Gillet v. . Moody

3 N.Y. 479
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJuly 5, 1850
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 3 N.Y. 479 (Gillet v. . Moody) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gillet v. . Moody, 3 N.Y. 479 (N.Y. 1850).

Opinion

Bronson, Ch. J.

The bank was in a sickly condition early in the year 1841, and was only kept up by pledges of the individual credit of the directors to raise funds. In March of that year, the agents of the bank in Albany ceased for several weeks to redeem its circulating notes; and on the third day of December following, the bank formally suspended specie payments, and never afterwards transacted any regular banking business. On the same day all the funds of the. bank were assigned to Egbert N. Fairchild, the cashier, to secure and indemnify the directors against the personal liability which they had previously incurred in raising money to carry on' the business of the bank. At this time some of the directors hoped, and probably believed, that the bank was not irretrievably insolvent, and that they should be able to make such arrangements as would set the institution again in motion. But they were mistaken. Stopping payment is of itself sufficient evidence of the insolvency of a bank, within the principle of the cases cited at the bar; and when, as in this case, there is nothing to rebut the presumption, the evidence of insolvency is conclusive. There is, however, other proof beyond that of stopping, payment; and clearly this must be regarded as a broken bank on the third of December, 1841.

The defendant was an original stockholder.to the amount of five thousand dollars, and was one of the directors of the bank from the time it commenced business in 1839, until after the transaction of which the receiver complains. He gave the bank his bond and mortgage for the amount of his stock, payable in October, 1843, with semi-annual interest. On the 23d of December, 1841, he made an agreement with the directors to take up his bond and mortgage by paying the amount, at the end of *482 six weeks, in the circulating notes of the bank, which were then at a large discount; and the agreement was subsequently carried into execution. The receiver does not complain of this transaction.

On the 24th of February, 1842, the board of directors—the defendant being present and acting as one of the number— agreed to purchase the defendant’s stock in the bank, amounting to five thousand dollars, and pay him for the same an equal amount in Arkansas bonds, which were then worth about eighteen cents on the dollar of their par value. The bill was filed to set aside this transaction; and I do not see how it can be supported. Creditors are entitled to a preference over stockholders in distributing the effects of an insolvent corporation. The principle is so obviously just, that I shall spend no time in attempting to prove it.

But it is said that the agreement to purchase the defendants stock was part of the arrangement made in December for paying the bond and mortgage—the entire contract being, that if the defendant would pay the mortgage, which was not then due, and surrender his stock, the bank would give him five thousand dollars in Arkansas bonds. Although there is some evidence going to support this view of the case, it does not, in my judgment, establish the fact that the agreement for the payment of the mortgage, and that for the purchase of the defendant’s stock, were both made at the same time. So far as the written evidence goes, they were separate and distinct transactions, with a period of two months between them. It is true that the resolution of the 24th of February speaks of purchasing the stock as agreed by the board of directors with Mr. Moody on the 23d of December, 1841but this is not very high evidence that there was such an agreement at that time. There may have been some conversation on the subject prior to the resolution of the 23d of December; but if the parties had come to an agreement—if there was one entire contract, as is now alledged, for the payment of the mortgage and the purchase of the stock, it is strange that half, and only half of the agreement, should have been reduced to writing ?.l the time, while there was no *483 written evidence of the other half until another resolution was passed two months afterwards.

Some of the witnesses speak of a general understanding or agreement among the directors of the bank, that any stockholder who would pay up his bond and mortgage and surrender his stock should receive from the bank state stocks to the amount of the stock surrendered; but they leave it doubtful when the directors came to this conclusion; and their resolution to that effect was not passed until the 4th of March, 1842, eight days after the arrangement with the defendant, in both its branches, had been completed.

I am not satisfied that the fact on which the main argument for the defence is founded has been made out by the proofs; but as there is some evidence tending to the conclusion that the defendant paid the mortgage in the expectation of receiving the Arkansas bonds on surrendering his stock, I will now assume that such was the agreement of the parties. How does the case then stand ? The defendant paid the mortgage before it became due; but for anticipating the day of payment, he had what must be deemed a full legal equivalent in stopping the interest, which was payable semi-annually. But he saved, moreover, from a quarter to one half the amount of the debt by paying in the bills of the bank at their par value, when they were at a discount at from twenty-five to fifty per centum in the market. It is impossible, therefore, to regard the payment of the mortgage as a valuable consideration to the bank for the other branch of the agreement. The stock which the defend ant surrendered was worthless, so that he neither lost, nor did the bank gain any thing by the surrender. It follows that the Arkansas bonds which the defendant got from the bank, and which were then worth about nine hundred dollars, were, in effect, a mere gift of so much money to the defendant; and that too, when he was one of the directors, and bound as a faithful trustee to protect the property for the creditors of the corporation. It would be difficult to defend such a transaction.

The only possible answer to this view of the matter is, that the directors thought the bank was not so utterly ruined but *484 that it might be again set in motion, if those who had given mortgages for stock could be induced-to pay their debts at once, instead of waiting until the stipulated term of credit had expired ; and in that belief made very liberal offers to the mortgagors for the purpose of accomplishing the object. I do not doubt that the officers of a bank may properly make sacrifices of the corporate property for the purpose of passing a crisis in the affairs of the institution. But such an act can only be justified when the object is to protect the rights of creditors, and do equal justice to all the stockholders of the corporation. It must not be an act for the exclusive benefit of a particular individual, especially if he be one who has been intrusted with the management of the funds of the institution. Now in this case, paying off the defendant’s mortgage was but a drop in the bucket towards what was necessary to set the bank in motion; and there does not appear to have been any resolution of the board offering similar terms to the other stockholders until the 4th of March, 1842, more than two months after the case of the defendant had been specially provided for by the board.

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Bluebook (online)
3 N.Y. 479, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gillet-v-moody-ny-1850.