) for the payment of death claims out of the gratuity fund when the number of deaths should exceed fifty in any one year, but further providing that should the gratuity fund be exhausted the liability of each membership to make payments on account of assessments in excess of $150 in any one year should not be impaired; (6) that after the exchange should be free from debt a proportionate part of the surplus income of the exchange intended for exchange jiurposes should be paid annually to the gratuity fund; (I) for the exemption of the exchange as a corporate body, from all liability by reason of the gratuity system, except for the payment of such assessments or such part thereof as should be collected from the members; (8) that the gratuity system should not be considered as creating an estate in esse which could be mortgaged or pledged. The amendment to by-law 21 provided that the same penalties for failure to pay an assessment for gratuity purposes should be enforced against the certificate of membership as were theretofore provided to pay assessments for the purpose of paying the expenses of the exchange by which the sale of a membership was authorized for the purpose of enforcing the collection of an assessment.

Within sixty days nearly twenty-five hundred members of the exchange subscribed to the gratuity system, the form of subscription being as follows:

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Bluebook (online)
61 N.E. 977, 169 N.Y. 34, 7 Bedell 34, 1901 N.Y. LEXIS 779, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/consider-parish-v-new-york-produce-exchange-ny-1901.