Greenpoint Sugar Co. v. . Whitin

69 N.Y. 328, 1877 N.Y. LEXIS 843
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 17, 1877
StatusPublished
Cited by38 cases

This text of 69 N.Y. 328 (Greenpoint Sugar Co. v. . Whitin) 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
Greenpoint Sugar Co. v. . Whitin, 69 N.Y. 328, 1877 N.Y. LEXIS 843 (N.Y. 1877).

Opinion

Church, Ch. J.

This is an action to foreclose two mortgages executed by the Kings County Manufacturing Company to the plaintiff; one dated November 4, 1869, for $44,244.24, and the other dated February 10, 1872, for $7,407.

*332 The principal questions arise in .respect to the former. The defendant Whitin, as assignee and\ owner of a subsequent mortgage, claims that the large mortgage was unauthorized, and is invalid for the want of a sufficient assent in writing by the stockholders owning two-thirds of the amount of stock in the corporation. The manufacturing act of 1848 (chap. 40, § 2), conferred unlimited power upon corporations to be created, to purchase, hold and convey real estate, but prohibited mortgaging or creating alien. This provision was modified by chap. 517 of the Laws of 1864 (§ 2), as follows:

“ § 2. Any corporation formed hinder the said act passed February 17th, 1848, * * * may secure the payment of any debt heretofore contracted ór which may be contracted by it in the business for which it was incorporated, by mortgaging all or any part of the real estate of such corporation; and every mortgage so made shall be as valid to all intents and purposes as if executed by an individual owning such real estate; provided, that the written assent of the stockholders owning at least two-thirds of the capital stock of such corporation shall first be filed in the office of the clerk of the county where the mortgaged property is situated.” - The written assent made and filed in this case was as i follows: “ Know all men by these presents, that we, the J undersigned, stockholders of the Kings County ManufacturI ing Company, and owning more than two-thirds of the capital stock of the said company, do hereby severally consent that the said Kings County Manufacturing Company execute to the Greenpoint Sugar Company a bond conditioned for the payment of-, and a mortgage to secure the same upon the lands and premises • by them owned, situate in the city of Brooklyn, county of Kings, in the State L_of New York, or any part thereof.”

i It is objected: First, that the consent is too indefinite, especially in not specifying the amount of the mortgage.

Second. That the lands are not specified, and that the property mortgaged was. not, at the time of signing the consent, owned by the company.

*333 Third. That stockholders owning two-thirds in amount of the capital stock did not execute the paper.

Fourth. That it was not filed before the mortgage was made or recorded.

It is quite manifest that the prohibition in the act of 1848 against mortgaging corporate property, and the qualifications in the act of 1864 to the.right of mortgaging, were enacted for the benefit and protection of the stockholders. While unlimited power to purchase and convey real estate was conferred upon corporations authorized to be created, they were prohibited from creating liens whereby preferences might be given to creditors through favoritism of the officers or other improper motive. In general, the right to mortgage inheres in the ownership of property as much as the right of other disposition; but it is competent in the case of corporations to restrict their powers and regulate their exercise in such manner as public policy and the interests of those investing their means in these artificial organizations may dictate.

The act of 1864 removed the restriction substantially imposed by the previous statute, with a proviso requiring only that those interested — the stockholders — should consent, thus plainly evincing that the purpose and intent was to protect the stockholders from improvident or corrupt acts of the officers of the company. There is nothing showing that the legislative policy regarded the mortgaging of corporate property improper per se, but the policy adopted indicates a fear of its improper exercise, and an intention to guard against it.

Without considering the question whether any but stockholders may interpose the objection to the authority exercised in this case, the inference that the general purpose and design of the act was in the interest of stockholders only has some bearing upon the question presented as to the proper rule of construction to be adopted of the paper produced as an assent of the stockholders. The officers of a corporation are the agents of the stockholders who. occupy, *334 in some respects, the character and position of principals, and this relation is recognized in the act in question, permitting the mortgaging of corporate property. The officers were prohibited from mortgaging, but may do it with the consent of the stockholders. The act of mortgaging is not deemed illegal, but the principal must assent in writing, and to make the provision of- practical value the difficulty of procuring the assent of every stockholder was avoided by permitting the owners of two-thirds to assent.

"" It" is important to observe that the statute does not prescribe any particular form of assent, nor what it shall specify or contain. It only requires an assent in writing to securing a debt by mortgage. The statute should receive a practical and not a technical construction, and especially in the absence qf fraud, and in the absence of any objection on the part of those for whose benefit the proviso was inserted, we are not called upon to exercise great astuteness in discovering defects which are not of such a substantial and radical character as to render the assent ineffective for the purpose designed.

The Kings County Manufacturing Company did execute a mortgage to the plaintiff for $44,244.24, to secure a balance of indebtedness due for the purchase price of real estate, and for advances made for erecting the buildings of the company. It is not denied that the debt was one which the statute authorized to be secured, and the evidence and findings show it to have been of the most meritorious character, and entitled, above ordinary debts, to a preference. It is clear that the stockholders did consent to the execution of a mortgage to plaintiff, and the question is whether the paper referred to, either expressly or by legal intendment is sufficient to manifest a consent to this mortgage. The paper in express and unambiguous language authorizes, the"7giviiig of a bond to the plaintiff (without specifying the amount), and a mortgage to secure that bond, upon certain property. Regarding this as authority from principal to agent, taken in connection with the act of 1864, I think it sufficient to *335 authorize a mortgage to secure any debt of the character specified in the act of 1864, which the manufacturing corporation then owed the plaintiff. Ikis.unnecessary to specify the amount of the debt, or the character of it. It is conceded tliat'if the paper had authorized the payment of any debt owing to the plaintiff, it would, in this respect, have been sufficient. The authority was unlimited as to the amount, and therefore it authorized securing any amount whiclvthe act authorized to be secured. This, it seems to me, is its legal effect, and it is as effectual as if it had specified the indebtedness or referred to the debt, as one owing to the plaintiff. No statute authority was requisite to the giving of the bond.

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Bluebook (online)
69 N.Y. 328, 1877 N.Y. LEXIS 843, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/greenpoint-sugar-co-v-whitin-ny-1877.