Giveen v. Gans

91 A.D. 37, 86 N.Y.S. 450

This text of 91 A.D. 37 (Giveen v. Gans) 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
Giveen v. Gans, 91 A.D. 37, 86 N.Y.S. 450 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1904).

Opinion

O’Brien, J. :

The plaintiff sued upon a contract which was made by him and the defendant Gans under which, it was alleged, the plaintiff was to receive one-half of the profits accruing from the sale of a cotton cloth called khaki, manufactured by the Giveen Manufacturing Company and sold by it to a corporation known as the C. Kenyon Company. ' - ■

[39]*39There are two crucial questions upon this appeal, the first and more important being as to whether the contract sued upon was valid and enforcible and, .second, if it were, whether as between the plaintiff and the defendant corporation it constituted a partnership agreement which covered all the transactions in khaki cloth in addition to that with the C. Kenyon Company. It appears that there were profits on the Kenyon contract and the amount allowed by the jury is not excessive. It further appears, however, that upon the other transactions in khaki cloth with other individuals and firms, the Giveen Manufacturing Company made a lbss, and the question whether or not the plaintiff as a partner should bear his part of the loss becomes, therefore, important.

We think that the disposition made by the learned trial judge in confining the contract sued upon to the transaction with the Kenyon Company was right and for the reason that it was the only transaction with which the plaintiff had anything to do, the subsequent transactions with the other firms having all been made after the plaintiff was deprived of his position and was no longer connected with the Giveen Company. The serious question, therefore, is whether the contract sued upon was valid.

At the time of the making of the agreement between the plaintiff and the defendant Gans, the plaintiff was in the receipt of a salary of $4,000 per annum from the defendant Giveen Manufacturing Company, was one of its stockholders, one of its directors, its secretary and the manager of the manufacturing part of the company. The defendant Gans was a stockholder, director and president of the company. There were two other stockholders named Bache and Von Gerichten, The preferred stock was $100,000, one-half of which was owned by Bache and the other half by the defendant Gans. The common stock, which was originally $150,000, was afterwards reduced to $1,500, and was owned as follows: Five shares by defendant Gans, five shares by Bache, three shares by plaintiff and two shares by Von Gerichten.

In the month of October, 1898, two months before the Kenyon contract was made, the defendant Gans purchased the stock of Bache and had his son elected director in Bache’s place, so that-at the time of the Kenyon contract Gans owned all the preferred and all the common stock, except three shares of the common stock [40]*40owned by the plaintiff and two shares. thereof owned by Von Gerichteh. Although the testimony is.that Von Gerichten’s stock was all purchased by Gans in February, 1898, we are inclined to think that this must be an error in the printed record, for, of course, from the other dates it apparently should be February, 1899. Whatever the date, however, of the purchase of. the two shares of Von Gerichten, it is conceded that when this suit was brought, other than the stock owned by the plaintiff, the defendant Gans owned all the stock of the company, both preferred and common.

As bearing upon the question of the enforcibility of this contract the ownership of the shares of stock becomes a very important feature of the case, though we have not overlooked the distinction which exists as between the powers of a corporation as a legal entity and the rights of its stockholders, a distinction which was pointed out by the Court of Appeals in Buffalo L., T. & S. D. Co. v. Medina Gas Co. (162 N. Y. 76). This distinction must always be regarded where a question arises involving the rights of'creditors or minority stockholders; but it is not as important in a contest where rights of creditors are not involved, and the dispute is between two stockholders who themselves own all the capital stock. This fact of ownership of all the stock has, therefore, a bearing upon the rights of the litigants. Here the plaintiff sues upon a contract which was made between himself and the defendant Gans, who between them owned all the capital stock of the corporation, and, as stated, no rights of creditors or other stockholders being involved, it really in substance gets to be á litigation between the plaintiff and the defendant Gans, though in form the suit is brought against the corporation. The only persons interested in the corporation, and that will ultimately be injured or benefited by the success or failure of the plaintiff in sustaining the validity of the contract, will be the plaintiff or thé defendant Gans.-

Starting -with these premises we are to consider, in addition to the parties by whom it is made and to whom we have already alluded, what was the nature and purpose of the contract and what was the effect or result to the Giveen .Manufacturing Company, wdiich company the contract by its terms sought to bind. The making of the contract,- and the agreement by its terms that the plaintiff was to receive one-half- of the profits as testified to by the plaintiff, were [41]*41not rebutted by any evidence given for the defendant upon the trial. The plaintiff produced evidence to sustain the allegations of his complaint, which was not rebutted, and which tended to show that about June 1, 1898, he devised a peculiar finish for a cotton cloth called khaki, which the defendants were willing to use in connection with a contract which they contemplated making with the 0. Kenyon Company, and that they agreed with him for the unusual services, outside of those for which he was paid by his own company, rendered and to be rendered by him in developing the quality and production of the cloth, promoting its sale and assisting the defendant in securing the Kenyon contract then under consideration, to pay him one-half of all profits accruing from the sale of the khaki as his share in said transactions; that he devoted himself to perfecting it and labored in promoting the sale and -assisted in making the-contract for a large .delivery of said material for the corporation known as the C. Kenyon Company; that as the result the Giveen Manufacturing Company manufactured and sold to the Kenyon Company a quantity which realized a total net profit of $23,403.10, one-half of which the plaintiff was entitled to, for which sum he demanded judgment.

Upon the trial, as stated, there was no attempt to contradict the plaintiff as to the making of the contract or its terms, out the defendants attacked the validity of the contract upon the ground that as. the plaintiff was a director of the Giveen Manufacturing Company and one of its managing officers, and was further employed as the manager of its department of manufacture, receiving a yearly salary, and as the business of the company was, that of a converter of cotton goods, it was the plaintiff’s duty under his employment to devise methods for the finishing and sale of cotton goods, and that he could not claim extra compensation for any services, however unusual, he might have performed in connection with devising a finish for the cloth which was afterwards manufactured and sold as khaki. If it had been shown that there were creditors or other stockholders interested in the company, there would be no doubt but such a contract was void, because it would be seeking a profit for services rendered to the corporation while plaintiff was under a contract to give his entire time and services to the business of the corporation.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Bosworth v. . Allen
61 N.E. 163 (New York Court of Appeals, 1901)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
91 A.D. 37, 86 N.Y.S. 450, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/giveen-v-gans-nyappdiv-1904.