Farmers' Loan & Trust Co. v. Hoffman House

58 N.Y. St. Rep. 684
CourtNew York Supreme Court, New York County
DecidedFebruary 15, 1894
StatusPublished

This text of 58 N.Y. St. Rep. 684 (Farmers' Loan & Trust Co. v. Hoffman House) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court, New York County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Farmers' Loan & Trust Co. v. Hoffman House, 58 N.Y. St. Rep. 684 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1894).

Opinion

Andrews, J.

I am of the opinion that the application must be denied for the following reasons:

First. If the receivers appointed by the court of chancery of Hew Jersey, and reappointed by the United States circuit court, have the right, with the permission of this court, to defend this action, nevertheless, the officers of the defendant had the same right before judgment was entered, and the receivers have no standing to make this application, and the court cannot lawfully grant it.' Section 70 of the general corporation law of the state of Hew Jersey, approved April 7th, 1875, provides that when any company shall become insolvent, it shall be lawful for any creditor or stockholder to apply by petition, or bill of complaint, to the chancellor for a writ of injunction, and the appointment of a receiver or receivers; and the same section authorizes the chancellor, if it shall be made to appear to him that the company has become insolvent, to issue an injunction to restrain the said company, and its officers and agents, from exercising any of the privileges or franchises granted by its certificate, or by the act incorporating the said company, and from collecting or receiving ■any debts, and from paying out, selling, assigning, or transferring any of the property of the company until the court shall otherwise order. Section 72 of said act authorizes the court of chancery ■at the lime of ordering the said injunction, or at any time afterwards during the continuance of said injunction, to appoint a receiver or receivers of the corporation.

I have carefully examined said act, and I cannot discover that it confers any power on the court of chancery to appoint a receiver, except at the time of the ordering of the injunction, or at any time afterwards, during the continuance of the injunction. It does not appear, from the papers before me, that said court has at any time granted an injunction, as provided for in the said act; and it is, therefore, somewhat difficult for me to understand how the court had jurisdiction to do more than to exercise the inherent power of a court of equity to appoint receivers, who should be merely the authorized custodians of the' property of tire corporation.

The order of the United States circuit court recites that the said receivers have been appointed by the chancellor of Hew Jersey, and appoints the same persons receivers of the property of the Hoffman House; and it also purports to confer upon the said receivers various powers, including the power .to continue the [686]*686business of the defendant, and the authority to appear in and conduct the prosecution or defense of any suits against the Hoffman House. Said order also enjoins the Hoffman House and all its officers and agents from interfering with or disposing of any of the property of said corporation, but does not otherwise restrain those officers from exercising the powers possessed by them. The state of New Jersey is not included in the second circuit of the United States, and the appointment of the said receivers by the circuit court is ancillary to their appointment by the court of chancery of New Jersey. It has been held in some cases that a court of equity will appoint a receiver to preserve the property of a foreign corporation, but it has not usually been considered, as I understand the decisions, that a court of equity, in the absence of special statutory authority, has the power n> grant an order appointing receivers, conferring upon them such extensive powers as were conferred by the order in question.

Assuming, however, that both the order of the court of chancery appointing the receivers, and the order of the United States circuit court reappointing the receivers, were regularly and lawfully made, it appears that before such orders were made this action had been commenced, and that a receiver of all the property of the corporation had been duly appointed in this action, and that such receiver had taken possession of all the property of the defendant; and it also appears that the receivers, Hall and Ward, are not in possession of any portion of the property of said corporation.

Under these circumstances, I think that the receivers have no standing to make the present motion. The corporation, itself has been dissolved. No injunction has been granted by the said court of chancery, nor by said circuit court, restraining the corporation, or its officers, from exercising the powers, privileges, and franchises granted by its certificate, or by the act incorporating it, except as above mentioned; or from appearing in and conducting the defense of any suits brought against said corporation. The corporation and its officers had, therefore, authority to appear in, and conduct the defense of, this action. The receivers, until and unless they are made parties to the action, are strangers to the proceedings. Tracy v. First Nat. Bank of Selma, 37 N. Y., 523. The appointment of said receivers, in the absence of an injunction restraining the officers of the defendants from defending the action, did not deprive such officers of the right to continue the defense thereof; and said receivers have no standing to move to set aside the answer which was served, and the judgment which was entered, and to move for leave to serve an answer on their own behalf, in the place of the one which has heretofore been served on behalf of the corporation. In other words, assuming that the receivers, if judgment had not been entered, were duly invested with the right to defend this action, provided this court in the exercise of a judicial discretion should permit them to do so, such fight was not superior to the right of the officers of the defendants to defend the action, and when those officers have permitted judgment to be entered, the ■ receivers [687]*687cannot claim, and have no legal standing to claim, that they should be permitted to reverse the lawful action of such officers.

Secondly. I am of the opinion that the interlocutory judgment of foreclosure was regularly and duly entered. As above stated, no injunction has been granted restraining the corporation, or its officers or agents, from exercising the powers and franchises of the corporation, except as above stated, and one of those powers was to appear in and defend this action. Assuming that, when the judgment of foreclosure was entered, the Farmers’ Loan & Trust Company -and its attorneys, and the officers of the H >11 man House corporation and its' attorneys, knew that the said receivers had been appointed by both of said courts, and assuming, also, as appears by the papers, that said receivers had notified the attorney who appeared for the Hoffman House in this action that his authority was revoked, nevertheless, such judgment was regularly entered.

Mr. Dclahunty had been employed by said corporation as its attorney in the foreclosure action, and had appeared therein, and he had all the powers possessed by an attorney of record in any action. Those powers could only be terminated by an order of this court substituting another attorney in his ¡>lace, or restraining him from acting as such attorney. The knowledge that the receivers had been appointed, and the fact that they served notice upon him revoking his authority, did not operate to terminate such authority. He still had the legal right to serve such an answer as he was directed to serve by the president of the corporation, who had not been enjoined from exercising the authority conferred upon him by virtue of his office. As was decided by the court of appeals in Tracy v. Nat. Bank of Selma, supra,

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Related

Tracy v. . First National Bank of Selma
37 N.Y. 523 (New York Court of Appeals, 1868)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
58 N.Y. St. Rep. 684, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/farmers-loan-trust-co-v-hoffman-house-nysupctnewyork-1894.