Freeman v. Sea View Hotel Co.

40 A. 218, 57 N.J. Eq. 68, 12 Dickinson 68, 1898 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 64
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedApril 30, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 40 A. 218 (Freeman v. Sea View Hotel 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
Freeman v. Sea View Hotel Co., 40 A. 218, 57 N.J. Eq. 68, 12 Dickinson 68, 1898 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 64 (N.J. Ct. App. 1898).

Opinion

Pitney, V. C.

The bill was filed by Charles D. Freeman and Wilson Fitzgerald, two of the stockholders (holding eight of the one hundred and twenty-six shares of stock) of the Sea View Hotel Company. Pending the suit Mr. Freeman died, and his widow and administratrix was substituted as complainant in his place. Besides the defendant the Sea View Hotel Company, which may hereafter conveniently be called the Hotel company, certain directors thereof are made parties defendants; also a corporation known as the Sea View Land Company, which may conveniently be called the Land company, together with one Fries, a director thereof, are defendants.

The bill (filed March 2d, 1891), in the first place, attacks a conveyance of land made June 19th, 1889, by the Hotel company to the Land company, on two grounds — -first, for want of power to convey in the mode in which the conveyance was made, and second, for fraud, the specification of fraud being that the property was sold at a grossly inadequate price, and that the directors (defendants herein) of the Hotel company were interested in the purchase by the Land company, and that [70]*70great profits were made by the Land company, in which the directors of the Hotel company participated; or, if there was no actual fraud, then that there was such gross negligence in the sale as to render the directors of the Hotel company liable to make good the loss. The prayer as to this branch of the bill, briefly stated, is that the defendants the Land company and the directors of the Hotel company, or some of them, may account for those profits to the Hotel company, to the end that the complainants may have their share thereof, and to that end that the Hotel company may have an account of the proceeds of so much of the lands as have been resold by the Land company to bona fide purchasers, and as to that portion of the lands not so sold, the same may be declared to be the property of the Hotel company.

In the second place, the bill charges that the Hotel company, about the date of the sale to the Land company, purchased other lands which it had no power to purchase, and in which certain of its directors were interested, and the prayer is that this sale may be set aside and the directors of the Hotel company be compelled to account for the actual cash invested therein, with the like view of giving the complainants their share thereof in money.

One element of the case attempted to be made by the complainants may be disposed of quite briefly. Complainants charge, with detail, the particulars of fraud in the conveyance of land by the Hotel company to the Land company and in the purchase by the Plotel company of other land from third parties, and call on the individual defendants to answer under oath. All those who lived long enough to answer.have answered, and deny fully and explicitly, under oath, all the allegations of fraud. This casts upon the complainants the burden of sustaining the charge by a decided weight of evidence. This they have failed to do. Not a single one of the directors or stockholders of the Hotel company was in anywise interested in the purchase by the Land company of the lands of the former, with the possible exception of a Mr. Zimmerman, who was the secretary and treasurer of the Hotel company and also a small stockholder; and after the [71]*71property had been bargained for by two persons, to wit, the defendant Fries and a Mr. Kremer, and its purchase secured by written contract, which was May 28th, 1889, they took in Mr. Zimmerman, in order to have the benefit of his knowledge and experience of the property for the purpose of managing it, and gave him an interest in the new purchase. He joined in the formation of the corporation June 11th, and the deed was made to it June 18th. But at the argument no relief was claimed against him or his estate, he having died without answering.

The only circumstance shown in the case which tends in the slightest degree to indicate fraud in the sale of the premises is that the defendant Wood, who was a director in the Hotel company and one of the committee to sell, was a partner in business, in Philadelphia, of Mr. Kremer, who was active in inducing Mr. Fries and others to form a syndicate to purchase it. Mr. Kremer undoubtedly heard that the property was for sale from his partner, Mr. Wood, and was advised by Mr. Wood to look into it and examine its value. Mr. Fries is a gentleman of independent means, who is engaged in railroading and somewhat connected with the Pennsylvania railroad. He had no interest in the Hotel company, and I cannot see that these facts are sufficient, in view of all the other circumstances of the case, to raise even a serious suspicion that any of these defendants were directly or indirectly interested in the purchase.

With regard to the new purchase of land, none of the defendants, except Mr. John Lucas, had any interest in the lands sold to the Hotel company. The fact that the directors had decided to purchase the lands in question was properly kept a secret, and the purchase was made through agents, and those agents took an option for a small tract from Mr. Lucas without disclosing to him the fact that it was being purchased for the Hotel company, and Mr. Lucas swears that he did not know that it was so purchased. It constituted a small part of the whole tract purchased, and there is no proof or contention that'it was not worth the price paid for it.

After the completion of the purchase of the new site, some [72]*72gentlemen organized a land company to purchase, on speculation, land in that neighborhood, and the defendant General Sewell, the president of the Hotel company, took an interest in it, but it does not appear that he had such venture in contemplation at the time the purchase by the Hotel company was decided upon, or that it did or could influence his action in the premises in the least degree.

So much for the allegation of fraudulent practice.

With regard to the power of the directors of the Hotel company to sell its lands, that (laying out of view the power at common law) depends, in part, upon the language of its charter, which was passed February 10th, 1869. P. L. of 1869 p. 40. By the first section, several gentlemen therein named, and their successors, were incorporated by the name of The Sea View Hotel Company,” and it is declared that by that name they shall

“have power to lease, purchase and hold real estate at or near Atlantic City, in the county of Atlantic, and State of New Jersey, and to erect and maintain a hotel and other buildings and improvements thereon, or upon any part thereof, for the accommodation of the public, and to mortgage said real estate with the appurtenances or any part thereof, and to transact all such business as may he incident or appertaining to the managing, erecting, furnishing, Conducting, leasing, holding or mortgaging of said premises, or otherwise controlling or disposing of the same.”

That language seems to me to give them power to convey the land at any time that, in the judgment of the directors, it might be best for the company so to do.

But independent of the special power given by the statute, the General Corporation act (P. L. of 1896 p. 277), which is a reenactment of an old statute, declares that every corporation as such shall have power to hold, purchase and convey such real and personal estate as the purposes of the corporation shall require,” not exceeding the amount limited by its charter.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
40 A. 218, 57 N.J. Eq. 68, 12 Dickinson 68, 1898 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 64, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/freeman-v-sea-view-hotel-co-njch-1898.