Gerhard v. Welsh
This text of 80 N.J. Eq. 203 (Gerhard v. Welsh) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The question involved in this appeal concerns the personal liability of directors of a building and loan association for losses arising from an investment, of the funds of the association in the stock of a manufacturing corporation. The insistence is that the purchase of such shares is not allowed by law.
The association was organized April 1st, 1890, under the general act then in force. Gen. Stat. p. 331. The same directors originally elected continued in office by re-elections until 1895, with the exceptions noted in the foregoing statement of facts.
Section 8 of the act above cited (Gen. Stat. p. 333) directs that
“every company formed * * * shall adopt a constitution. * * * The investments of every such association shall be made either in loans to, or a redemption of the shares of, or in purchasing lots and erecting dwellings for the members or in ail of said modes, or in such other ways as the constitution of the particular association shall provide.”
The constitution of this association did provide another way .for the investment of the funds, as follows:
“In the event of the funds of the association lying unproductive, the directors are empowered to loan them to shareholders and others than ‘‘shareholders, on undoubted security.”
Without at this point stopping to determine whether a manufacturing stock was a proper investment for the funds of an association of this character, we pass at once to consider the limitations imposed by the statute and the constitution, adopted under it, upon-the directors in rendering the funds productive.
To purchase a security is one thing; to loan upon security is quite another. In the former transaction, title is taken to the thing bought; in the latter, it is given with a promise of repay-[206]*206merit, made sure not only by such promise of repayment involving the personal responsibility of the promisor, but as well by the “undoubted security” exacted by the constitution, and reasonably to be expected to be accepted at a part only of its actual value.
The learned vice-chancellor in the court below thus tersely puts it:
“Now, what they did was, not to loan on undoubted security, but to purchase an industrial stock—an altogether different thing—different for the reason that I have pointed out, and different also for the reason that on such a stock the loan would • ordinarily be made not up to its full market value, but for a lesser sum. Either way you look at it the distinction is not a technical one, but real and substantial. It cannot be the law that directors, directed by statute as to what they may do, may go be-3rond that statute and do something else which results in loss.”
We, therefore, conclude that the directors of a building and loan association, organized under the general law (Gen. Stat. p. SSI), and having a constitution empowering its directors to loan its funds to others than shareholders on undoubted security, are not authorized to purchase outright shares in a manufacturing corporation, such purchase being in no sense a loan.
Liability will result from unauthorized acts under such circumstances, although willful wrong-doing is not intended. Cook Stock. (3d ed.) ¶ 632; Citizens’ Building and Loan Association v. Coriell, 34 N. J. Eq. (7 Stew.) 383; Williams v. McKay, 46 N. J. Eq. (1 Dick.) 25, 26.
But it is argued that the purchase of stock made in November, 1896, was not contrary to law and in the absence of fraud or gross negligence, the directors should not be held liable. It is asserted that the defendants were careful in their inquiries about the standing and financial strength of the woolen company, that in their judgment founded upon such investigation, the shares were a safe and productive investment, and one which, under the “Act concerning corporations,” Revision of 1896 (P. L. 1896 p. 277), which went into effect July 4th, 1896, the association was authorized, to purchase and hold.
Particular reference is made to section 51 of that act which reads as follows:
[207]*207“Any corporation may purchase, hold, sell, assign, transfer, mortgage, pledge or otherwise dispose of the shares of the capital stock or any bonds, securities or evidences of indebtedness created by any other corporation or corporations of this or any other state, and while owner of such stock may exercise all the rights, powers and privileges of ownership including the right to vote thereon.” P. L. 1896 p. 291/.
The difference between this section and the supplement of 1893 (P. L. 1893 p. 301) is pointed out, namely, that the latter was limited in its application to corporations created under the General Corporation act, while in the former, such limitation has been omitted, whereby additional powers are conferred.
We are unable to give our assent to the argument that this enactment conferred upon the association power to purchase and hold the stock in question.
This court has declared concerning this legislation, that the power thus conferred primarily exists only when the purpose to exercise it is expressed in the certificate of incorporation, and that its incidental existence depends upon whether its exercise is necessary or convenient to enable the holding corporation to attain the objects for which it was created. State v. Atlantic City and Shore Railroad Co., 77 N. J. Law (48 Vr.) 465.
The certificate does not and could not express the purpose to exercise the power, and it is not perceived how its exercise as an incidental power is either necessary or convenient for the attainment of the objects for which the loan association was organized. The holding of shares in a manufacturing business corporation is quite apart from the objects expressed in the general act under which the defendant in this case was organized.
It is lastly urged that because of acquiescence in the acts of the directors in the purchase of these shares, and ratification of them ■by the stockholders, the complainants are not entitled to relief.
Acquiescence and ratification are founded upon knowledge of the facts brought home to the parties to be bound. Proof that annual statements were issued by the directors from the years 1897 to 1902, both inclusive, and circulated among the stockholders, showing that these shares were carried as assets of the association, and that the same directors were, in the face of these statements, continued in office by annual elections by the stock[208]*208holders, has been • adduced' upon this point to show such knowledge.
Moreover, it is said that no complaint was ever received from a stockholder while the woolen mills paid dividends. Protests came when the dividends ceased.
These annual statements were not explicit. They varied in each year. In those of the first two years, the item is “Somerville Woolen Mills Stock $2,500.” In the next two, “Loaned on Stock $2,500.” In the fifth, “Woolen Mills Stock $2,500,” and in the ' last, “Loaned on Stock $2,500.”
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80 N.J. Eq. 203, 10 Buchanan 203, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gerhard-v-welsh-nj-1912.