Gray v. National Steamship Co.

115 U.S. 116, 5 S. Ct. 1166, 29 L. Ed. 309, 1885 U.S. LEXIS 1823
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMay 4, 1885
Docket216
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 115 U.S. 116 (Gray v. National Steamship Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gray v. National Steamship Co., 115 U.S. 116, 5 S. Ct. 1166, 29 L. Ed. 309, 1885 U.S. LEXIS 1823 (1885).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Field

delivered the opinion of the court.

This was a suit in equity to charge the defendant,-the National Steamship Company, with the paymeút of a judgment recovered against another company, known as the National Steam Navigation Company. Both of the companies were English corporations, formed under the English statute, known as the Companies Act of 1862. The National Steam Navigation Company continued in business until August 15, 1867, when it went into liquidation. On the following day it sold its ships and its other property and delivered the same to the National Steamship Company. This latter company was incorporated on the first of July, 1867, under the name of the Steamship Company, limited; The change of its name to the National Steamship Company was made August 8, 1867. After the sale of its property the Navigation Company had no power to do business under the Companies Act, and existed only for purposes of liquidation.

On the 24th of October, 1867, the steam-tug Princeton was going up the harbor of New. York with a tow of fourteen canal-boats loaded with coal. When near the mouth of the *118 Hudson River she met the English steamship Pennsylvania, owned by the National Steamship Company, and a collision took place between the canal-boats and the steamship, by which three of the boats were sunk, and a man by the name of Wilson W. Gray was killed. The widow of Gray took out letters of administration upon his estate, and then brought an action in the Superior Court of the City of New York, under a statute of the State, for damages caused by the loss of her husband, against the National Steam Navigation Company, evidently supposing that this company continued the owner of the steamship as it formerly had been. In May, 1868,- she obtained a verdict, and in June fóllowing judgment was entered thereon for $3,289.05.

The National Steamship Company was formed for the purpose of buying the property of the Navigation Company and conducting the same business. The consideration for the purchase was stock of the new company to such of the old stockholders as would consent to take it, and money to the dissenting stockholders. • Provision was made to raise the money necessary to fill up the capital stock to the required sum, and the sale was subject to the debts of the old company on August 16,1867. The officers of the old company became the officers of the new company.

The widow Gray issued execution on her judgment to the sheriff of the County of New York, which was returned unsatisfied. In December, 1869, she assigned the judgment to one Asa E. Miller, and in January, 1870, he commenced a suit in the Supreme Court of New York against the National Steamship Company, setting forth in his complaint the judgment of the Superior Court, the return of the execution unsatisfied, the incorporation of the National Steam Navigation Company, and that a short time before the commencement of the action it was engaged in the shipping business between New York and Liverpool, employing steamers, and having a general agency in New York; that at the time of the accruing of the cause of action it was thus engaged in business; that about the time the judgment was obtained and the execution issued the company assumed and became known by the name of the' *119 National Steamship Company; that the sheriff was thereby disabled from levying on the property which up to that time had stood in the name of the Navigation Company ; that the change of name was to cure a technical defect; that the Steamship Company was incorporated under a statute limiting the liability of the stockholders, and to that company the Navigation Company had handed over its ships and all its other property to a sufficient amount to pay the judgment; that such property remained under the same control; that the change of name was made fraudulently, to prevent a levy upon the property; that the Steamship Company held the ships of the Navigation Company as trustee for the creditors of the latter company; that the Navigation Company had not been within the State of New York for a year, and had no property except that.standing in the name of the Steamship Company; and that this last company had a steamship and other ships in its hands, the property of the Navigation Company. The prayer of the complaint was that the Steamship Company might be decreed to pay the judgment, and be enjoined from disposing of the property it had received from the Navigation Company and for the appointment of a receiver.

The Steamship Company answered, admitting the judgment of the plaintiff, the return of execution issued upon it unsatisfied, and the organization, of the Navigation Company, alleging its own distinct incorporation, admitting the sale, transfer and delivery of the steamships and business of the old company to the new company, August 16, 1867, the conduct of its shipping business and its employment of steamers by the old company, up to such transfer and sale, and alleging that the old' company had no property in the State, with a general denial of other allegations. The case was heard upon the pleadings ,and proofs, and at a special term of the court on December 12, 1870, judgment was rendered dismissing the complaint. On May 7, 1875, at a general term of the court this judgment was affirmed. A year after its affirmance an order was entered at a special term by consent of parties discontinuing the suit. Before this was done Asa F. Miller, the plaintiff therein, assigned the Superior Court judgment to one Morrison, and in *120 February, 1877, Morrison assigned it back to the plaintiff, who soon afterwards commenced the present action in the Supreme Court of New York. On motion of defendants, it was removed to the Circuit Court of the United States, and there the plaintiff filed a bill in equity in place of the complaint filed in the State court. This bill set up the agreement between the two companies of August 16, 1867, alleged the identity of the officers of the two companies, mentioned the recovery of the judgment of the plaintiff and the various assignments of that judgment, the unsatisfied execution issued thereon, the transfer of the ships and other property of the old Navigation Company to the new Steamship Company, alleged that the Navigation Company had not made a change of ownership of the steamers by sufficient bills of sale, according to British law, mentioned the winding up of the Navigation Company, and averred that the new company held the property of the old company in fraud of the right of the plaintiff to have his judgement satisfied out of it, and that the Navigation Company had no próperty not embraced in the transfer to the Steamship Company out of which execution upon the judgment could be satisfied. The bill prayed for a receiver of the property of the Navigation Company at the time of its assignment, for an accounting by the defendant of such property, and that the receiver be directed to sell the property and pay the debts of the plaintiff, and for general relief.

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Bluebook (online)
115 U.S. 116, 5 S. Ct. 1166, 29 L. Ed. 309, 1885 U.S. LEXIS 1823, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gray-v-national-steamship-co-scotus-1885.