Edison v. Edison United Phonograph Co.

52 N.J. Eq. 620, 7 Dickinson 620
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedMay 15, 1894
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 52 N.J. Eq. 620 (Edison v. Edison United Phonograph Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Court of Chancery primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Edison v. Edison United Phonograph Co., 52 N.J. Eq. 620, 7 Dickinson 620 (N.J. Ct. App. 1894).

Opinion

Yak Eeeet, Y. C.

The complainants are stockholders of the Edison United Phonograph Company and have filed the bill in this case for the purpose of having the directors of the corporation displaced and this court take control of the corporation, and, through a receiver, manage and direct its business. The special relief that the complainants ask at this time is that the court will find and declare that the corporation has not administered the trust imposed upon it according to law; that a receiver be appointed 'to carry on its business and to investigate the condition of its affairs and make report, to the end that its business may be continued .or wound up according to the condition in which its affairs shall be found. On the argument three grounds were put forward as the basis of the relief asked — -first, that the corporation is insolvent or will soon become so if its directors do not abandon their present method of conducting its business and adopt the method which the complainants insist should be adopted; second, that the directors, by the course of business they are now pursuing, are violating a trust which was imposed upon the corporation when the complainants assigned their inventions to it; and third, that dissensions exist among the directors, as to the most successful mode of carrying on the business of the corporation, of such a character and to such an extent as to make it impossible for the corporation to prosecute its business with advantage to the stockholders.

The Edison United Phonograph Company was organized under a general law of this state, in February, 1890, for the purpose, among other things, of manufacturing, buying and selling phonographs, and also of selling and assigning, and of licensing others to sell and use, patents, patent rights and inventions relating to the manufacture, use and operation of phono[622]*622■graphs. Within less than a month after its organization, it became the owner, by purchase and assignment, of all of Mr. Edison’s inventions relating to speaking machines, whether secured by letters-patent' or not, in every country of the -world except the United States and Canada. The assignment also passed to the corporation all extensions of any letters-patent for such inventions which should thereafter be granted. Within about the same time the International Graphophone Company, a New York corporation, owning the patents for a speaking machine called the graphophone, assigned its patents to the defendant corporation. The object which the promoters of the defendant corporation had in view in its formation is apparent. They wanted to vest in a single person, endowed with corporate life for a long number of years, all known inventions for the -construction of speaking machines, and thus avoid disputes respecting priority of invention or infringement, and so render the introduction and use of such machines throughout the world less difficult and more profitable than if independent attempts were made to exploit each invention. The corporation was organized with a capital of $1,000,000, divided into ten thousand shares of $100 each. Five thousand shares, representing $500,000, were issued- to Mr. Edison in payment for the inventions and other rights transferred by him to the corporation, and ■a like number of shares were issued, for a like purpose, to the International Graphophone Company. The corporation still holds all the inventions and other property transferred to it by Mr. Edison and the International Graphophone Company, except the right to sell and use speaking machines in the Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland. That right it sold, in December, 1892, to a corporation organized under the laws of Great Britain for £20,000 in cash and four thousand shares of the stock of the vendee corporation of the par value of £5 each, the cash and ■stock representing a value in our currency of about $200,000.

The case is destitute of the least proof tending to show insolvency. That, in cases of this kind, is the jurisdictional fact. The court can do nothing — neither issue an injunction nor appoint a receiver — until insolvency is first established. Until [623]*623that fact is satisfactorily proved, the court, has no jurisdiction. Atlantiac Trust Co. v. Consolidated Electric Co., 4 Dick. Ch. Rep. 402, 405. The complainants do not claim that the present indebtedness of the defendant corporation exceeds $107,000, nor that. its principal assets, consisting of inventions, patents and patent privileges, are not worth all that the corporation paid for them, or that they would not bring, if sold in any market where their value is known, a sum largely in excess of the amount required to pay all the debts of the corporation. The complainants have not attempted, either by their own oaths or the oaths of others, to show the value of these assets. They say, however, that they have the fullest belief in their value, provided their method of utilizing them is adopted. The fact is that both parties to this litigation believe that these assets possess an immense value. They do not disagree as to their value, but the sole point in difference between them is as to how they can best be utilized. Their difference is one of judgment respecting the most expedient course of business and not in respect to a fact. The complainants say that if the. present business policy of the corporation is not abandoned and their policy adopted, their assets will soon become worthless, and then insolvency must ensue; while the defendants, on the other hand, assert with equal confidence, as the result of their best judgment, that to make the business of the corporation a great financial success the corporation must adhere to its present business policy. This is the real point in controversy. Hence it is manifest that the complainants are not asking for the appointment of a receiver because the corporation is now actually insolvent, but because of a fear, resting entirely on conjecture, that it will become so at some time in the future. It is too plain to require demonstration that this court has no power to appoint a receiver to wind up a corporation because it is feared or even expected that it will become insolvent at some time in the future. Nothing short of present actual insolvency will warrant the appointment of a receiver for such a purpose.

The affairs of the defendant corporation are subject to the control of a board of nine directors. Two of the nine believe [624]*624that' the most successful mode of carrying on the business of the corporation, and the best way to subserve and promote the interests of its stockholders, is by the establishment of agencies in different parts of the world for the sale and hire of speaking machines and adopting that as the leading feature of its business. The other seven do not concur in this belief. On the contrary, they believe that the business of the corporation can be made most successful and profitable by the sale of territorial rights and making that the principal part of its business. Each faction appears to be thoroughly persuaded that its method is the true one, and that the method of the other is injudicious, and that its judgment is wise and that the judgment of the other is fallacious. Neither denies or impugns the good faith and honesty of the other. This suit had its origin in this difference of belief. The complainants, to show that they have a right to have their method adopted, allege that when Mr.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
52 N.J. Eq. 620, 7 Dickinson 620, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/edison-v-edison-united-phonograph-co-njch-1894.