General Rubber Co. v. Benedict

164 A.D. 332, 149 N.Y.S. 880, 1914 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 7797
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedNovember 13, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 164 A.D. 332 (General Rubber Co. v. Benedict) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
General Rubber Co. v. Benedict, 164 A.D. 332, 149 N.Y.S. 880, 1914 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 7797 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1914).

Opinions

Dowling, J.:

The complaint in substance alleges that plaintiff is a corporation organized pursuant to the laws of the State of New Jersey, whose affairs under the statutes are managed by its directors, and that defendant was a director therein and, as such, charged by law with the continuous duty of protecting and promoting its welfare by the exercise of diligence and faithfulness and of preserving its property and assets from waste, and of refraining from authorizing, making or knowingly permitting to be made any unlawful, improper or improvident use of its funds or assets, and of abstaining from doing himself and from acquiescing in the doing by any one else of [333]*333any wrongful act which he knew to be detrimental to its pecuniary interests, and especially with the duty of refraining from doing and of preventing others from doing any act which to his knowledge would be detrimental to its pecuniary interests and at its cost would be promotive of his own interests; ” that plaintiff has been continuously engaged for several years prior to May 1, 1911, and thereafter until September 20, 1911, in purchasing crude rubber in Brazil for its business through Gordon & Co., a concern located at Para, Brazil, in which plaintiff and one W. Stuart Gordon were interested; that on the latter date a corporation was organized under the laws of the State of New Jersey, known as “ General Eubber Company of Brazil,” to which the business of Gordon & Co. was transferred, and of all of whose shares the plaintiff became owner, and has since retained ownership thereof, with the exception of some 18 shares out of the total issue of 3,000; that said 3,000 shares were worth their par value of $300,000 -until damaged by the acts complained of; that the Brazil Company is the sole crude rubber buying instrumentality of the plaintiff in Para, Brazil, and its principal office outside of New Jersey has been in New York city, where its directors’ meetings have been held; that defendant is the only director of plaintiff who has ever been at Para; that Arnold J. Hutter was general manager of W. S. Gordon & Co. down to September 20, 1911, after which date" and until June, 1913, he was general manager of the General Eubber Company at Para and, as such, in charge of its moneys, property and business there; that in May, 1911, defendant, Hutter and Colgate Hoyt purchased a rubber-growing and crude rubber-buying and selling business in Brazil, and established an agency thereof in Para under the name of “E. Levy,” and placed Hutter in charge thereof as general manager at a salary of $6,000 per annum; that without plaintiff’s knowledge, defendant also agreed that Hutter should be one of the owners of said business and interested to the extent of 200 shares in the corporation to be formed to acquire the same; that defendant informed plaintiff and its board of directors in June, 1911, that he had engaged in the business of “E. Levy” and desired Hutter’s services therein for not more than six months, [334]*334which would not take more than one hour a week and would not interfere with the performance of his duties as plaintiffs general manager at Para, and thereupon requested plaintiff and its board of directors to consent to Hutter’s performing the services in the business of “E. Levy” to the extent indicated; that defendant withheld from the plaintiff and the board the real agreement between Hutter and himself and his other associate in. E. Levy ” by which Hutter’s salary was to he an annual one, bis services were to continue for much longer than six months, and he was to he one of the owners of the business, devoting twenty hours per week to the same, and thus lessening the value of his services to plaintiff, interfering with the performance of his duties to it, and putting him in a position in which his interests would conflict materially with those of the plaintiff; that neither plaintiff nor its directors, save defendant, knew of these facts, though defendant did have knowledge of all of them and concealed them; that defendant with Hoyt and others caused the incorporation in West Virginia of the Moju Rubber Plantations and Development Company, ” whereof defendant owns more than one-fourth of the stock, being its vice-president, a director and a member of its executive committee; that the Moju Company became the owner of the business conducted under the name “E. Levy;” that on July 10, 1911, Hutter became the general manager of the Moju Company at the annual salary of $6,000 and subscribed for and acquired twenty per cent of its capital stock, still without plaintiff’s knowledge; that the Moju Company was in pressing need of money from February, 1912, its condition becoming gradually worse until, in June, 1913, it was, and has since remained, insolvent, and claims against it are of little or no value; that during the period named, defendant knew that Hutter, as general manager of the Brazil Company, was in possession of large sums of money belonging to it and was removed from personal supervision by its officers and could dispose of funds without consultation with them; that in February, 1912, Hutter, to the knowledge of defendant, misapplied funds and moneys of the General Rubber Company of Brazil to the amount of $4,000 to the use of himself, defendant and their associates, and paid out and misapplied the moneys of said [335]*335company in payment of the debts and obligations of the Moju Company, and continued until June, 1913, misapplying additional funds of the Rubber Company of Brazil to the use of the Moju Company and for the benefit of defendant, Hutter and their associates to the aggregate amount of $185,000; that neither plaintiff nor any of its officers or directors, save defendant, ever knew of such misapplication of its funds. The complaint then proceeds to set forth: '

“ Twenty-third. On information and belief, that at or about the time of such misapplication of each of the said sums of money or funds of the said General Rubber Company of Brazil, to the uses of the said Moju Company by the said Hutter, the defendant herein was cognizant thereof and acquiesced in and approved of such use thereof, and that at all such times he knew that thereby such funds were being placed in jeopardy and were liable to be wholly lost to said General Rubber Company of Brazil and to the damage of the plaintiff, and that such misuse of said funds was a fraud upon the plaintiff and upon said General Rubber Company of Brazil and in the financial interest of the defendant and his associates and of said Hutter, and that at all the said times the defendant well knew that the plaintiff and its officers and directors (other than himself) and the said General Rubber Company of Brazil and its officers and directors, were and each of them was wholly ignorant of such misuse of said funds.
“ Twenty-fourth.

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Related

General Rubber Co. v. Benedict
150 N.Y.S. 1087 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1914)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
164 A.D. 332, 149 N.Y.S. 880, 1914 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 7797, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/general-rubber-co-v-benedict-nyappdiv-1914.